 This toolkit has quite a variety of resources. You may want to review the training video more than once. As one of the toolkit testers, Darian O'Brien advises, watch a part of it and then try out the activity you just watched. Work through each of the activities. Don't skip any of them, since each one teaches a valuable concept about the telescope. Remember, the toolkit manual on the CD called scopemanual.pdf has all the suggested scripts, masters for the various cards, where to get more materials, and background information for each activity. The CD has several other resources on it, including PowerPoints. You're welcome to make copies of the toolkit manual and resources CD and of this training video to distribute to other club members and educators. Here's a few more tips from the toolkit testers. Joan Chamberlain in Maine recommends every person doing outreach with a telescope should have a field of view card, the averted vision and color card, the moon cards, explaining resolution, a spoon, and the foam and sticks, like a mini-kit at the telescope. Paul Hoy of East Bay Astronomical Society in California says their observatory now has the field of view cards available at each of the main telescopes. Jim Zabrowski of the Aldrich Astronomical Society of Massachusetts recommends also using these activities in the classroom and with your own club members. The toolkit helps break through the many myths about telescopes, especially magnification and resolution. I like it because it helps answer questions that even some adult beginners have about telescopes in a very user-friendly way that doesn't put off people who never had opportunities to have their questions about telescopes answered correctly. We look forward to reading about your events and how this toolkit enhances your visitors' understanding as they directly experience the universe through your telescopes.