Tuesday, December 14, 2010

21st Century Skills


There are so many great website that are out there that would be wonderful for us to incorporate into our classroom. These are some sites that I have found interesting. I teach life science so most of them relate to what I teach.

This is an interactive human body website:

This is an interactive skeleton:

This one is how you can build a skeleton in your classroom:

This is a good website environment-themed lessons.

I love the utah site for genetics, cells, & DNA!

p://learn.genetics.utah.edu/

This site is a little advanced for my students but some of you may like it:









Sunday, November 28, 2010

Lesson In Heat Transfer

For many, many years I have had tea for breakfast, so I know approximately how long it takes for the tea to cool, about 5-10 minutes, so that I am able to drink it. What I was not prepared for was how long it would take for the hot water to cool enough so that I could test it. My testing materials were newspaper (four layers thick), thick leather, heavy-duty wool, and thick cotton. My prediction in efficiency was that the order from the least to most efficient would be: newspaper, cotton, wool, leather. The first mistake that I made was to use boiling water. I tested the mug with the newspaper covering after 15 minutes. It was well above 120 degrees, so I waited until thirty-five minutes had passed; the results were still the same. I then waited until an hour and seven minutes had passed. The water temperature was at or above 120 degrees with the newspaper-covered mug so I decided to wait even longer. After an hour and thirty-seven minutes of waiting, I tested the same mug again. The temperature was at one hundred and twelve. The leather and wool were still at or above one hundred and twenty-two and the thick cotton was at one hundred and fifteen. I decided to do the experiment over this time using hot water not boiling water since I had opened the newspaper-covered mug so many times, which I thought had really skewed the results. This is another reason why teachers should always conduct these types of experiment before they do them in class. You really need to work out the kinks before you do them with the students.
       The second round of testing I had much better results. This time I heated the water well but nowhere near boiling. After waiting fifteen minutes I tested the newspaper-covered mug. The temperature was at one hundred and seven degrees, so I decided to wait at least another hour. After waiting one hour and thirty-five minutes I recorded the results again. The newspaper-covered mug water temperature was at ninety degrees, which really shocked me that the temperature had only dropped a mere seventeen degrees over an hour and twenty minutes. I really thought that the temperature would be in the sixty or seventies. The wool-covered mug was at ninety-seven degrees, the leather at ninety-six and a half, and the cotton at ninety-two degrees. They were all really amazing insulators. My prediction was about what I thought it should be, although the wool was slightly better than the leather. Although even more shocking, was that they were all within seven degrees of one another. I thought that the range would be much more spread out, possibly a twenty point spread or even higher.
       When I was recording the results for the testing, I thought of what I had read about the Depression. I remember the stories about how people use to put newspaper in their clothes and shoes to keep them warm. After performing this experiment, I can see that the newspaper method probably worked pretty well.
       What I learned from doing this experiment is that the students would really be able to learn the concepts of heat flow and enjoy the activity at the same time. Also by doing this type of lesson, the students are not likely to forget the concepts either. Now, I just have to think how I could do more of these types of activities in life science.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

A Lesson in Guided Inquiry

I had my student do the collision activity testing mass and velocity in two of my classes. I used my children's Hot Wheels and set up 11 stations throughout my room on the lab tables. I just told them we were going to study physics today- even though we are currently studying genetics! After they did some experimentation they went on the computer to look at Newton's 3 Laws. I think when the students hear Newton, they think apple and gravity. After they got over that, most were able to correlate the lesson with the Laws. My lesson went pretty well but I think I just need to do more planning the next time. I should have had different objects of different mass and the course should have been more smoooth. Ideally the subject would be something we were studying. What I got from the lesson is that I do not always have to teach the subject first before I do an activity, lab, or experiment. I can let loose a little and let the kids discover the answer for themselves.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Reflections on Lesson Plan

I created this week's assignment because I had planned to study diffusion this week. What I did was do three mini-lab demonstrations before I even went over the concept of diffusion. The first was a balloon with almond extract hidden in a shoebox with a hole in the lid which they passed around.They loved smelling the box- they thought it was cherry scent. The second demonstration was timing how fast perfume permeates the air across the room. I had one or two students stationed at every meter and they raised their hand when they first smelled the perfume. Another student timed the experiment. They loved getting up and participating in the lab. The third was a beaker filled with water with blue dye squirted in it. I then showed a PowerPoint that was infused with several movie clips and we chatted even more about the mini-lab demonstrations and how they related to the definitions. The following day we did a lab with corn starch and iodine with ziploc bags to help get the concept of diffusion of substance across a semi-permeable membrane. I did a few things wrong but overall I think that creating a lesson that is multi-faceted really helps to get the concept across for all types of students. What I really learned is that it makes the lesson fun for me. And if I'm happy, they're happy!

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Glaciers Melting!!!


I think about the effects of global warming all of the time especially since I live on a barrier island- I can see the beach being eroded. I know some is natural, barrier islands are constantly shifting, but the rate seems a bit fast- more than several feet are missing every year. I keep telling my husband that we should move to the mountains near a large water source- like a lake or spring. Of course he thinks I’m crazy and says that if it ever gets that bad, it would be horrible anywhere. Then I think that maybe Florida wouldn’t be such a bad place to be if the Gulf Stream is stopped by the glaciers & poles melting, and we go into some sort of ice age. We’ll be in one of the warmer spots! Did anyone else watch the PBS movie on the glaciers melting?

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The 5 E's


I have never done the lesson plan that I have created but it is one that I would like to try. The lesson is on evolution, one of my favorite topics to teach. I would like for a group of students to create a StoryBook presentation on how a certain place in the world- Australia, Hawaii, a desert in Mexico- has evolved, with regard to the organisms that inhabit it, over time. I have never done StoryBook either! Has anyone out there done StoryBook?

I have never created such an elaborate lesson plan- never have the time. I kind of follow the 5 E’s when I do create lesson plans but I think that I have been doing the lesson plans for so long that I just don’t think about them.

The 5 E's


I have never done the lesson plan that I have created but it is one that I would like to try. The lesson is on evolution, one of my favorite topics to teach. I would like for a group of students to create a StoryBook presentation on how a certain place in the world- Australia, Hawaii, a desert in Mexico- has evolved, with regard to the organisms that inhabit it, over time. I have never done StoryBook either! I was suppose to take a class on it after school was out in June but I had to cancel because I had to attend a funeral in Delaware. Has anyone out there done StoryBook?

I have never created such an elaborate lesson plan- never have the time. I kind of follow the 5 E’s when I do create lesson plans but I think that I have been doing the lesson plans for so long that I just don’t think about them.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Overstuffing of Science Curriculum in Middle School



My “overstuffed” curriculum was recently reduced but since the elementary schools are not teaching critical areas in science, my curriculum is staying exactly the same- “overstuffed”. Basic concepts like differences between an invertebrate and a vertebrate are not being covered in my county, in the elementary schools. Is anyone else having the same issue in middle school science?