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by
Andrew Fraknoi (Foothill College & A.S.P.)
©
copyright 2000 Project ASTRO, Astronomical Society of the Pacific,
390 Ashton Ave., San Francisco, CA 94112
Reproduction of any kind without express written permission is forbidden.
Contact the author at: fraknoiandrew {at} fhda.edu
This
resource list includes a small selection of especially effective
astronomy activities designed for K-12 classes and science projects.
We focus on those activities that are either hands-on, or at least
encourage students to think for themselves, and not merely follow
a cookbook recipe or fill in a few blanks. Each listing has a brief
summary and comments; note that these comments are the opinion of
the list's compiler and are not the "official policy" of Project
ASTRO or the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Another person
in astronomy education may have selected a different list of activities
and may have had different things to say about them. Additions or
suggestions for future editions of this list are most welcome.
The
Web is now a huge, and mostly unorganized, repository of information,
and we make no claim that our list is complete. Instead, we simply
hope that it can introduce you to the wide range of organizations
and institutions that are working to put astronomy activities on
the web, and to give you leads for activities that contain reasonable
astronomy and emphasize hands-on, inquiry-based learning.
Several
large collections of astronomy activities on the Web (mostly sponsored
by NASA) that can be printed out as entire books are summarized
in the last section.
Classification:
- e
= elementary
- m
= middle school
- h
= high school
- a
= any grade
Table
of Contents:
1.
General Astronomy
2. Moon Phases and Eclipses
3. The Seasons and the Sun in
the Sky
4. Constellations and Sky Observing
5. The Scale of the Solar System
6. Planets and Satellites: General
7. Planets and Satellites: Specific
Worlds
8. Comets, Asteroids, Meteors,
and Meteorites
9. The Sun
10. Stars and Stellar Evolution
11. Galaxies
12. Cosmology
13. Light and Color
14. Telescopes, Observing, and Instrumentation
15. The Universe at Many Wavelengths
16. The Search for Life Elsewhere
17. Debunking Pseudo-science
18. Interdisciplinary Approaches to
Astronomy
19. Appendix: Some Activity Books
That Can be Printed Out
General
Astronomy
Astronomy
in the Marketplace:
In
this classic activity by Dennis Schatz, groups of students are asked
to come up with a list of astronomical terms that are used in business
and commerce, such as Saturn cars, and Mars candy bars. You must
scroll down past the main article to get to the activity. [a]
Cosmic
Calendar:
Students
learn to scale the history of the universe since the big bang to
a one-year calendar, noting where significant events (such as the
formation of the Earth or the rise of humans) would fall in that
year. Based on a suggestion by Carl Sagan. [m,h]
Educator's
Guide to Spotting Satellites:
While
satellite tracking is not really astronomy, we like the way this
site provides background information and links to other sites and
databases to help beginners get started in finding the Shuttle and
satellites in the night-time sky. [m,h]
How
Would You Spend the Government's Money:
Short
exercise by Ken Edgett comparing how students would suggest dividing
up the main categories of the federal budget with reality. Good
launch-pad for discussions of NASA or NSF funding and whether our
society can afford large science programs.
Image
Really Works!:
Astronomer
Elizabeth Roettger introduces and gives basic instructions for the
use of a free program called Image, for image processing. She suggests
both terrestrial and celestial images to play with and demonstrates
a few simple techniques. [h]
Picture
an Astronomer:
Students
are asked to imagine an astronomer and then to draw a picture. No
clues are given about the astronomer's race, sex, or age. Students
discuss why they drew the pictures they drew and why they have the
mental images of scientists that they have. [a]
Stellar
Travel Times:
Students
learn to understand the concept of a light year by calculating distances
to the stars in other units, such as bike years, car years, and
Space Shuttle years. Part of the SETI Institute Life in the Universe
curriculum. [m,h]
table
of contents
Moon
Phases and Eclipses
Birthday
Moons:
Students
use web-based lunar-phase displays to find the phase of the Moon
for their birthday this year and in other years. They then place
their birthday moon in the context of the pattern of moon phases.
Good beginning activity for younger students, but should be followed
by encouraging students to observe the Moon in the real sky, not
just the computer. [e]
table
of contents
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