Connected on 2008-11-25 12:00:00
from , TX, US
- 11:16 am
- Bugscope Teamsample pumping to vacuum
- Bugscope Teamsamples were relatively dry, so it should get to vacuum easily
- Bugscope Team'lo Chas
- 11:22 am
- Bugscope Team2.7
- Bugscope TeamHi. I'm in a meeting in 4169 BI, just checking in. Did Scripps already have one connection this morning?
- Bugscope Teamyes
- Bugscope Teamso do we need to do anything -- oops lost Chas
- Bugscope Team1.8
- Bugscope Teampresumably we can just continue our demo session
- Bugscope Team1.5
- Bugscope Team1.4
- 11:29 am
- 11:35 am
- 11:42 am
- TeacherHi! I'm logged on, and I can't believe I've actually hooked up the projector and got it working all by myself this year! The kids will be here in about ten minutes. Can you remind me how to drive? Thanks!
- 11:48 am
- TeacherLOVE the presets! Thanks so much!
- 11:53 am
- Bugscope TeamHi Mrs C
- Bugscope Teamsorry we were setting up and didn't see when you connected
- TeacherHi! We're SO EXCITED!
- Bugscope Teamwe are happy that you guys are pumped up
- TeacherJust let me know when I have control of the microscope....
- 11:58 am
- Bugscope Teamyou may have it now
- Bugscope Teamyou can have control now if you want
- Bugscope Teamlet us know if you have any trouble drivin'
- TeacherI am a controlling person, so I'd love to have control whenever you want to give it me. Thanks!
- Bugscope Teamyeah go for it
- Bugscope Teamlots of mouthparts on this praying mantis -- lot of palps
- TeacherAre there any mandibles?
- Bugscope Teamdrop the mag a little and we can see
- Bugscope Teammaybe they are obscured
- 12:03 pm
- TeacherThe kids want to know if this is food in his mouth...
- Bugscope TeamI don't remember them having fierce-looking mandibles
- Bugscope Teamnot sure
- Bugscope Teamit's in the right place
- Bugscope Teamyour ant spiracle
- TeacherLove it! What are the little hairs for?
Bugscope Teama spiracle is like a nostril, the air comes in through here, and the hairs are there to catch anything that doesnt belong, like nose hairs
- TeacherIs this dirt next to the spiracle?
Bugscope Teamyes it looks like it, they do like mucking around in dirt
- Bugscope Teamyes!
- TeacherWho is our guest named crystal?
- Bugscope Teamwe thought it was you
- Bugscope TeamHi Crystal!
- TeacherI think it might be a parent...
- Bugscope Teamwe are happy to have guests
- Bugscope Teamthis is cool
- 12:08 pm
- TeacherAre we looking inside the proboscis or outside?
Bugscope Teamthe proboscis is the part curled up, so we are looking at the outer part of it
- Bugscope Teama pollen grain outside the proboscis
- Bugscope Teamd'oh like you were already doing
- Guesti have a friend doing this but shes not here
- TeacherOkay, so what are all of the hairs around us?
- TeacherCOOOOOOOL!
- Bugscope Teamthose I think are fine setae on the head
- Bugscope Teamnow you can see the eye, to the left
- GuestIs Airmee there?
- TeacherYes, she is - are you her cousin in California?
- GuestYes, I'm Aaron
- TeacherWelcome!
- Bugscope Teamthis is a true bug -- hemiptera
- TeacherSo, is this one of our insects that we sent in or is this one of yours
Bugscope Teamthis is one of yours, you and your class thought it was an ant, and it does look like one
- Bugscope Teamwe know because it has piercing mouthparts
- 12:13 pm
- Bugscope Teamit's antennae are somewhere else
- TeacherWow! So, it's a true bug! We see the compound eye, but what is next to it?
- Bugscope Teamthose holes are where they were
- Bugscope Teamantenna base, juju
- TeacherVery cool!
- Bugscope Teamin this case the juju is hemolymph
- Bugscope Teamthey are scimitar-like
- TeacherWhat is scimitar-like?
- Bugscope Teamnow the facets of the compound eye, called ommatidia
- Bugscope Teamlike a sword
- Bugscope Teamthese are really pretty butterfly scales
- Bugscope Teamthe same stuff that is soft and powdery when you touch their wings
- 12:18 pm
- TeacherWOW! So, are we looking at a single scale now or many scales?
