Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide

Similar documents
Elements of Physics Motion, Force, and Gravity Teacher s Guide

Heat and Temperature: Teacher s Guide

Discovering Math: Prediction and Probability Teacher s Guide

Animal Colors and Shapes Teacher s Guide

Discovering Math: Data and Graphs Teacher s Guide

Elements of Physics: Energy, Work, and Power Teacher s Guide

Discovering Math: Exploring Geometry Teacher s Guide

Discovering Math: Using and Collecting Data Teacher s Guide

Great Books: Tales of Edgar Allan Poe Teacher s Guide

Great Books: Freud s Interpretation of Dreams Teacher s Guide

Science Investigations: Investigating Astronomy Teacher s Guide

Invention: Recycling: Teacher s Guide

5-Minute Refresher: FRICTION

World War II: Causes and Consequences: Teacher s Guide

The Space Shuttle: Teacher s Guide

Discovering Math: Number Concepts Teacher s Guide

Free Fall: Observing and Analyzing the Free Fall Motion of a Bouncing Ping-Pong Ball and Calculating the Free Fall Acceleration (Teacher s Guide)

parts of an airplane Getting on an Airplane BOX Museum Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate in a Series

Force and Motion: Ramp It Up

Friction and Gravity. Friction. Section 2. The Causes of Friction

Endemic and Introduced Species Lesson Plan

Roanoke Pinball Museum Key Concepts

Reality Matters: Deadly Highs: Teacher s Guide

Elements of Chemistry Acids and Bases Teacher s Guide

Great Books: Walden: Teacher s Guide

Contents. Stage 7. Stage 8. Stage 9. Contents. Key: Enquiry / Extension / Review BOLD PAGE NO. = in this booklet

T E A C H E R S N O T E S

Battling Beyond U.S. Borders

Chapter 4: Newton s Laws: Explaining Motion

ACTIVITY 6: Falling Objects

ESSC 311 Lesson Plan. Force and Motion. Sarah Canfield Evan Gora March 13, 2012

PHYS 117- Exam I. Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

WATCH THIS ICON: View this short clip from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety DVD called Understanding Car Crashes It s basic physics.

Physics: Principles and Applications, 6e Giancoli Chapter 2 Describing Motion: Kinematics in One Dimension

Motion Graphs. Plotting distance against time can tell you a lot about motion. Let's look at the axes:

3rd/4th Grade Science Unit: Forces and Motion. Melissa Gucker TE 804 Spring 2007

A Determination of g, the Acceleration Due to Gravity, from Newton's Laws of Motion

Ancient Rome: Expansion and Conquest: Teacher s Guide

Graphing Motion. Every Picture Tells A Story

Chapter 3 Practice Test

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Resistance in the Mechanical System. Overview

Unit 3 Work and Energy Suggested Time: 25 Hours

What is Energy? 1 45 minutes Energy and You: Energy Picnic Science, Physical Education Engage

Getting to Know Newton

LESSON 17: Balloon Rockets ESTIMATED TIME Setup: 5 10 minutes Procedure: 5 10 minutes

Forces. When an object is pushed or pulled, we say that a force is exerted on it.

Title ID Number Sequence and Duration Age Level Essential Question Learning Objectives. Lead In

NTTI Media-Rich Lesson

WindWise Education. 2 nd. T ransforming the Energy of Wind into Powerful Minds. editi. A Curriculum for Grades 6 12

Planning for Learning - Record of Validation

Science in. Wind WHAT S GOING ON? In the Terminal or in the Airplane. Try This:

Section 15.1 Energy and Its Forms (pages )

Kinetic and Potential Energy

Chapter 3 Falling Objects and Projectile Motion

7.4A/7.4B STUDENT ACTIVITY #1

Balanced & Unbalanced Forces

Design Considerations for Water-Bottle Rockets. The next few pages are provided to help in the design of your water-bottle rocket.

Conceptual Questions: Forces and Newton s Laws

Research question: How does the velocity of the balloon depend on how much air is pumped into the balloon?

Work, Energy and Power

Physics 11 Assignment KEY Dynamics Chapters 4 & 5

Poetry to Play Creating a Dramatic Scene from a Chapter of The Odyssey Lesson Plan

NJ ASK PREP. Investigation: Mathematics. Paper Airplanes & Measurement. Grade 3 Benchmark 3 Geometry & Measurement

Barbie Bungee Jump. High School Physics

Lesson #13 Congruence, Symmetry and Transformations: Translations, Reflections, and Rotations

This Performance Standards include four major components. They are

2After completing this chapter you should be able to

8. As a cart travels around a horizontal circular track, the cart must undergo a change in (1) velocity (3) speed (2) inertia (4) weight

Football Learning Guide for Parents and Educators. Overview

M1. (a) (i) 4.5 allow 1 mark for correct substitution i.e

Physics Section 3.2 Free Fall

Subject: Math Grade Level: 5 Topic: The Metric System Time Allotment: 45 minutes Teaching Date: Day 1

