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Butler County schools incorporate activities, modify schedules ahead of solar eclipse

FILE - This combination of photos shows the path of the sun during a total eclipse by the moon Monday, Aug. 21, 2017, near Redmond, Ore. On April 8, 2024, spectators who aren't near the path of totality or who get cloudy weather on eclipse day can still catch the total solar eclipse, with NASA, science centers and media organizations planning to stream live coverage online from different locations along the path. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

After Monday, the next total solar eclipse seen from North America won’t occur for another 20 years, experts say, and by that time, current elementary school students will be in their late twenties and thirties.

To give students an opportunity to learn about the eclipse, some schools in Butler County are incorporating eclipse-related activities or allowing for excused absences to accommodate parents wishing to keep their children home for the event. Others are modifying their schedules Monday, April 8, altogether due to safety concerns.

Jeff Beckstead, president of the Mars Robotics Association, which donated about 3,500 pairs of eclipse glasses to elementary students at Mars, Knoch and St. Luke's Lutheran schools, said the astronomical event could be used as an educational experience.

Eclipses are frequent occurrences, Beckstead stated, but “total solar eclipses are rarer.”

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