- Bugscope Teamyeah these are really beautiful
- Bugscope Teamthis is part of one scale
- TeacherSO COOL!!!!!
- Bugscope Teamsuch a cool pattern -- we see these a lot but this is particularly nice
- TeacherDo we know what the purpose of the holes is?
- Bugscope Teamthe shapes of the fine structures of the scales can produce structural colors -- colors that come from the shape, not from pigment
- TeacherThat is SO AMAZING!
- Bugscope Teamthe holes, however, we have always assumed they make the scale that much lighter
- Bugscope Teamsometimes you can see pigment granules in these same places, around the holes, but not here
- TeacherThey remind us of bird bones, hollow with the brackets in them
- Bugscope Teamso they will be strong and light as well
- TeacherIs this the annoying insect that we sent that I said I find in my kitchen a lot?
- Bugscope Teamyes!
- TeacherDO YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS?????????????????
- Bugscope Teamwe think it looks like a wasp or bee, it is probably non agressive if it never hurt you
- 12:24 pm
- Bugscope Teamyeah we are not sure -- we were thinking it was a wasp
- Bugscope Teamthis is a job for Annie, our entomologist, who is not here today -- she's headed south
- Bugscope Teamit has four wings, like a wasp
- TeacherOkay.... do you know what all of the dots are? Is this just a dirty bug?
Bugscope Teamyes if you increase the magnification, you will find a lot of debris like dust or dirt on it
- Bugscope Teambees have four wings as well, but this is not a bee
- TeacherAre these hairs on a membranous wing?
- Bugscope Teamyes little spines
- TeacherThis is really exciting - you're bringing our studies to life!
- Bugscope TeamYay!
- Bugscope Teamthat's great, we like it when our sessions go really well
- Bugscope Teamfocus ex machina
- TeacherThis is REALLY COOL! Why would they have spines on those types of wings?
- Bugscope Teamwhen we look at insects we often have more questions than answers -- but think about if you had wings and they got wet -- it would be good to have something that would keep them from sticking to a smooth surface
- Bugscope Teamthis is ours the top of a tick
- Bugscope Teamthis is the business end of a tick
- Bugscope Teamthe part right in the middle is the part that holds into your skin
- 12:29 pm
- Bugscope Teamthe gunk around the mouth is what is left of the cement type stuff that makes the tick get a good hold onto your skin
- Bugscope Teamon the opposite side of that it is sort of like a file, with finer rasping toothlike projections
- TeacherDo all of those spines go into your skin? Or is it the scalloped looking section
- Bugscope Teamthe parts on the sides fold down
- TeacherLots of OOOOOOHHHHHs going on here!
- TeacherWhat are the holes on either side for - with the spikes
- Bugscope Teamalso on the other side of the head are little eyespots
- TeacherThose are the eyes????
- Bugscope Teamthese remind of of antennae/taste buds. scott?
- Bugscope Teamwe think those little ports are likely sensory -- they can smell the air -- maybe CO2 that you would breathe out
- TeacherIs that a part that broke off, or is it always like that?
- Bugscope Teamthey don't have eyes, but where we cannot see there are little spots that look like the top of a pepper shaker
- Bugscope Teamthis is always like this, but with less juju
- Bugscope Teamyeah I think they are like the taste buds on antennae -- the chemosensory buds
- Bugscope Teamsee the jaws?
- Bugscope Teamthey open like a gate
- Bugscope Teaminsect mouths usually operate sideways, compared to ours
- TeacherThey don't look as sharp as we would think? What does a wasp eat?
- 12:34 pm
- Bugscope Teamany they seem to have many more components
- Bugscope Teamand, not any
- Bugscope Teamthey often look like this, not really sharp
- TeacherWasp TARSUS, right?
- Bugscope Teamyes!
- TeacherWe see a main claw, but what are the other big hairs around it for?
- Bugscope Teamwasps eat lots of stuff -- like people food, from what I have been reading
- Bugscope Teamthe hairs are most likely mechanosensory
- Bugscope Teampaper wasps have an interesting eat habit: Adult paper wasps either drink nectar or catch caterpillars and drink the caterpillar's blood, or hemolymph. Then the adult wasp flies back to the nest and regurgitates (throws up) the nectar or blood into the mouths of young (larval) wasps or other adult wasps. After the young wasps are full, they produce a saliva (or spit) which is fifty times more nutritious than nectar. The adult wasps drink this saliva from the mouths of the young wasps.
