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TE 407, Sections 3 and 4: Science

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The bag will rise ... Air makes things float in water. Helium and hot air rise ... Conservation of Mass in Air. When a solid or liquid turns into a gas in air. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TE 407, Sections 3 and 4: Science


1
TE 407, Sections 3 and 4 Science
  • Charles (Andy) Anderson
  • Gail Richmond
  • Steve Tuckey
  • Brett Merritt
  • Dipendra Subedi

2
Questions 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?

3
Most 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?

4
What 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

5
What 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

6
How 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

7
What are the arguments from evidence?
  • Gases have mass
  • Mass is conserved

8
A 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.

9
Big Problem for Science Teaching (Teaching for
Understanding)
  • How do we get students to believe and use
    scientific theories that contradict lived
    experience?

10
Another Big Problem for Science Teaching
(Teaching for Motivation)
  • How do we get students to make the effort it
    takes to learn with understanding?

11
Thursday Properties of Substances
  • Changing from heaviness and amount to mass,
    volume, and density

12
Each Group of 4 Candidates Needs
  • 5 vials
  • Cups of each color of solution
  • Waste cup
  • 4 droppers
  • 4 soda straws

13
Key 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?

14
Comparing 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

15
Question Do the colored solutions activities
lead you to change your prediction for the
Alka-Seltzer demonstration?
16
Tuesday Wrapping up Alka-Seltzer and Colored
Solutions
17
How 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

18
Evidence-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

19
Experiences, Patterns, and Explanations
20
Question 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)

21
Experiences, Patterns, and Explanations for
Colored Solutions
22
Relating 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)

23
Measuring or Comparing Mass
  • Spring scale measures force
  • Balance compares forces (weights)

24
Comparing 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

25
Scientific 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

26
Questions 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?

27
Notes 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)

28
Investigating 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

29
Conservation 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?

30
Instructional Representation for Buoyancy
31
Challenges 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
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