Charles presented several stations for Newton’s Laws of Motion. His goal is to have his students spend more time with their hands on activities, and less time listening to lectures. He generally introduces the activities of the day with a mini lecture, then students have time to work the activities. He does some preparation/manipulation of the apparatus to ensure students get the desired results. Some of his activities/demos include: A great demo he uses is a “fake rock” made of foam and painted black that he can throw to students and be surprised by how light it is. Nice heavy…
Author: Lee Trampleasure
Lee Trampleasure has been teaching for 25 years, and teaches Physics and Biology at Menlo-Atherton High School.
Here’s a short summary of presentations at the March 28th Spring 2009 meeting’s Show and Tell. Photos will be linked from here shortly. Chuck Hunt, American River College Intro to conservation laws demo. Five M&Ms in a small brown bag. How many times did the red one hit the green one? How many M&Ms are in the bag? Checked it by pulling them out. He pulls out six. How come? Shows the empty bag and places six in the bag. Shakes them up. Hides at the back of the room, then is seen chewing. How many in the bag? Counts…
“Seeing Radiation: Nuclear Science Experiments” A Teacher Workshop for high school science educators
Friday, April 3, 2009 8:00 am to 5:00 pm University of California, Berkeley This workshop will focus on using cloud chambers and Geiger counters to help teach the principles of radioactivity and radiation. Participants will receive a wealth of materials – a cloud chamber kit and Geiger counter, workbooks, and classroom activities. This workshop will include a tour to the Advanced Light Source and lectures by leading scientists. The educational material is targeted for high school science teachers, grades 9-12. A review of the workshop is available online: http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/news/Sci_teachers_workshop/index.htm Preliminary Topics What is radiation? How is it measured? Where does…
The program for our Spring 2009 meeting/gathering is now available online. NCNAAPT Spring 2009 meeting/gathering Saturday March 28th, with a Friday evening social the day before. Everyone is invited, and first-time attendees are free. See the program for complete details.
Once again, the GLOBE community is invited to participate in the annual global sky observation known as GLOBE at Night. GLOBE at Night brings people outside to observe the constellation Orion from 16-28 March 2009. Participants simply choose a clear night on which stars are visible, take measurements of stars in this portion of the sky using GLOBE’s Magnitude Charts, and enter observations into the GLOBE at Night Web site. Students — alongside teachers, parents and community members– amass a data set from which they can begin to explore the concept of light pollution and to research the patterns of…