- Bugscope Teamthe big ones
- TeacherThat is SO DISGUSTING but SO COOL!
- Bugscope TeamI am glad people are not like paper wasps -- can you imagine what it would be like at a restaurant?
- Bugscope Teamin general, wasps are predators and eat small insects and spiders. They also like sweet things such as very ripe fruit, and will even eat from sugar water feeders that people hang out for hummingbirds.
- Bugscope Teamew
- TeacherI'm so glad I'm a person!
- TeacherIt hairs on the actual CLAW! The kids think they need a shave!
- 12:39 pm
- Bugscope Teamnow you can see more of the tarsi
- TeacherThe poor wasp lost his stinger!
- Bugscope Teaminsects need to have lots of hairs (setae) because they have an exoskeleton -- it's like if you were wearing a suit of armor all of the time
- Bugscope Teamif you were wearing armor you would not be able to feel the wind or things touching you
- Bugscope Teamthe hairs are connected to little nerves that relay back what the insect is sensing
- Bugscope Teambut if you drilled little holes in the armor and stuck things through that touched your skin you would be able to feel
- Bugscope Teamso it's like Cate says -- the hairs are connected to nerves so the insect can feel
- Bugscope Teamsome of the hairs can pick up chemical signals, and some can feel heat or cold
- TeacherAre all the little dots dirt or pollen?
- Bugscope Teamlook a little closer and you will see
- Bugscope Teamthere is a little charging, but you will likely see both
- Bugscope TeamHello Mrs Canada!
- 12:45 pm
- Bugscope Teamthe stinger is probably inside where we cannot see it
- TeacherAre the spiky things pollen?
Bugscope Teamyes!
- Bugscope Teamyes!
- TeacherHi, Kimberly!
- Bugscope Teamit helps them stick to things
- Bugscope TeamHi Kimberly, and ritaroo
- GuestHello, my son is in the next class...just a little early to make sure I did everything right. This is GREAT!
- Bugscope Teamyay!
- GuestHello is Caroline Gonzalez in there somewhere??/ ;-))
- TeacherHi, ritaroo!
- TeacherNot yet - 10 more minutes, ritaroo!
- Bugscope Teamnow we are seeing a lot of charging because the electrons cannot escape from this part of the sample readily
- TeacherIs this the closeup of pollen grain?
- Guestok Mrs. C.
- Bugscope Teamyes it is
- Bugscope Teamyes there may be better ones to the north
- Bugscope Teamlike in preset 13
- Bugscope Teamha
- TeacherSO BEAUTIFUL!
- Bugscope Teamcool
- TeacherAre there scales on the abdomen?
- Bugscope Teamthe cuticle has such a cool pattern on it
- 12:50 pm
- TeacherWhat is the cuticle?
- Bugscope Teamlooks like scales but I think that is the way it forms
- TeacherOh, Caroline's Papaw!
- Bugscope Teamcuticle is what we call the exoskeleton
- Bugscope Teamit is like what your fingernails are made out of -- or like a shrimp shell
- Bugscope Teamalso called chitin
- Guestgreat magnification....says Papaw
- Bugscope Teammore scaley looking surfaces
- TeacherWe never want to look in our flour again....
- Bugscope Teamyou can sort of tell how high the mag is by looking at the micron bar in the lower left of the image
- Bugscope Teamthe weevil mouth, from below
- Guesthe looks like he has had a really bad day..is that its tongue??
- Bugscope Teamthose are mandibular and maxillary palps, which help insects manipulate and taste their food
- TeacherHe uses the palps to taste your flour before he eats it, right?
- Bugscope Teamin the tips of the palps we see little taste bud like things
- Bugscope Teamnice imaging!
- TeacherWOW!!!!!
- Bugscope Teamgreat job focusing
- 12:55 pm
- Bugscope Teamthere are some "tastebuds" or in the insect world chemosensory setae
- Bugscope Teamsee the micron bar now?
- Guestwill this still be available on the web tomorrow for some H.S. students to view from my advanced anatomy class...says Papaw
- TeacherThe kids think it looks like playdough coming out of a playdough thing....
- Bugscope Team14 microns is 7 bacteria long
- TeacherThe kids want me to tell you that God is SO AMAZING!
