One of the nice things about living in Denver is the proximity of several companies that house rocket scientists. Even better is when rocket scientists have a conference and invite teachers! I was fortunate to attend the AIAA Science Conference in 2009, amassing a whole new set of teaching tools to help kids get into Space-figuratively and, who knows, literally. Once again, I was jazzed by the possibilities I could include in my space unit.
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Space Critter from Ganymede, I think... :) |
To put us in the mood each day, I downloaded the themes from Star Wars, Star Trek, Stargate SG-1, Back to the Future and Classical Gas and played them at the beginning of our work sessions. I, also, used them as a transition/clean up signal. They loved it.
Students were given a balloon representing his/her astronaut. I also had different materials available to create space suits. When they felt their astronauts were “safe”, we traveled to the moon (the gym). From a very high ladder, I released a “micro-meterorite (nail hole punch) down a PVC pipe on to the unsuspecting “astronaut” at the bottom. Oh, the carnage. Very few survived. The history of spacesuits, of course, had to become one of the Symposium categories.
Space aliens was another fun option. Back in the day, when there was time to expand topics a bit more, we made the paper maché space aliens. The assignment was to create an alien that would be able to survive the harsh living conditions on whichever of Jupiter’s moons you were on. They had to name their creature and explain how it was adapted to eat, breathe, drink, protect himself- everything a creature on our planet would have to do to survive. For this symposium, the work would be done at home with a class brainstorming session of what they could use. They would add a written piece describing their discovery.
Wanting to immerse them in space, I chose several books for reading groups with a space theme, using A Wrinkle in Time as my read aloud. Ender's Game and Transall Saga were a couple choices used, but any science fiction or mythology book would work well.
NASA has an excellent teacher page on their website. I completely believe events such as Space Symposium are what get kids interested in learning. It definitely tapped into their creativity!
4/19/13 Oh my gosh! I just saw this on YouTube and had to add it to this post. Two high school girls wanted to know what would happen when a soaking wet wash cloth was wrung out in space. The astronauts on the International Space Station performed the experiment. Take a look to see what happens. Show it to your kids, but have them guess what they think would happen before they watch. Very cool!
4/19/13 Oh my gosh! I just saw this on YouTube and had to add it to this post. Two high school girls wanted to know what would happen when a soaking wet wash cloth was wrung out in space. The astronauts on the International Space Station performed the experiment. Take a look to see what happens. Show it to your kids, but have them guess what they think would happen before they watch. Very cool!
"The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it."
Neil deGrasse Tyson