Third Grade Astronomy Earth/Sun/Moon - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Third Grade Astronomy Earth/Sun/Moon

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Moon Movies. Patterns in the Sky. Movement in the Sky...Why? Other objects in the Sky ... Describing the phases: New, crescent, waxing, quarter, gibbous, full, waning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Third Grade Astronomy Earth/Sun/Moon


1
Third Grade AstronomyEarth/Sun/Moon
  • John Heffernan, Ronen Plesser, and Kitty
    Rutherford
  • Lead Teacher Development Institute
  • June 27, 2006

2
Session Goals
  • Explore activities for the Earth/Sun/Moon( ESM)
    3rd Grade science goal using materials from TRACS
    Investigating Objects in the Sky (IOBS) kit and
    an online ESM Unit
  • Learn inquiry process and additional content of
    the ESM Unit to help teach additional activities
    to enhance the IOBS kit, with more active
    recording and modeling of the observable patterns
    in our sky.
  • Share ideas for integrating science notebooking,
    literacy, technology and math

3
Doing Science and the Scientific Method
  • Five Science Misconceptions
  • There is one scientific method.
  • Inquiry is only when the student generates the
    question.
  • The process is whats important not the content.
  • Inquiry based instruction is the only method to
    teach science.
  • Using kits and hands-on materials makes inquiry
    teaching easy.
  • From http//science-education.nih.gov/supplements/
    nih6/Inquiry/guide/info_process-b.htmfeatures

4
  • Inquiry Problem-based Learning Cycle

5
National Science Content Standards
  • Science as Inquiry
  • Abilities necessary to do scientific inquiry
  • Understandings about Scientific inquiry
  • 2. Science Technology
  • Abilities of technological design
  • Understandings about science and technology

6
National Science Content Standards
  • 3. History and Nature of Science
  • Science as a human endeavor
  • 4. Unifying Concepts and Processes
  • Systems, order, and organization
  • Evidence, models, and explanation
  • Constancy, change, and measurement
  • Form and function

7
National Science Education Content Standards and
Benchmarks
  • Objects in the Sky have patterns of movement.
    The Sun, for example, appears to move across the
    sky in the same way everyday, but its path
    changes slowly over the seasons. The moon moves
    across the sky on a daily basis much like the
    Sun.
  • The Sun, Moon and stars all have properties,
    locations and movements that can be observed and
    described.
  • The observable shape of the Moon changes from day
    to day in a cycle that lasts about a month.
  • The patterns of the stars stay the same although
    they appear to move across the sky nightly.
  • The Earth is one of several planets that orbit
    the Sun and the Moon orbits the Earth.

8
NC Standard Course of StudyStandards
  • Competency Goal 3 The learner will make
    observations and use appropriate technology to
    build an understanding of the earth/moon/sun
    system.
  • Objectives 3.01 Observe that light travels in a
    straight line until it strikes an object and is
    reflected and/or absorbed.
  • 3.02 Observe that objects in the sky have
    patterns of movement including
  • Sun.
  • Moon.
  • Stars.
  • 3.03 Using shadows, follow and record the
    apparent movement of the sun in the sky during
    the day.
  • 3.04 Use appropriate tools to make observations
    of the moon.
  • 3.05 Observe and record the change in the
    apparent shape of the moon from day to day over
    several months and describe the pattern of
    changes.
  • 3.06 Observe that patterns of stars in the sky
    stay the same, although they appear to move
    across the sky nightly.

9
Astro Unit Lesson Sequence
  • Sun Moves in the Sky
  • Light and Shadows Part 1 2
  • Pinhole Viewers
  • Changes in Shadows
  • Day and Night on a Spinning Plate
  • Earth is Round
  • Day and Night on a Spinning Globe
  • Tilting the Globe
  • Seasons and the Orbit
  • Phases of the Moon
  • Dance of the Earth and the Moon
  • Eclipses
  • The Full Dance

10
TRACS Unit Lesson Sequence
  • Sky Wilderness
  • Moon Watching
  • Changes in Shadows
  • Star Gazing
  • Star Guides
  • Moon Movies
  • Patterns in the Sky
  • Movement in the SkyWhy?
  • Other objects in the Sky
  • Confusion in Sky Wilderness

11
Fundamental Elements our Astro Inquiry Lessons
  • Teamwork Partnership
  • Science Notebooks
  • Motivation/Challenge Pre Post Assessment
  • Observable Phenomena
  • Sequential Learning
  • Year-long Project Learning
  • Developing the ability to compare and integrate
    appearance of same phenomenon from different
    points of view