- Bugscope Teamthat is exactly what it looks like isnt it
- Bugscope Teamseven bacilli end to end
- Bugscope Teamcool
- TeacherWhat is at the base of the taste bud things?
- GuestI love the presets bar...very cool.
- Bugscope Teamritaroo tomorrow is dedicated to research here
- TeacherWe're wondering what our tongues would look like this close up - do we have hairs on our tongue, too?
- Bugscope Teamwe have to share the microscope with our in-house, in-University people
- Guestso is that a no that no one can log on tomorrow???
- GuestHow many eyes does a fly have?
Bugscope Teamthey have 2 compound eyes and 3 simple eyes. the simple eyes act as a navigational tool, like a built in GPS
- GuestIs everyone still there?
- TeacherYou can see all of our images on our homepage once they're loaded, along with all of our questions
- Guestooops, sorry
- Bugscope Teamyes thats right
- Bugscope Teamyeah I am sorry someone else is using the 'scope -- but tell Papaw he can sign up for his own session at the bugscope web site
- Guestgotcha....I told them to log in today...but I don't see them
- TeacherWe're switching classes right now - a new class is coming in....the other class was very impressed thank you!
- Bugscope Teamnow the compound eyes can have hundreds to thousands of individual facets, which you can see right now
- TeacherAre the simple eyes visible on here anywhere?
Bugscope Teamthey are usually nearer the very top to part of the back of the head, so we don't always see them. they probably wont be visible here because it is lying on its back
- Bugscope Teamplease thank them for all their questions and their attention
- 1:00 pm
- Guestwow thanks for this fantastic opportunity...ritaroo and papaw
- Bugscope Teambut you could always try
- Bugscope Teamif you have a high school class please consider running a session
- GuestHow many are in a compound eye?
- GuestBird...hello
- Guestthe butterfly scale is beautiful in the presets
- Bugscope Teamit would take a grad student with lots of time to count them
- Bugscope Teamthe simple eyes would be right behind the antennae. so we cant see them afterall
- Bugscope TeamI like this.
- GuestFor some reason the chat will not scroll for me
- GuestMrs. Canada you just popped up in the scroll here...working well...love this one...Papaw
- GuestI have to type something for it to scroll for me...
- Bugscope TeamMrs Canada we have a similar problem sometimes on one of our computers.
- Bugscope Teamif you cant scroll, maybe your browser window isn't wide enough?
- Guestok a little levity...mascara anyone???
- TeacherIf you go to view and full screen, it works better...
- TeacherHi, Brian and bird! Are you related to anyone in our class?
- Bugscope Teamno mascara?
- GuestYes Parker
- 1:05 pm
- Bugscope Teamit does have eyelashes
- TeacherSO COOL!
- Bugscope Teamnice little hexagons
- Guestlook at the perfect form of these hexagons!!
- TeacherLook at how MANY hexagons are in ONE EYE!
- Bugscope Teamyeah would you like to try counting them?
- TeacherDoes the butterfly have ocelli?
- Bugscope Teamsometimes when we get a moth or butterfly, we cant always tell if it is one or the other (the main way is by looking at its antennae), but we usually get them without their antennae attached. So another way to identify whether they are moth or butterfly is by looking at their eyes
- Bugscope TeamI am not sure if we have ever seen ocelli, if they have them
- Bugscope Teamwhich makes sense since they are night insects
- Bugscope Teamtime tunnel
- TeacherWe have to show our administrator the pollen grains
- Bugscope Teamsome insects can see ultraviolet wavelengths of light, which we cannot
- Bugscope Teamthe differences in antennae are that butterflies have little clubs at the ends while moths do not.
- Bugscope Teamthis is the butterfly you sen
- Guestin the presets does that praying mantis look devout or what???
- Bugscope Teamsent
- TeacherSO COOL!
- Bugscope Teamspiracle
- Bugscope Teamso just go to http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/members/2008-097/ at anytime you wish.
- 1:10 pm
- TeacherWe have to show this to this class, too!
- Bugscope Teamthe scales!
- Bugscope Teamthey are kind of like little feathers
- Bugscope Teamthese are individual scales on a butterfly wing. They are what makes the wing feel velvety
- Guestin the presets...the tenent from the longhorn beetle is fascinating
- Bugscope Teamsometimes the sample will appear to move. that is because either the electron beam is manipulating the sample or the carbon tape we have the insects on is shrinking a little bit
- TeacherWe love the butterfly scales!
