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I'm a bit more worried about having them memorize the Clapp, Colpitts,
and Pierce Oscillators. Isn't that stuff still on Tech exam? The Eternal Squire On Jan 25, 8:01 pm, Lawrence Statton XE2/N1GAK wrote: writes: All, I have a situation, and would like some opinions rather than flames on how to handle it. My wife teaches at a public school just off the Easter Arizona Navajo reservation. Lately, a junior school science teacher is starting up a science club and has asked me to provide for the amateur radio side of the club and be its control operator.[much snippage]... I won't flame you at all -- I admire your elmering, and think it's a great idea. I'd be exteremely careful to make sure you meet the field-strength requirements of Part-15 with whatever project you do -- it can be remarkably easy to get foul of it and reliable measurements require skill. Besides 80m and the top of the AM ex-band you might also consider the lowfer 1750m stuff ... Lots of kits out there for it, and an active user community. Of course getting them all licensed would be the best solutiuon ... Junior high is probably just at the edge of where passing the novice or tech written would be a cake-walk. As I used to joke to my classes, "there's three parts to the written -- three engineering formulae: E=IR ; c = f lambda ; 40inches in a meter., a handful of common sense questions, and a few memorizable factoids" (band edges, etc.) I had a sixth grader of average intelligence in one class - it was a little harder for her, but she passed it on her second try. -- Lawrence Statton - s/aba/c/g Computer software consists of only two components: ones and zeros, in roughly equal proportions. All that is required is to place them into the correct order. |