12
Day 1 Three Lessons
  • Day and Night on a Spinning Plate
  • Earth is Round
  • Day and Night on a Spinning Globe

13
Day and Night on a Spinning Plate
  • Follows lessons on Suns apparent motion in the
    sky and on the properties of light, including a
    study of the properties (shape, size) of shadows.
  • Use a rotating plate with tees attached to
    integrate these into an understanding of how the
    orientation of the Earth can create the
    conditions observed throughout a day morning,
    noon, evening, night.
  • This is the students first experience with a
    view from off Earth.

14
  • By rotating the plate, students manage to cause
    the tees shadow to reproduce the behavior of
    their shadows over the course of a day on Earth.
  • Challenge what would a person in the tees
    position see integrate with previous
    activities.
  • Challenge Our shadows do not vanish at noon
    (they never do). How to modify plates motion to
    reproduce this tilt.

15
Earth is Round
  • Actual experience differs from the rotating plate
    because Earth is round.
  • Modeling Earth with a styrofoam ball, study the
    effect of Earths curvature on our experience.
  • Emphasize points of view the classroom models
    outer space.

16
  • On a round Earth, up is a different direction at
    different locations.
  • As Earth rotates, the part of space visible at a
    given location changes.
  • Once more, classroom is outer space looking down
    on Earth
  • Challenge find the part of space always visible
    from some location, and the part of space never
    visible.

17
Day and Night on a Spinning Globe
  • Integrate previous activities to understand how a
    rotating round Earth explains the alternations of
    day and night we observe.
  • Investigate the apparent motion of objects in the
    sky at various latitudes
  • Why do we use time zones?

18
  • As a round Earth turns to the East, objects in
    space appear to rotate around us from East to
    West.
  • The axis of apparent rotation is the Earths
    axis. This is vertical at the poles, horizontal
    at the equator, and tilted in between.
  • The part of the sky always visible includes
    circumpolar stars.

19
Review Day 1
  • How does tilting and rotating effect a shadows
    size and shape?
  • If you are standing on the Earth where is up and
    down?
  • Where on the world is sunset, sunrise, noon and
    midnight?

20
National Standards vs. Traditional Teaching
Methods
  • The Five-minute University offers a proposal
    based on what students retain from traditional
    teaching

21
Day 2
  • Changing Emphases
  • Less
  • Treating everyone alike only responding to the
    whole group
  • Only focus on student acquiring info
  • Assess only facts learned
  • More
  • Responding to individual students strengths
    needs
  • Focus on student understanding
  • Providing opportunities for discussion and debate

22
3 Lessons
  • Seasons and the Orbit
  • Phases of the Moon
  • Dance of the Earth and the Moon

23
Seasons and the Orbit
  • Why do we have the seasons?
  • Model an Earth orbiting the Sun while rotating
    about a tilted axis to understand seasonal
    changes.
  • Northern and Southern Hemisphere, angles, length
    of days and shadows
  • Marking the Change of Season Solstices and
    Equinoxes
  • Distance from the Sun?

24
  • As the Earth orbits the Sun, the Earths tilt
    causes sunlight to fall differently on Earth at
    different times of year.
  • What seasonal changes would you expect at the
    equator?
  • Why are the stars we see in summer different from
    those visible in winter?
  • Challenge Earths rotation takes less than
    24hrs?

25
Phases of the Moon
  • What causes the changing shape of the Moon in the
    sky?
  • Moon is a rocky ball. Why does it shine in the
    sky at all?
  • Model the moon with a styrofoam ball here
    students head models Earth
  • Describing the phases New, crescent, waxing,
    quarter, gibbous, full, waning

26
  • Moon shines by reflecting sunlight.
  • As Moon orbits Earth, fraction of visible side of
    Moon illuminated by Sun varies, causing phases.
  • Does Earth exhibit phases as seen from Moon? How
    are these related to Moon phase?
  • Crescent Moon often shows a faint completion
    optical illusion?

27
Dance of the Earth and Moon
  • Integrate all the motions in Earth/Sun/Moon
    system in a kinetic exercise
  • Students play role of Earth and Moon
  • Explain the missing four minutes

28
Replacing ESM Misconceptions
  • The Private Universe illustrates misconceptions
    that survive (or are aided) by instruction
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