Title: TE 407, Sections 3 and 4: Science
1TE 407, Sections 3 and 4 Science
- Charles (Andy) Anderson
- Gail Richmond
- Steve Tuckey
- Brett Merritt
- Dipendra Subedi
2Questions to Answer
- What will happen when the Alka-Seltzer drops into
the water? - The bag will rise
- The bag will not go up or down
- The bag will sink
- Why will that happen?
3Most Common Answer from High School Students
- The bag will rise
- Some of the solid Alka-Seltzer is converted to a
gas, and gases are lighter than solids - What do you think of this answer?
4What evidence supports the common student answer?
- Gases are lighter
- Solids and liquids fall to the ground gases
dont - Some gases make things float
- Air makes things float in water
- Helium and hot air rise
5What evidence supports the common student answer?
- Mass can change
- Most properties of substances can change without
having to go anywhere - Temperature
- Volume
- Shape
- Color
- Mass is like those other properties
- People gain and lose weight
- Trees grow from seeds
- Things burn up
- Liquids evaporate
6How do people change their minds?
- Arguments from authority
- Learn these facts
- They are right and you are wrong
- Arguments from evidence
- My theory predicts and explains what we observe
in the world better than your theory
7What are the arguments from evidence?
- Gases have mass
- Mass is conserved
8A Couple of Things to Notice about Tuesdays
Discussion
- Sharing your own ideas is scary--especially if
you are used to science classes where all that
counts is the right answer. (So thanks for being
willing.) - Practicing right answers that consist of a word
or a number or the right multiple choice doesnt
completely prepare you to teach the content - Students ideas are interesting.
9Big Problem for Science Teaching (Teaching for
Understanding)
- How do we get students to believe and use
scientific theories that contradict lived
experience?
10Another Big Problem for Science Teaching
(Teaching for Motivation)
- How do we get students to make the effort it
takes to learn with understanding?
11Thursday Properties of Substances
- Changing from heaviness and amount to mass,
volume, and density
12Each Group of 4 Candidates Needs
- 5 vials
- Cups of each color of solution
- Waste cup
- 4 droppers
- 4 soda straws
13Key Questions about Colored Solutions
- What stacks of solutions are possible?
- Are any stacks impossible?
- Is it possible to make different stacks by
different techniques? - In the vials, vs. droppers, vs. soda straws
- By using different amounts of liquid
- Why?
- How is this activity connected with the
Alka-Seltzer demonstration?
14Comparing Student and Scientific Ideas about Mass
and Density
- Student ideas Heaviness as a property of matter
- Objects and materials can be light or heavy
- Balance scales and floating/sinking both compare
heaviness - Qualitative scientific ideas Mass and density as
properties of matter - Mass (extensive) is a property of objects
- Density (intensive) is a property of materials
- Balance scales compare mass
- Floating and sinking compare density
- Quantitative scientific ideas
- Spring scales and balances measure mass (weight)
- D M/V Weighing measured volumes of substances
15Question Do the colored solutions activities
lead you to change your prediction for the
Alka-Seltzer demonstration?
16Tuesday Wrapping up Alka-Seltzer and Colored
Solutions
17How do people change their minds?
- Arguments from authority
- Learn these facts
- They are right and you are wrong
- Arguments from evidence
- My theory predicts and explains what we observe
in the world better than your theory
18Evidence-based Arguments that Floating and
Sinking Depend on Density, Not Weight
- Floating heavier substances on top of lighter
ones (e.g., lots of red on top of a little green,
glacier on top of a layer of water) - Comparing different amounts of more and less
dense substances - Comparing equal amounts of more and less dense
substances - Quantitative scientific relationship D m/v
19Experiences, Patterns, and Explanations
20Question Do the colored solutions activities
lead you to change your prediction for the
Alka-Seltzer demonstration?
- Is this a demonstration about MASS (qualitatively
compared with balances) or about DENSITY
(qualitatively compared by floating and sinking)
21Experiences, Patterns, and Explanations for
Colored Solutions
22Relating Properties of Substances to Forces
- How do we understand the relationship between
forces (which we can measure and detect) and mass
(which we cannot measure or detect)
23Measuring or Comparing Mass
- Spring scale measures force
- Balance compares forces (weights)
24Comparing Density
- Qualitative pattern less dense materials float
in more dense materials - Qualitative explanation Why?
- One explanation
- Balance of forces
- Force pressure x area
- Compare pressure on top and bottom of submerged
object or fluid
25Scientific Quantitative Patterns Archimedes
Principle
- What is the size of the buoyant force?
- Buoyant force weight of displaced fluid
- Buoyant force density of displaced fluid x
volume of object - Three key variables
- weight of object ( volume x density of object)
- density of displaced fluid
- volume of object
26Questions to Answer
- What will happen when the Alka-Seltzer drops into
the water? - The bag will rise
- The bag will not go up or down
- The bag will sink
- Why will that happen?
- What predictions would you expect students to
make, and why?
27Notes for Science Teachers
- Being articulate about the answers to the why
questions is important - Being able to answer the third question is as
important as being able to answer the first two - Arguments from evidence are important
- Evidence has to be convincing to STUDENTS
- Look for new experiences that will help them to
see new patterns (incorporating both old and new
experiences)
28Investigating Buoyant Forces on Objects Denser
than the Fluid
- Using a balance to compensate for extra weight
- How can we change the three key variables
individually? - Density of fluid
- Weight of object
- Volume of object
- These are experiments that support arguments from
evidence
29Conservation of Mass in Air
- When a solid or liquid turns into a gas in air.
- What happens to the mass?
- What happens to the weight?
- What happens to the measured weight?
30Instructional Representation for Buoyancy
31Challenges for Student Understanding
- Properties of materials
- Conservation of mass in changes involving gases
- Confusion of weight/mass and density heaviness
- Colored solutions
- Weighing colored solutions
- Density column
- Confusion of weight/mass and volume amount
- Displacement volume
- Forces on materials and measuring weight in fluid
media - Explanations for floating and sinking
- Balance between buoyant force and weight
- Size of each force density x volume
- Buoyant forces on objects denser than the medium
- Washer demochanging medium
- Alka-Seltzer demochanging volume
- Removing water demochanging weight