Periodic Table of the Elements Transition Metals II Teacher s Guide

(D) record and organize data using pictures, numbers, and words; and

Greatest Discoveries With Bill Nye: Chemistry Teacher s Guide

H.S. Solar Energy: Solar Powered Cars

Gravity SEN. Answers (in the wrong order) Force Isaac Newton Energy Gravity Apple Powerful engines less Newtons Gravity

Speed, velocity and acceleration

Explore 2: Gathering Momentum

Science Grade 1 Forces and Motion

4 Gravity: A Force of Attraction

Interaction at a Distance

Ancient Greece: Teacher s Guide

review/assessment questions

How Do Paper Airplanes Fly?

CHAPTER 6 WORK AND ENERGY

Review Vocabulary force: a push or a pull. Vocabulary Newton s third law of motion

Explore 3: Crash Test Dummies

1 of 10 7/29/2014 7:28 AM 2 of 10 7/29/2014 7:28 AM

Phases of the Moon. Preliminaries:

Review Chapters 2, 3, 4, 5

GOING FOR A SPIN: Making a Model Steam Turbine

1 of 7 9/5/2009 6:12 PM

5.1 The First Law: The Law of Inertia

High Flying Balloons

Simple machines provide a mechanical advantage that makes our work faster and easier, and they are all around us every day.

Playing with Parachutes

Rubber Band Race Car

Educator Guide to S LAR SYSTEM El Prado, San Diego CA (619)

Transcription:

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide Grade Level: 6-8 Curriculum Focus: Physical Science Lesson Duration: Two class periods Program Description Put students in the driver s seat as they learn how to measure speed and distance. This humorous, high-energy road show highlights the conditions that affect speed, as well as the ways we use the forces of nature in our daily lives. This program includes four short segments: Forces and Motion (6 min.) The Physics of Falling (6 min.) Air Forces (10 min.) The Planet Electric (5 min.) Onscreen Questions What is the relationship between distance, time, and speed? In what ways do air resistance and the shape of an object influence its acceleration and speed? Lesson Plan Student Objectives Review the various forces at work on a falling parachute. Demonstrate these forces by constructing and testing parachutes of different sizes. Materials Forces and Motion video and VCR, or DVD and DVD player Lightweight, plastic kitchen garbage bags (depending on size, 1 or 2 per group) Scissors Rulers 20-inch lengths of light string (12 per group)

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 2 Plastic sandwich bags (3 per group) Raw eggs (3 per group) Procedures 1. Divide the class into several small groups, and distribute the materials. Tell students they are going to build and test three parachutes. 2. Give students these directions to build their egg parachutes: From the garbage bags, cut out three squares: one 10-inch, one 20-inch, and one 30-inch square. Make a parachute out of each square: tie a piece of string to each of the corners; attach the ends of the strings to a plastic sandwich bag. Place a raw egg in each of the sandwich bag 3. Ask students to predict which egg has the best chance of surviving a 10-foot drop and to explain the reasoning behind their predictions. 4. Have the groups test their predictions by dropping all three of their parachutes from a height of 10 feet. 5. When the groups are finished with the experiment, ask students to describe the forces that acted on the parachutes as they fell and how these forces changed the parachutes motion. In what ways did the larger parachutes perform differently than the smaller ones? 6. Review the following with students: Gravity pulled the parachutes downward; air resistance worked as an opposing force to gravity; and the parachutes accelerated until the air resistance equaled the gravity, at which point the parachutes reached terminal speed. Because the parachutes with a larger area fronting the wind created more air resistance than the smaller parachutes, these larger parachutes reached terminal speed earlier. Assessment Use the following three-point rubric to evaluate students work during this lesson. 3 points: Students made predictions based on sound reasoning; carefully performed their experiments; accurately and completely recorded results; presented clear and logical explanations. 2 points: Students made predictions based on sound reasoning; performed their experiments with sufficient care; incompletely recorded results; presented acceptable explanations. 1 point: Students made predictions based on guesswork; performed their experiments with insufficient care; incompletely or inaccurately recorded results; presented sketchy explanations.

