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Proud to be part of LJMU,
in partnership with the Dill Faulkes Educational Trust

 

The Schools' Observatory was launched in October 2004 and since then has supported the education of many thousands of learners. The breadth and reach of the project can be demonstrated by three statistics:

 

Website Activity

Since the launch of the current version of the website in October 2016, detailed logs have been kept of all page "hits". The statistics below exclude known "bots" (non-human systems that trawl websites) and any activity from within the University. As such they give a good indication of both the volume of use of the website, and its geographical scope.

Highlight any bar in the graph to see the top-10 countries for that month

Website hits per month


Top 10 countries

 

Registered Users

There are three kinds of users. Educator registration is available to any teacher or educator. In addition, educators can choose set up student accounts for any (or all) of their students or pupils. Both educators and students have access to the full range of observations.

Only registered users who have been active in the previous year are included in these statistics


Active website users

 

Observing Requests

Observing Requests are made through the unique Go Observing system and can be anything from a simple, single observation of a planet, to multi-observation scientific programmes. There are no limits on how many requests any user can make.

Some clear trends can be seen, with a strong correlation in activity to school terms. The large increase from 2012 to 2017 is in part due to the Schools' Observatory being highlighted as suitable for the GCSE in Astronomy offered by Pearson Edexcel, in particular for the Controlled Assessment component. This resulted a large number of requests from a small number of GCSE students. Since 2018, the Controlled Assessment has been removed from almost all GCSEs, so the impact on the statistics of a relatively small number of users has dropped.

Highlight any month to show the fraction of each night that the Liverpool Telescope was able to observe.


Observing requests each month


Liverpool Telescope Observing time each night


Graphs generated with the help of D3.js