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ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT TEACHING HEAT, IN 30 SECONDS

SYNOPSIS

This page summarises;

  1. All you need to know about the core scientific concepts about HEAT.
  2. A number of short videos to model how misconceptions can be used in teaching.
  3. Five principles to encourage scientific thinking.
  4. Links to the longest study undertaken in teaching for scientific thinking rather than memorisation of facts

HEAT - IN 30 SECONDS

Why teaching/learning should focus on deep understanding rather than facts

  • If your teaching/learning focuses on an understanding of the principles, the rest is easy.
  • All that you need to understand about the current scientific view about heat is….

The universe is made up of matter and energy.

  • Matter is made up of atoms and molecules (groupings of atoms).
  • Energy causes the atoms and molecules to always be in motion - either bumping into each other or vibrating back and forth.
    • The motion of atoms and molecules creates a form of energy called heat or thermal energy which is present in all matter. Even in the coldest voids of space, matter still has a very small but still measurable amount of heat energy.
    • Energy can take on many forms and can change from one form to another.

Heat can be a chemical or physical phenomena, but all chemical phenomena ultimately reduce to physical phenomena (physics)

  • Thermal energy itself can cause a substance to heat up, simply by increasing the speed of its molecules. 1)

In summary, put energy into a system and it heats up, take energy away and it cools.

For example, when we are cold, we can jump up and down to get warmer. If we stop moving, we cool down.

A number of practical teaching/learning resources are available in this wiki to help you teach/learn heat concepts. Including:


SO, IF IT'S THAT EASY, WHY START WITH A MISCONCEPTION?

All of the evidence shown that children bring strong, pre-existing, personal concepts about the physical world with them when they start school.

Despite being contrary to modern scientific understanding, studies show that, without intervention, these misconceptions persist throughout our lives. 2)

The content of the HEAT unit draws primarily on research by Dr Derek Muller (Sydney University) 3) and the Private Universe Project in Science - a collaboration between multiple research institutions, including Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, MIT, Rutgers SUNJ and Annenberg Media 4) and UC Berkely 5)

Video: Dr Derek Muller (USyd) - How To Teach Science in the Internet Age (8min)

  • IF UNABLE TO ACCESS YOUTUBE VIDEO, TRY:Viewpure

By challenging 'intuitive' scientific misconceptions and instead focusing on deep, 'difficult' scientific principles, even at a very young age, research shows that students make huge gains in both short-term and lifetime understanding of scientific concepts, and in an ability to generalise their problem solving and creative abilities.

“It is safer to accept any chance that offers itself, and extemporize a procedure to fit it, than to get a good plan matured, and wait for a chance of using it.” - Thomas Hardy


WHAT IS HEAT

Many students when asked what heat is, can not go beyond a statement “Heat is a form of energy”.

Table 1. Misconception-based discussion topics for deeper understanding about heat and temperature:

  1. There are two types of heat, hot and cold (cold heat and hot heat)?
  2. Heat is a material substance like air or steam?
  3. Heat is a form of energy?
  4. Heat is hot, but temperature can be cold or hot?
  5. Some substances are naturally colder than others?
  6. Heat and cold are opposite and both are fluid materials?
  7. The temperature of an object is related to its size?
  8. If two liquids are mixed, temperature of the mixture is the sum of both temperatures?
  9. There is no difference between heat and temperature (heat and temperature are the same)?
  10. Temperature will change during melting or boiling?
  11. Heat transfer starts and does not stop at once when the temperature equalised?
  12. Air only cools other bodies if they are surrounded by air?
  13. Temperature is the amount of heat?
  14. If two bodies are at the same temperature they have the same energy or heat?
  15. Heat enters and leaves different materials with different ease?
  16. Different materials attract heat or retain heat differently?
  17. Objects at room temperature that feel cold have different temperatures?
  18. Objects could have a certain quantity of heat in them?
  19. Objects could get hotter than their surroundings?
  20. The temperature of water could exceed the boiling point?
  21. Constant heat means no heat exchange possible?
  22. Heat is a ‘state quantity’ (something in a body)?
  23. Metals attract, hold, or absorb cold?
  24. Conductors conduct heat more slowly than insulators?
  25. Insulators conduct heat fast and heat leaves so insulators don’t feel hot?
  26. Insulators absorb/trap heat Wool warms things?
  27. Heat is attracted by the cold body until heat and cold have neutralised?
  28. Heat is not an 'extensive' quantity, but an 'intensive' quantity?


HOW TO TEACH SCIENCE FOR AUTHENTIC UNDERSTANDING

Start by finding out what students really think, not just what they say

Every teaching activity is explicitly linked to the NESA NSW K-10 Curriculum framework, but instead of launching straight into instruction, each activity starts with the examination of a misconception. This questioning is intended to uncover the existing conceptual ideas that students/teachers bring to the classroom at the start of the teaching process.

We use misconceptions only as a path to discover and challenge student/teachers scientific misconceptions. To then leverage their natural curiosity and interest in science by helping them to devise their own rigorous way of way of representing,, investigating, understanding and solving authentic scientific problems.


Five principles to encourage scientific thinking:

  1. Start with a question (ideally, a misconception).
  2. Allow students time to struggle (ensure students invest effort)
  3. The teacher is not the answer key (be less helpful - do not give answers / strategies)
  4. Say 'yes' to student ideas ('do not say 'correct' or 'wrong' - what if 2 + 2 = 12, let's explore the consequences?)
  5. Pose problems (The formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution - Albert Einstein)

Video: Scientific Thinking of Children (2min)

  • IF UNABLE TO ACCESS YOUTUBE VIDEO, TRY:Viewpure

The activities in this wiki are intended to help uncover, challenge and stimulate development of each student's own mathematical ideas and strategies; To help make their understanding and thinking more visible and powerful through the collaboration and communication required to convince others as they develop their solution(s) to each problem.

The end-goal of each activity is to encourage a deep understanding and consequent ability to generalise strategies to solve real-world problems in a real-world context.

  • Students take 'ownership' of each problem.
  • It is essential that teachers do not offer strategies or solutions, but students are encouraged to copy, discuss, share their own strategies and solutions and convince their peers.
  • There are no 'right/wrong' strategies and/or 'right/wrong' answers but students must convince the teacher/others by providing a convincing arguments (proof).

Video: Anyhow, All of this is way too hard for my kids! (2min)

  • IF UNABLE TO ACCESS YOUTUBE VIDEO, TRY:Viewpure

The Private Universe Project in Science

Focusing on the development and teaching of K-12 science education, this is the longest evidence-based study of its type ever undertaken.

There are on-line videos, workshop guides and related resources. 6).

The Private Universe Project in Science demonstrates and honours the power and sophistication of these ideas, and explores how science teaching can be structured to resonate with children's sophisticated thinking.

The project resources and videos offer a rare opportunity to follow the development of students throughout grades 1-12, and to observe teachers in the process of redefining what science is for themselves and for their students. 7) 8)

References

 
 
2018/heat/introduction/home.txt · Last modified: 25/06/2019/ 19:46 by 127.0.0.1