Tuesday, April 26, 2016

What We Don't Know We Can Find In The News

Using the news and current events are a great way to teach science information that is relevant to today.  For Science-in-the-News I used the website Newsela to gather my articles for astronomy.  In Newsela, you can search by grade level, topic, main idea, or vocabulary.  When I was searching for articles I looked for topics that sparked an interest for me.  All the articles were on the topic of Astronomy.  By finding articles that were interesting to me I had more of an interest of reading the articles in depth and not just glance over them.  After gathering ten articles, I created a Glogster with a short summary and link to each articles.  Glogster is an interactive custom poster.  This is my Glogster.  By using the articles we then created a TagCrowd.  TagCrowd is a webpage that creates a clip art based off of the most common words found in all the articles. TagCrowd allows you to enter the text of a articles and it will pull out the most common words, with the most common words are the biggest and boldest.  This is what TagCrowd created:

 Using these websites was very exciting and interesting.  They are a great way to engage students in learning both science topics and technology.  Some of the other sites we have used for the world clouds are Wordle and Tagul.

From this information we then compiled a time line for the topic of astronomy.  My group used a very interactive website called Tiki-Toki. We started our timeline with Thales 624 B.C., Aristarchus 310 B.C., Galileo 1564, Stephen Hawking 1942, NASA 1958, Kepler Mission 2009, Pluto 2009, Deep Space 2020, and Living on Mars 2030.  As a teacher you could use this timeline in many different ways.  It can be used to teach students the chronological order of a topic, it can also be an interesting way of introducing your lessons.

Our groups Astronomy Timeline


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