SYNOPSIS
This page provides detailed (but summarised) references, background information and practical examples that teachers should review before programming/teaching Heat for Stage 2. This includes…
While teaching we want to collect evidence and data as to how the students are understanding the material. We then use that evidence to form or change what we do next. This process is commonly referred to as Formative Assessment.
Formative assessment can take many shapes, including:
Formative assessment is NOT designed to obtain a score for entry into a grade-book.
While teaching we want to collect evidence and data as to how the students are understanding the material. We then use that evidence to form or change what we do next.
A well recognised, research-based diagnostic tool (QUIZ) is available to aid formative assessment. At the top of each QUIZ, you will see something like:
THIS IS A QUIZ - IT IS NOT A TEST It is to help you find & understand correct answers, not mark you down for incorrect answers!
As a bonus, the evidence from 'pre' versus 'post' quiz scores provides an easy way for teachers to gain authentic comments for student reports.
To get started, all teachers and students should first complete the HEAT QUIZ - before commencing any teaching/learning activities.
QUIZ: Please complete the on-line THE HEAT QUIZ now.
This quiz should be completed on commencement of the course and may be completed one or more times for pre and post-test use.
Getting the 'correct' answers is unimportant - It is only a diagnostic tool to test for understanding.
INTRODUCTION:
This unit ( Heat - ST2 2018) is designed to teach the core principals and to ensure students gain an understanding of heat at the deepest level. It is not an easy topic and it is not easy to teach.
Taking the harder path is justified by the belief that it is better to teach something that is difficult and correct than something that is easier but incorrect.
NOTE: Students have difficulty distinguishing between heat and temperature.
Nearly all text books which deal with heat offer different explanations of the term. For example, they say ‘heat is energy’, ‘heat is a form of energy’, ‘heat comes from sun’, ‘heat is internal energy’, etc.
These well-meaning but varied, imprecise and non-scientific explanations tend to create confusion.
SCIENCE:
LITERACY:
EXAMPLE DESIGN + ASSESSMENT TASK:
CONCEPTS:
Some example questions based on common misconceptions:
Students will be asked to explain their current thoughts about how many different types of energy can be converted into heat energy. For example, energy conversion via:
Following these discussions, students are challenged by hands-on activities designed to allow them to discover answers that will assist them overcome common, a-priori misconceptions about heat and temperature.
The on-line THE HEAT QUIZ should be completed on commencement of the course and may be completed one or more times for pre and post-test use.
The teacher/facilitator will explain that students will work together in groups to create, carry out, document and discuss a number of practical experiments.
Students may use supplementary on-line resources to experiment with heat concepts using inter-active simulations
It is extremely important that students come up with their own solutions and answers.
Teacher(s)/facilitator(s) MUST NOT provide prescriptive explanations, strategies or answers during practical activities. Students are encouraged to work collaboratively to come up with their own theories and solutions.
Students must be given continuous opportunities/reminders to compare 'what I used to think' with 'what I think now'
When something feels hot to you, the molecules in that something are moving very fast. When something feels cool to you, the molecules in that object aren’t moving quite so fast. Believe it or not, your body perceives how fast molecules are moving by how hot or cold something feels.
Your body has a variety of ways (senses) to detect energy.
What a magnificent energy sensing instrument you are!
See how heat can travel via conduction, convection, radiation
For an explicit, detailed explanation of heat and temperature, visit The Physics Classroom - 1)
HINTS
Video 1. Bill Nye - Heat (2min)
Imagine that you are standing by a highway , measuring the speed of passing vehicles. The average speed (average amount of movement) of all of the vehicles would be like temperature the average amount that all of the molecules are moving. If all of the vehicles were to crash into a concrete wall at the end of the freeway, then the total amount of energy transferred from the trucks into the wall as a result of all of those collisions would be more like the amount of heat. For more (scientific) detail, see Heat - The Physics Classroom
In thermodynamics, heat is a type of energy transfer in which energy flows from a warmer substance or object to a colder one. It can be defined as the total amount of transferred energy excluding any macroscopic work that was done and any transfer of part of the object itself. 2)
Video 1. Eureka - Heat Versus Temperature
The on-line HEAT QUIZ should be completed on commencement of the course and may be completed one or more times for pre and post-test use.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=327&v=HnqbQVPKldk