shpe foundation shpe jr. chapter curriculum hands-on activity training teachengineering hands-on...

14
SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: *Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital Library: teachengineering.org http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Seifenblasen.jpg

Upload: cristian-hutchcraft

Post on 29-Mar-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

SHPE FoundationSHPE Jr. Chapter

CurriculumHands-on Activity Training

TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity:

*Surface Tension Lab

TeachEngineering Digital Library:teachengineering.org

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Seifenblasen.jpg

Page 2: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

TeachEngineering Digital Library

• The TeachEngineering digital library provides free, teacher-tested, standards-based engineering content for K-12 teachers to use in science and math classrooms.

• Engineering lessons connect real-world experiences with curricular content already taught in K-12 classrooms.

• Mapped to educational content standards, TeachEngineering's comprehensive curricula are hands-on, inexpensive, and relevant to children's daily lives.

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

http://www.teachengineering.org

Page 3: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

General Advice• Be prepared! Do each activity beforehand

• Make sure all materials are available

• Keep students on task

• Follow the time frame

• Be flexible

• Have Fun!!

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Giant.bubble.jpg

Page 4: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

• Surface tension in soap bubbles• Engineering focus:

o Engineering Analysis • Develop a test with quantitative measurements

o Engineering Design Cycle: • Design, Test, Evaluate Results, Redesign, Retest, etc.

• Learning objectives:o Develop a procedure to test soap bubbleso Explain how the procedure could be improvedo Describe criteria in determining a “better bubble”o Experiment with concentrations of water and surfactant (soap) and

additives (sugar or salt) to design the best recipe for soap bubbles

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Full Activity on TeachEngineering

Page 5: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab• Suggested time: 50 minutes

• Suggested group size: 2 students/group

• Materials:• 2-3 small paper cups per group• 1 bubble wand per group• water• liquid soap (surfactant)• sugar (additive)• salt (additive)• measuring cups• measuring spoons• plastic spoons• ruler• stopwatch• safety goggles or glasses• Bubble Surface Tension Lab Handout• Why Do Liquid Jets Form Droplets (optional)

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Page 6: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Engineering Connection (Real World Application):• Engineers design inkjet printers by exploiting the tendency of

a continuous stream of water to break apart and form droplets.

• Surface tension must be finely adjusted, both for the ink to form droplets of the desired size and for the ink to adhere to the paper surface without smearing or bleeding, so part of the chemical engineering includes the "ink" formulation.

• Inkjet printers are also especially designed for many industrial applications, such as: o automotive coatings o decoration of curved and irregularly-shaped surfaces o printing conductive patterns with metallic particles o replacing screen printing on everything from ceramics to

textileso creating rapid 3D prototypes.

Page 7: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Vocabulary Terms

Definitions

Chemical engineering

A field of engineering; chemical engineers use scientific knowledge of chemistry, as well as physics and biology, to design products for a wide array of uses. These products can range from personal care products (shampoo, etc.) to fuel to medicine.

Surface tension The property of the surface of a liquid that allows it to resist an external force; caused by cohesive force; the reason why bugs can walk on water.

Cohesive force A force of attraction; an attraction of molecules to each other; the cause of surface tension and the shape of water droplets.

Surfactant A compound the reduces the surface tension between two liquids or liquid and a solid; soap is an example.

http://www.bls.gov/ooh/architecture-and-engineering/chemical-engineers.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Clayton_Anderson_zero_g.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:WaterstriderEnWiki.jpg

Page 8: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension LabSurface Tension Background:

o Water in a stream or jet starts out in a cylindrical column, and ends up as droplets.

o Water molecules really like to stick together and that causes water to act the way it does.

o Cohesive forces cause liquid molecules to be attracted to each other and they pull liquid molecules towards each other.

o At the surface, the liquid molecules move to create the least surface area possible, as a way to minimize the stretching of the “skin”, and lower the amount of energy in tension on the surface.

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drop_(liquid)

Page 9: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension LabSurface Tension Background (cont.):

o The water forms into round drops (not cubes or any other shape) because spheres are the shape with the least amount of surface area for a given volume of liquid.

o Mixing soap (a surface-active agent or surfactant) with water lowers surface tension, and that's how we can create soap bubbles. With a lower surface tension, the air/liquid surface is more "stretchy." By contrast, high surface tensions encourage liquids to bead rather than spread evenly across surfaces

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:2006-01-21_Detaching_drop.jpg

Page 10: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Activity Procedure: o Divide the class into lab groups, and send them to lab stations.

o Have students use the lab handout to conduct all four parts of the lab, answering questions as they go.

o Part 1: What makes a good soap bubble? Students decide how to measure whether a soap bubble is "good" or not. For example, they might measure how large the bubble is, how long it lasts, or how far it floats once it leaves the wand.

o Part 2: Soap and Water Bubbles: Students describe procedures for testing mixtures of soap (surfactant) and water for their bubble-making abilities, record their results, and indicate which mixture performed best.

Page 11: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Activity Procedure (cont.): o Part 3: Additional Additives: Students refine their recipes by adding a

third additive to the best mixture from Part 2, in varying amounts, to improve their solutions.

o Part 4: Analysis and Reflection: Students describe their best soap bubble recipes and assess how their measurements and procedures could be improved.

o Conclude with team-to-team presentations and discussions of lab techniques, procedures and results, and (optional) have students create summary documents.

Page 12: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Surface Tension Lab

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Teaching tips: o Emphasize the science concepts, vocabulary, and engineering

connection; reinforce these throughout the activity

o Allow students to develop testing ideas on their own first, and then ask them to share. Reinforce with students that it’s okay if two different groups use the same criteria for testing!

o Make sure each group has a measurable, quantitative criterion.

o Make sure students thoroughly wash the paper cups, measuring cups and spoons and the bubble wands with water and dry them between trials of different bubble recipes

o Compare the “best recipes” from each group. Ask students to identify similarities and differences.

o Have fun!!

Page 13: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

Activity Takeaways• Teambuilding skills

o Making decisions, sharing tasks and materials

• Engineering skillso Engineering Design Process: design, test, evaluate, redesign,

etc.o Engineering Analysis: developing a testing procedure, taking

quantitative measurements, analyzing results

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

http://www.buckeyeaz.gov/index.aspx?nid=163

• Encouragement to be creativeo The activity encourages creativity in the

developing a testing procedure

• Motivation through having funo Introduce the activity as a fun learning

experience!

Page 14: SHPE Foundation SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum Hands-on Activity Training TeachEngineering Hands-on Activity: * Surface Tension Lab TeachEngineering Digital

TeachEngineering Contact

Information• TeachEngineering: http://www.teachengineering.org/

o over 1,200 standards-based engineering lessons and activities

• Carleigh Samson, TeachEngineering Editoro [email protected] 303.492.6950

SHPE Foundation

SHPE Jr. Chapter Curriculum

Hands-On Activity Training

Questions?

http://www.fws.gov/refuge/Stone_Lakes/FAQ.html/