UWM hosts Wisconsin Science Festival in Milwaukee Oct. 21-23

MILWAUKEE_Dive into Lake Michigan without getting wet, learn the secrets of glow-in-the-dark microbes and see how Iron Age people made ale (and get a taste) when the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee hosts the Wisconsin Science Festival in Milwaukee Oct. 21-23.

The statewide festival is produced by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, UW-Madison and the Morgridge Institute for Research. But Milwaukee’s featured partner is UWM, offering 11 free, interactive programs targeted at adults and high school students.

See the lineup at uwm.edu/sciencefest.

“This is a festival for grown-up kids. These programs offer a brush with the spectacle of science, and the thrill of learning something interesting in a hands-on, celebratory environment,” said Phyllis King, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.

The programs are not strictly limited to science topics. Instead, the festival has a “STEAM theme,” displaying the wonders of science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics.

The signature program on Saturday night at Wisconsin Lutheran College’s Schwan Concert Hall is a perfect example.

Think of “Big Ideas for Busy People” as “speed dating with research” – an all-star, interdisciplinary faculty cast will present a series of provocative ideas that have surfaced in research so the rest of us can understand the amazingness. But here’s the hitch: Each speaker has only five minutes to present and just five minutes for follow-up questions before it’s on to the next hot topic. It’s a night of knowledge nuggets – from black holes to green energy.

To recognize the 50th anniversary of UWM’s first doctoral degree program, festival programming will include two shorter “Big Ideas” programs at area coffeehouses that feature some of the university’s doctoral students. They will present their “big ideas” in a variety of fields – in only five minutes, with five minutes of follow-up questions.

Also on tap is a show at SC Johnson in Racine that features a multimedia presentation about Frank Lloyd Wright’s early inspirations. That show includes a tour of the SC Johnson campus, where Wright designed two of the company’s office buildings.

Back at the UWM campus, don’t miss night-sky viewing at the Manfred Olson Planetarium that is blended with theater performances; workshops on the internet-connected world; and tours of the Zilber School of Public Health labs, where scientists probe things in the environment that can make you sick.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:  Laura Otto, 414-303-4868, llhunt@uwm.edu