National Chemistry Week Resources for High and...
Transcript of National Chemistry Week Resources for High and...
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LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP
September 19, 20126:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. Eastern time
National Chemistry Week Resources for High and Middle School Science
Presented by: Michael Tinnesand and Tracy Halmi
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Tracy Halmi• Penn State Erie, The Behrend College• National Chemistry Week (NCW) Chair
Michael Tinnesand• Former high school chemistry teacher• Former Associate Director of the ACS Education
Division
Introducing today’s presenters…
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Science is all about BIG ideas…
But sometimes we must start very
small
Photo: lbl.gov
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Procedure:1. Make the battery and bulb circuit (see diagram).Have your adult partner help you assemble the apparatus.
2. Use the pencil to draw and color in a thick, dark box on the piece of paper. Make it several inches long and around half an inch wide.
Tip: Make the box as dark as you can — try not to let any patches of paper show through.
Exploring Materials—Graphene
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3. Touch the two insulated wire leads to the graphite box. Watch the bulb—what happens?
Record the distance between the two leads and record your observation in the table. Now try moving the leads closer together and further apart.
What differences do you notice? Record your results in the observation section.
Safety note: never use a plain wire to connect the terminals on any battery directly together. This could cause a short-circuit , overheating or even an explosion.
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4. Draw some other heavy dark paths that are not straight and check them with your battery apparatus. Record your results in your observation.
Safety note: never use a plain wire to connect the terminals on any battery directly together. This could cause a short-circuit , overheating or even an explosion.
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Graphite conducts electricity because it has a large number of delocalized elections, which are free to move, similar to metals.
If this sample was pure graphene it would act like a super conductor at room temperature.
What’s Going On?
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What’s Going On?
On the right is an artist’s impression of different localized chemical and electrical environments created on a single sheet. This possibility can allow faster and smaller electronic circuits.
(Illustration by Krista Shapton)
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Let’s pause for questions.
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A. Chemists
B. Teachers
C. Students
D. The public
E. All of the above
Who Celebrates National Chemistry Week?
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National Chemistry WeekFourth Week in October
2005: The Joy of Toys
2006: Your Home - It’s All Built on Chemistry
2007: The Many Faces of Chemistry (20th Anniversary)
2008: Having a Ball with Chemistry – The Chemistry of Sports
2009: Chemistry – It’s Elemental!
2010: Behind the Scenes with Chemistry
2011: Chemistry – Our Health, Our Future!
2012: Nanotechnology: The Smallest BIG Idea in ScienceOctober 21 - 27
14Photo found at http://pubs.acs.org/cen/priestley/recipients/1989pimentel.html http://portal.acs.org/portal/PublicWebSite/education/outreach/ncw/CNBP_030513
25 Years of NCW
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www.acs.org/ncw
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Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCWCelebrating Chemistry
• Activities
• Articles
• Career info
• Puzzles
• Games
FREE copies available!!!
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Articles from Celebrating Chemistry
What is nanotechnology?
Sunscreens
25 Years of NCW
Meg A. Mole Interviews
http://portal.acs.org/portal/PublicWebSite/education/outreach/ncw/CNBP_030513
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Exploring Materials – Graphene
Does Size Make a Difference
Exploring a Hydrogel
Safe in the Sun
http://portal.acs.org/portal/PublicWebSite/education/outreach/ncw/CNBP_030513
Activities from Celebrating Chemistry
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Activity adapted from “Draw a Circuit,”Nanoscale Informal Science Education (NISE) Network.
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Let’s pause for questions.
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Does Size Matter?
In this activity you will learn about how materials and also physical forces behave differently when things get very, very small.
Throw a baseball in the air and you can predict what will happen – it will fall to the ground due to gravity. The diameter of a baseball is about 73 millimeters. What if that baseball were only 73 nanometers in diameter? Would it behave differently? Would gravity be the only force influencing the ball?
We are going to explore this idea… but instead of baseballs, we are going to look at water drops.
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Materials
• A canning jar (pint or quart)
• Ring part of the lid for the jar
• A Styrofoam plate• A ruler• A sharp pencil• Scissors• A pail (optional)
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Procedures
1. Trace the opening of the jar with your pencil on the Styrofoam plate and cut it out.2. Fill your canning jar with water.3. Place your Styrofoam circle into the ring lid and screw it onto your jar.4. Poke a small hole into the center of your Styrofoam circle with your pencil point. Measure and record the diameter of your hole in the data table.
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Procedures (continued)
5. Working over a sink or pail, place your finger over the hole and turn the jar upside down. Ask your adult lab partner for help if you need it. Keep the upside-down jar straight up and down, and hold it steady. Slide your finger off of the hole. Water should not come out of the hole.
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Procedures (continued)
6. Turn your jar upright. Make the hole bigger by pushing your pencil a little farther into the hole and repeat the procedure.Record your observation. Record the diameter of the hole and your observations.
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Procedures (continued)
7. Keep increasing the size of the hole with your pencil and repeating the procedure until the water comes spilling out.Record all diameter measurements in your data table.
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How does it work?
