Author Archive

Making rays of light for optics experiments

In optics experiments, you often need to create lines of light. You can do this with light boxes, but they’re expensive, and tend to have too many rays to be useful. Laser light boxes are great, but again, spendy.
One teacher recommends using laser levels. These are the things made to help you […]

Posted in Topics: Classroom Activities

Add a Comment »

Book: Teaching Physics with the Physics Suite

If you’re a teacher — of physics, or any other physical science — and haven’t yet picked up a copy of Edward Redish’s Teaching Physics with the Physics Suite , I’m making a bid right now that you do so.
I finally read it — really read it — instead of just browsing through a chapter […]

Posted in Topics: Educational change, How People Learn, Physics

Add a Comment »

Video resources for teaching

I feel like I keep posting these, I should compile them.
Currki : Currki, an open source website for educational materials k-12 has over 80,000 members who are educators and teachers.
TeacherTube TeacherTube is a video sharing website based on YouTube. It is designed to allow those in the educational industry, particularly teachers, to share […]

Posted in Topics: Resources & Events

Add a Comment »

Myth: The astronauts didn’t float away because they had heavy boots

 
Below I am reposting a rather long piece taken verbatim from the website of Steve Detweiler who just says that it’s an “amusing anecdote from a friend of mine.” So, I’m not sure of the veracity of the story, and some claim that it’s an urban legend. It may well be. But […]

Posted in Topics: How People Learn, Physics, Science Myths

Add a Comment »

Cheat sheets and blogs for science teachers

A couple links that look very helpful.
100 excellent blogs for science teachers (which includes yours truly!)
Includes a bunch of teacher blogs (which seems like a great way to get some online mentorship if you’re all alone), and subject-area blogs (like physics or biology). A very useful list.
100 cheat sheets for K12 teachers
The sections on […]

Posted in Topics: Resources & Events

Add a Comment »

Video footage of teaching

Here are a few collections of videos of science teaching and learning — useful for learning how to teach.
Annenberg:
http://www.learner.org/resources/series90.html
http://www.learner.org/resources/series126.html
TIMSS
http://nces.ed.gov/timss/video.asp

Posted in Topics: Pedagogy

Add a Comment »

Make a yummy fish mummy

Ok, it probably wouldn’t be very yummy, but here’s another hands-on activity you can use that’s rather Halloween-like. Called “Make a ‘mummy’”, this Exploratorium activity is a great way to demonstrate how mummification works, by drying out the tissue in a fish using baking soda. Egyptians used a specific type of salt to […]

Posted in Topics: Classroom Activities

Add a Comment »

Science activities for Halloween!

With halloween fast approaching, it’s time to take advantage of a frivolous holiday to do some fun science stuff.
No post about Halloween would be complete without a reference to the Grossology site. Scroll down for “lab activities”: This gets high marks from one teacher who says, “It has the simpliest of the slimey […]

Posted in Topics: Classroom Activities

Add a Comment »

Student activity with a simple centrifuge

Got a unit on circular motion? You may want to use an activity with a centrifuge, to show how it separates substances of different densities. Even if you’ve got a commercial centrifuge, how might you instead do a hands-on activity to show the same thing?
Try mixing red colored sugar in cooking oil in […]

Posted in Topics: Classroom Activities

Add a Comment »

Creating stalagmites in your freezer

Have you ever had this unusual occurrence in your freezer? This one observant science teacher says:
We had a single stalagtite form from one cube in an ice cube tray. It rose about an inch, no more than an eighth of an inch in diameter, and tapering to a sharp point. How did that […]

Posted in Topics: Weird science tricks

Add a Comment »