- Guestwe do as well.
- Bugscope Teamcan I try fixing this at the 'scope?
- Bugscope Teamthese tenent or sometime they are called tenet comes from the latin tenere- to hold.
- 1:15 pm
- Guestwow...this is like the old movie FANTASTIC VOYAGE!!
- Bugscope Teamthey are what allows the insect to walk on walls
- TeacherIs the longhorn beetle one of ours?
Bugscope Teamyes, a longhorn beetle can easily be identified by its long antennae (antlers)
- Bugscope Teamthey are so small it is hard to prevent them from charging up with electrons
- TeacherThese that we're looking at now are what help it stick to walls?
Bugscope Teamyes, though i wouldve thought that beetle you sent us was too big for that but here they are!
- TeacherWhat are tenent setae? We know what setae are, but we don't know about the tenent part...
- Bugscope Teamtenent, as Cate said below, comes from the Latin tenere - to hold
- GuestIN THE PRESETS .....THE POLLEN IN THE PROBOSCIS REMINDS ME OF THE DUST SPECK IN "HORTON HEARS A WHO??"
- Bugscope Teamit is hard to see everyhing that goes by
- TeacherThese spikes are COOL!!!!!!!!!!!
- Bugscope Teamthe tenent setae need to be able to stick, but they also need to be able to release as the insect walks
- Bugscope Teamthe horizontal lines we were seeing -- the distortion -- was because the electron beam is getting caught in that small area
- 1:20 pm
- GuestAre we looking at the beetle?
- Bugscope Teamthis is a praying mantis head
- Guestok, thanks
- Bugscope Teampraying mantises are kind of like cockroaches -- they seem to be very streamlined
- Bugscope Teamnow we are on the tick
- TeacherNow we are looking at a tick
- TeacherWhat is the scalloped part?
- Bugscope Teamthe scalloped part is what sticks into your skin
- GuestOUR NEIGHBOR HAD ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED TICK FEVER THIS SUMMER AND BARELY SURVIVED AFTER BEING BITTEN ON THE ANKLE BY A TICK IN INDIANA
Bugscope TeamRocky Mountain spotted fever is caused by Rickettsia rickettsii, a specialized bacteria. Ticks infected with the organism transmit the disease to humans.
- TeacherSo are the spikey things piercing mouthparts? Is that what it sucks your blood with?
- Bugscope Teamwow
- GuestMAKES ONE THINK OF SHARKS TEETH
- Bugscope Teamthat's one reason why I never go outside
- Bugscope TeamWhat's cool is this tick has bacteria all over it
- TeacherIs that what all of the dots are?
Bugscope Teamthe small round things are bacteria
- Bugscope Teamthe spikey things are the fore portion of the proboscis
- 1:26 pm
- Bugscope Teamat the top and on the other side of the spikey things we would find something that is similar but less spikey
- Bugscope Teamyeah I wonder if these are Rickettsia
- GuestWE ALSO HAD A CLOSE FRIEND BARELY SURVIVE LYME DISEASE THIS SUMMER FROM A TICK BITE...HERE TICKS WERE EXTREMELY NUMEROUS THIS SUMMER IN INDIANA
- Bugscope Teammy mom got Lyme disease
- Bugscope Teamthe bacterium is a little shrunken
- Bugscope Teamthe electron beam affects it and makes it shrivel a little more
- Bugscope Teamlook at the micron bar
- Bugscope Teamoops not now
- TeacherSorry - we are trying to get to as much as we can!
- Bugscope Teamno problem
- GuestIS THIS STILL THE TICK??
- Bugscope Teamafter you are done today we have people who are looking at cancer cells
- Bugscope Teamno this is a wasp
- TeacherThis is a wasp, and the mandibles have HAIR ON THEM!
- Bugscope Teamthere is the ball and socket part of the antenna
- Bugscope Teamthe antenna base
- GuestINCREDIBLE
- Bugscope Teamthe ocelli would be back there between the antennae
- 1:31 pm
- Bugscope Teambut they may be back further on the head than we can see from this angle
- TeacherThey must be back there....
- Bugscope Teamyeah I am sorry they must be over the ridge Mrs C
- GuestI am assuming the stinger is missing...right?
- Bugscope Teamthe stinger is STILL gone!