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 3 Vocabulary accelerate Definition: To move faster or gain speed Context: A car will accelerate when the forces propelling it forward are stronger than the forces attempting to slow it down. gradient Definition: Change in the value of a quantity (such as speed, temperature, or pressure) with change in a given variable, and especially per unit distance, in a specified direction Context: On a distance-versus-time graph for a moving object, the gradient is equal to the speed of the object. graph Definition: A diagram that represents the variation of a variable in comparison with that of one or more other variables Context: The motion of a car can be represented on a graph with position plotted on the y-axis and time on the x-axis. terminal speed Definition: The speed at which the downward pull of gravity is balanced by the equal and upward opposing force of air resistance for a falling object Context: Not long after she jumped out of the airplane, the skydiver reached her terminal speed. Academic Standards National Academy of Sciences The National Science Education Standards provide guidelines for teaching science as well as a coherent vision of what it means to be scientifically literate for students in grades K-12. To view the standards, visit http://books.nap.edu. This lesson plan addresses the following science standard: Physical Science: Motions and forces Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL) McREL s Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education addresses 14 content areas. To view the standards and benchmarks, visit http://www.mcrel.org/. This lesson plan addresses the following national standards: Science Physical Sciences: Understands forces and motion Language Arts Viewing: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 4 Support Materials Develop custom worksheets, educational puzzles, online quizzes, and more with the free teaching tools offered on the Discoveryschool.com Web site. Create and print support materials, or save them to a Custom Classroom account for future use. To learn more, visit http://school.discovery.com/teachingtools/teachingtools.html DVD Content This program is available in an interactive DVD format. The following information and activities are specific to the DVD version. How To Use the DVD The DVD starting screen has the following options: Play Video This plays the video from start to finish. There are no programmed stops, except by using a remote control. With a computer, depending on the particular software player, a pause button is included with the other video controls. Video Index Here the video is divided into four parts (see below), indicated by video thumbnail icons. Watching all parts in sequence is similar to watching the video from start to finish. Brief descriptions and total running times are noted for each part. To play a particular segment, press Enter on the remote for TV playback; on a computer, click once to highlight a thumbnail and read the accompanying text description and click again to start the video. Curriculum Units These are specially edited video segments pulled from different sections of the video (see below). These nonlinear segments align with key ideas in the unit of instruction. They include onscreen pre- and post-viewing questions, reproduced below in this Teacher s Guide. Total running times for these segments are noted. To play a particular segment, press Enter on the TV remote or click once on the Curriculum Unit title on a computer. Standards Link Selecting this option displays a single screen that lists the national academic standards the video addresses. Teacher Resources This screen gives the technical support number and Web site address. Video Index I. Forces and Motion (6 min.) Take a test drive in a Rolls Royce, a sports car, and on a motorcycle as we learn how to calculate and graph speed, acceleration, and stopping distance.

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 5 II. The Physics of Falling (6 min.) What do height, speed, and air resistance have to do with one another when you are falling through the air? Go bungee jumping with Adrian Nicholas and find out! III. Air Forces (10 min.) Bicyclists, skydivers, and airplane pilots all rely on the same thing forces of motion. Learn how friction, gravity, and other forces interact. IV. The Planet Electric (5 min.) Electrical energy is always around us, whether we see it or not. Discover some of the ways in which we harness this energy to use in our daily lives. Curriculum Units 1. Graphing Speed Q: How do forces of nature affect you in your daily life? Q: What is constant speed? A: It s when an object in motion continues to stay in motion without accelerating or decelerating. On a graph, constant speed appears as a straight line. 2. Acceleration and Deceleration Q: What is the connection between speed and acceleration? A: Speed tells you how fast an object is traveling. Acceleration shows exactly how fast an object s speed is changing. Q: Which is more important to you, the ability to reach a faster speed or a higher rate of acceleration? 3. Measuring Jumps Q: What does falling feel like? Q: What does the height of a jump have to do with the speed of a fall? A: The greater the height, the more speed the falling object picks up. The top speed of someone falling from a height of five feet will be less than the top speed of someone falling from 10 feet.

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 6 4. Forward and Backward Forces Q: Approximately how fast can you ride a bicycle for a sustained amount of time? Q: What are the counter forces that attempt to push a moving bicycle backwards? A: Friction between the tires and the track, friction between moving parts on the bike, and air resistance as the cyclist continues to push along against the force of the air. 5. Changing Speeds Q: How do you maintain a steady speed when riding a bicycle? A: You have to keep both forward and counter forces in balance. If you stop applying forward force your bike slows down; too much forward force and your bike speeds up. Q: What happens to counter forces when greater forward force is applied? A: The greater forward force overcomes the counter forces and acceleration occurs. As the forward force increases, the counter forces of friction and air resistance also increase, although at a lower rate. Eventually, the forces rebalance and a constant speed is again achieved. 6. Skydiving and Gravity Q: When do you most feel the effects of gravity? Q: Why do skydivers use parachutes? A: Parachutes provide greater air resistance. Skydivers use this air resistance to balance the force of gravity and slow their fall, allowing them to hit the ground at a reasonable speed. 7. Using Lift Q: Why don t airplanes fall out of the sky? Q: How does an airplane create lift? A: Airplane wings are curved on top and flat on the bottom. Air traveling over the top of the wing moves faster, creating less pressure than the air below the wing. The difference in pressure lifts the plane from the ground.

Forces and Motion: Teacher s Guide 7 8. Harnessing Electricity Q: In what ways do we use electricity? Q: What are some ways to generate electrical energy? A: Electricity can be generated from fossil fuels, moving water, solar power, wind power, nuclear power, and geothermal energy.