SYNOPSIS
This page includes all of the student activities (including example activites that have been their own, separate pages), plus additional explanatory/background material for teachers.
In particular, teachers should see the 'Bonus' and 'Related Links' sections at the bottom of this page.
- Not yet complete (last updated 21 April 2018)
Here is an explicit list of activities where students engage in solving problems designed to promote deeper understanding of heat.
These example activities are designed to take up about 50% of classroom time.
In general, the first session should introduce a misconception which is discussed along with explicit remedial content. This should be followed by a second session comprised of hands-on activity directly related to the misconceptions and concepts discussed in the earlier session.
Studies have shown that challenging misconceptions by experiment and through discussion can quickly enable them to acquire the necessary concepts to equip them to develop their understanding of thermal physics.
Some example students activities for K-6 are explained in more detail in their own web pages:
CURRICULUM LINK
PROBLEM
CURRICULUM LINK
Create a simple survey to introduce the concept of Infra-red (IR), and familiarise students with and IR thermometer.
If you will be using an Infra-red (IR) thermometer this is a good activity to familiarise students with some of the underlying science.
This will be an extremely useful tool to use for almost every heat experiment described below.
Watch the videos and select at least one practical experiment to perform, then discuss (some example activities/ideas can be found here.
METHOD
QUESTION
DISCUSSION
An infra-red (IR) thermometer can be used to make some experiments more concrete.
Better still Concord uses affordable IR cameras to visualize invisible energy flows and transformations in easy-to-do science experiments. Using this “desktop remote sensing” approach, thermal energy can be readily “seen.”
Other types of energy that convert into thermal energy can be inferred from thermal signals. Hence, many invisible physical, chemical, and biological processes that absorb or release heat can be visualized, discovered, and investigated. The following experiment can be successfully performed using a simple IR thermometer only.
Shine a desk lamp (or invisible IR light source) through an inverted plastic take-away or similar container.
The light will be absorbed by the black paper inside.
The paper will radiate IR light, but the IR radiation emitted from the paper cannot penetrate through the transparent container.
As a result, heat is trapped inside the cup.
The above can be measured using an IR thermometer.
QUESTION
PROBLEM Do Different Colours Absorb More/Less Sunlight/Heat?
Colour | Red | Blue | Yellow | Green | Black | White |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Temperature |
QUESTION
PROBLEM
CURRICULUM LINK
METHOD
Enter your name and then, in the top row, tick the box of the item you think will be WARMEST:
Feels | Plastic | Paper | Metal | Wood |
---|---|---|---|---|
Warmest | ||||
Coolest |
Enter your name and then, in the top row, tick the box of the item you think will be COOLEST:
Feels | Plastic | Paper | Metal | Wood |
---|---|---|---|---|
Warmest | ||||
Coolest |
Ask students to write down what materials they think will feel coldest and which feel warmest.
Discuss the results that you wrote into your table.
Using a thermometer, measure the temperature of each item and enter that temperature into the second row for each of your tables
Using results that you wrote down, discuss what you observed and what that might show about heat and different materials.
Discuss the results of your Heat Prediction Survey results (see example table above).
QUESTIONS
Some example answers:
QUESTIONS
DISCUSSION
The purpose of this simple experiment is for students to investigate the properties of materials:
Lots of materials can be used to help insulate (slow/stop melting) ice. Some materials work better than others at slowing down the speed that ice melts.
CURRICULUM LINK
PROBLEM
QUESTION
EXPERIMENT
METHOD
Measure the following temperatures first (without ice)
Question | Paper plate | Wood block | Aluminium dish | Plastic block | Glass dish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Which of the materials feels warmest | |||||
Which of the materials feels warmest | |||||
What is the temperature of each item |
MEASUREMENT
Question | Paper plate | Wood block | Aluminium dish | Plastic block | Glass dish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
How long does it take to melt one ice-block |
Nothing works for an extended period of time, so you should move quickly!
Discuss the results for the materials that you tested and data you entered into your table(s).
Using your results, discuss the result that you observed and what they might show about heat.
Can you use your own/other evidence to help convince the class about why materials feel warmer/cooler and make ice-blocks melt slower/faster
How could this experiment be improved if someone wanted to run a similar test?
Vibrating (jiggling) molecules can move up, down and around
The purpose of this simple experiment is for students to determine the relationship between temperature and speed of molecules in a liquid.
QUESTION
EXPERIMENT
PROBLEM QUESTIONS:
Students will use water & food dye to discover more about 'jiggling' and heat: Source
Think about what you are going to do, then write down a prediction about how you think the temperature of water might make a difference when food dye is dropped into the water
Materials you’ll need:
Method to conduct the experiment:
Perform your experiment, then write down your results in a table similar to this:
Question | Results (write down what you found) |
---|---|
Which of the three jars holds the warmest water | |
Which of the three jars holds the coldest water | |
Which of the three jars spreads the food colour fastest | |
Which of the three jars spreads the food colour slowest |
Discuss the results that you wrote into your table.
Using your results, discuss the result that you observed and what they might show about heat.
Can you use your own/other evidence to help convince the class that molecules move slower/same/faster when they are warmer, slower/same/faster when they are colder, or move the same amount when warmer as they do when cooler.
Check out the link (below) to a video about heat and 'convection currents'.
Watch the video
In your journal, write down the things you think someone would need to do to repeat this experiment if they could not see or hear the video (see extra directions)
At the end write down a short explanation of what you think the video shows.
When you are finished, your teacher will hand your instructions to a team of your classmates who will need to perform the experiment using your instructions. Your teacher will supply the things you need, including safety and management of any hot/iced water.
Discuss what you did with the class and see if you can suggest anything you would change if you were to do this experiment again.
FACT: If you yelled non-stop for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days, you would have produced just enough sound energy to heat up one cup of coffee: Source Interesting facts of physics
Why does sound travel further in water than in air (why is sound absorption less in water than in air)?
Imagine that we could take a very fast picture of certain properties of a sound wave during transmission. The pressure varies from a little above atmospheric, to a little below and back again as we progress along the wave. Now the high pressure regions will be a little hotter than the low pressure regions. A small amount of heat will pass from hot to cold by conduction. Although it is only a small mount, this non-adiabatic (non-heat conserving) process is responsible for the loss of energy of sound in a gas.
What happens when we change the frequency? The heat has less distance to travel (shorter half wavelength), but less time to do so (shorter half period). So high frequency sounds lose more energy due to this mechanism than do low. This, incidentally, is one of the reasons why we can tell if a known sound is distant: it has lost more high frequency energy, and this contributes to the 'muffled' sound. Another contributing effect is that the relative phase of different components is changed. Read More...