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Goals
and Tips
Tips
and Suggestions
For
earlier grades, give students the selected set of events or have
them create pictures for the events provided.
The
mathematics used to determine a relative date on the time line can
be done as a class rather than as an individual activity. However,
encourage students in later grades to do the math and use division
and remainders to identify the actual date or time for particular
events. You can add additional events for later grades corresponding
to material already covered in class.
Present
the activities as hall displays. Encourage your students to think
about how they could explain the model calendar to others. One way
is to annotate each event and include what evidence scientists have
to support their estimates. For example, the age of the solar system
is based on the radioactive dating of meteorites and moon rocks.
Have
students research a particular era on the model calendar and develop
a more detailed "inset" or "zoom-in" view. For example, the age
of the dinosaurs from 200+million years ago could be broken into
specific geological periods (Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous, etc.).
Preparation
Materials
For
the classroom demonstration you need:
1.
Twelve monthly calendars
2.
Clothesline and clothespins (optional - to string the calendar across
the classroom)
3.
Cosmic Cards for each major event with
the date of the event written on the back (covered with a piece
of paper).
Each
student group will need:
1.
Cosmic Calendar handout
2.
Large sheet of construction paper
3.
Glue
4.
Scissors
5.
Optional: Cosmic Spinner
Extending
the Activity
1.
Have younger students (third to fifth graders) assemble and decorate
the Cosmic Spinner. They can
make additional bottom disks with different events and dates.
2.
Have students design their own cosmic timelines in their notebooks
and include information and scale drawings.
3.
Have students work in groups to design mobiles using hangers and
string.
4.
Designate an entire hall in the school as a cosmic timeline. Have
students create drawings and captions to describe the major events
and hang these along the time line. Have one group make a poster
to explain the timeline concept to other students.
Extensions
for Older Students (Grades 7-9)
1.
After students have been introduced to the idea of compressing the
events since the Big Bang into a single year, have the students
brainstorm about some of the most important events that happened
between the Big Bang and now.
2.
Have students do library research to determine how long ago the
various events they have selected happened. Each student or group
can be responsible for a manageable number of events to research.
If time is short, you may need to provide the times associated with
the major events in cosmic history.
3.
Have students calculate where in the cosmic calendar year the various
events will be placed. To do this, the students need to know the
age of the universe. You might have students research this, or simply
use 15 billion years (the value Sagan uses in his book). Note that
this is currently under debate as new data comes in from the Hubble
Space Telescope and other instruments. You can print out the Cosmic
Calendar Math worksheet to help students set up the equations
for this calculation.
Online
resources:
Basic
cosmology primer from NASA.
A Solar
System scale model activity
The Earth as a Peppercorn
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