- Bugscope Teamthe stinger is probably retracted within the abdomen
- TeacherDifferent kids...
- Bugscope Teamyes Mrs Canada we think it is -- d'oh -- as Cate says
- TeacherBEAUTIFUL POLLEN!
- Bugscope TeamI was just joking - I was thinking we could sneak up on the stinger and it might have come out
- 1:36 pm
- Bugscope Teamsee the weevil eyes on either side of the head?
- TeacherWe're going to look at the weevil now - you'll never want to eat old flour again!
- Bugscope Teamdown low
- Bugscope Teamextra protein
- Bugscope Teamyou can tell if an insect is a weevil by looking to see if it has a snout like an anteater
- TeacherWhat is the circle center thing?
- Bugscope Teamit is a mouthpart that has palps attached to it
- Bugscope Teamit kind of looks like it can move up and down
- Bugscope Teamwe are often at a loss to understanding just how it works
- Bugscope Teamwe need to watch more insects eat
- Bugscope Teamtiny taste buds
- TeacherAWESOME!
- Bugscope Teamhere we had hoped to show you the sponging mouthparts
- 1:41 pm
- TeacherThen what is it? We were thinking it was a sponging mouthpart
- Bugscope Teamthis fruit fly was critical point dried and should have had a nice bulbous sponge here --
- GuestIS THIS THE FRUIT FLY THAT APPEARS IN ONES KITCHEN DRAWN TO SAY OLD BANANAS?
- Bugscope Teamyes
- Bugscope Teamit is the right place, the right thing, but it is shriveled -- I am sorry
- Bugscope Teamfruit fly eyes seem always to have these little setae on them
- Bugscope Teamnice job focussing
- Bugscope Teamthe setae help the fly feel which direction the air currents are moving so it can easily fly
- Bugscope Teamit's also one of the reasons why it can get out of the way so easily when a flyswatter or a hand is coming to swat them away
- TeacherThank you! Look at the ridges on the setae! So cool!
- TeacherIs that just dust next to the setae?
Bugscope Teamit looks like a bit of dust and dirt
- Bugscope Teamlooks like dust of some sort
- Bugscope Teamwe don't always see it
- Bugscope Teami think it is something that gets on critical point dried samples sometimes
- 1:46 pm
- Bugscope Teamwhen we get samples that were fixed in ethanol we can critical point dry them and often keep them from shriveling, as when they air dry
- Bugscope Teamsee the tenent setae to the left?
- Bugscope Teamthey are flat like a brush
- Bugscope Teamthe ant!
- GuestWOW...WHAT AN AMAZING VIEW
- Bugscope Teamthis one has a fluted jaw and fluted head
- TeacherAre the things on top the mandibles? If so, what is underneath?
- Bugscope Teaminside the mouth you can see some plant material. maybe this ant is a leafcutter ant
- TeacherIs that an eye? If so, what kind?
- Bugscope Teamthat resembles a nose
- Bugscope Teamthe eye to further down and to the right
- Bugscope Teamsome ants look like this, and it likely does help identify the species
- 1:51 pm
- Bugscope Teamants have many different shapes and sizes even in the same species
- Bugscope Teamthe ridge we were looking at is where the antennae are missing
- Bugscope Teamoften the antennae are in -- when we see the ant from the front -- the position we would expect the eyes to be if we were ants
- Bugscope Teamif you lower the mag you can see where we are
- TeacherThis has been so cool! Thank you so very much for giving us this glimpse into insects! We appreciate your time - especially with the holidays coming up. Thanks, parents and grandparents, for joining us today!
- Bugscope TeamThank you all for connecting today!
- Bugscope Teamthank you for all your questions and your great driving
- 1:57 pm
- GuestThank you for including us in these awsome pictures! We love the componund eye pictures!
- Bugscope TeamWe had fun working with you this afternoon.
- TeacherSo, how can they log on to see our homepage again? Can they get to it from the main Bugscope page?
- Bugscope Teamanyone can go to http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/members/2008-097/ and there they can view the session transcript and see all the chat and images from today
- Bugscope Teamit is all anonymized unless the teacher logs in
- TeacherGreat! Thanks so much! I have to log off now to go pick up my other kids, but I look forward to doing this again in the future!
- Bugscope TeamWe look forward to having you back!
- Bugscope Teamok everyone, we have to go now. thank you for logging in today