• Surface tension
• At the nano scale, properties change
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How many years have you had students participate in an NCW contest?A. Never
B. 1-2 years
C. 3-4 years
D. 4-5 years
E. 6 or more years
2010 Winner Stephanie Schopowal, 10th Grade, Oscar Smith High School
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K-12 Illustrated Poem Contest (2012 Winners)
Catherine Zhou8th Grade, Glasgow Middle School
Baton Rouge Local Section
James Titolo, Jr. 2nd Grade, Bishop Dunn Memorial School
Mid-Hudson Local Section
Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCW
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NCW Community EventDo More with Less!
For the 2012 NCW Community Event, take action on at least one way to "Do More with Less" in your local community.
• recycling drive• canned food drive• health fair• park clean-up• any activity that improves
your region
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More Activities: www.acs.org/kids
Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCW
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ChemMatters—A magazine for high school chemistry students
www.acs.org/chemmatters
• Magazine articles and activities• Online Teacher’s Guide• Browsing by chemistry topics• Video podcasts – search for the ChemMatters channel on You Tube or download from the ChemMatters website. •To receive updates about new online content LIKE Chemmatters on the Facebook.
http://portal.acs.org/portal/acs/corg/content?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=PP_MULTICOLUMN_T2_66&node_id=1090&use_sec=false&sec_url_var=region1&__uuid=b1731cb3-2e7f-4674-809d-0f7f0e60bd92
Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCW
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National Chemistry Historic LandmarksA series of online resources based on historic chemistry landmarks. Celebrating seminal achievements in the history of chemical sciences.
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/education/chemical_landmarks/timeline/timeline2/timeline2.html
Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCW
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• The mission is to support a community of educators and students as they experience chemistry beyond the classroom.
• ACS ChemClubs provide fun, hands-on opportunities through free resources.
• Just about 500 Clubs throughout the U.S.and Puerto Rico, plus international clubsin Brazil and U.K.
• Find out more and apply at www.acs.org/chemclub
What is the ACS High School ChemClub Program?
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$25 annual subscription rate for K–12 and homeschool teachers12 print issues, full access to online issue archive from 1924 to current issueOver 100 JCE Classroom Activities especially for middle school/high school
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39 http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ed081p544A39
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Chemical & Engineering News—The journal of the American Chemical Society, with helpful sites such as ‘What’s That Stuff?’
http://cen.acs.org/collections/wts.html
Tools for Teachers: Resources for NCW
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ACS Resources for Middle and High School
• Middleschoolchemistry.com
• Inquiry in Action
• Best of WonderScience
(2 volumes)
• Apples, Bubbles and Crystals
• Sunlight, Skyscrapers and Soda Pop
• Chemistry in the Community (ChemCom) textbook
• ACS Examinations Institute
• Green Chemistry Teaching Resources
• Teaching Chemistry to Students with Disabilities
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Let’s pause for questions.
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/tech/making-stuff.html#making-stuff
Thanks Greglynn Gibbs, Lehigh Valley Local Section ACS PR Chair
44http://www.teachersdomain.org/assets/wgbh/nvms/nvms_doc_materialssci/nvms_doc_materialssci.pdf
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45http://www.nisenet.org/
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Rainbow FilmHow can you make rainbow colors out of clear nail polish?
In this activity, kids use clear nail polish to create a beautiful iridescent pattern on black paper.
Suitable for kids ages 3 and up.
"Developed for the NISE Network with funding from the National Science Foundation under Award Numbers 0532536 and 0940143. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Foundation."
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• Shallow pan• Strips of black paper (Bristol is best, but
construction paper works)• Clear nail polish• Pencil• Place to let paper dry
Materials
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Preparation: 5 minutes
Activity: 5 minutes
Cleanup: 5 minutes
Note: It takes about 30 minutes for thebookmarks to dry.
Preparation
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Step 1Use the pencil to write your name on a strip of black paper.
Holding onto one end, slide the paper into the pan.
Make sure it’s completely under water (except for the end you’re holding).
Procedure
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Step 2Use the brush to drip one drop of nail polish onto the surface of the water.
Watch what happens—the polish instantly spreads out into a thin film!
Procedure
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Step 3Lift the paper up and out of the water.
The film of nail polish will stick to the paper.
Does the nail polish still look clear?
Procedure
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The nail polish spreads out into a thin film, which creates iridescent colors on the paper.
The film is only a few hundred nanometers thick.
Light reflected from the upper and lower boundaries of the film interfere with each other to form a variety of new wavelengths –and new colors.
What’s going on?
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Thin films can reflect light in special ways because they’re only a few hundred nanometers thick.
That’s in the same size range as the wavelength of visible light.
Soap bubbles and oil slicks are some other examples.
How is this nano?
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GmUeCf_bI-s
55http://www.nnin.org/
FREE!!!
56http://www.nanooze.org/main/Nanooze/English.html
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“Hunting the Elements”with NOVA and the American Chemical Society
NOVA's "Hunting the Elements" program spins viewers through the world of weird, extreme chemistry: the strongest acids, the deadliest poisons, and the universe’s most abundant elements. Join the American Chemical Society and NOVA for a free, professional development webinar about available chemistry resources for your classroom based on the program!
When: Wednesday, October 24, 2012Time: 6:30 pm ESTRegister: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/YSWC7F2
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Let’s pause for questions.
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Bibliography
• Celebrating Chemistry: http://portal.acs.org/portal/PublicWebSite/education/outreach/ncw/CNBP_030513
• Terrific Science Health Science Resources: http://www.terrificscience.org/freebies/
• ACS Education Division: acs.org/education
• Chemical & Engineering News: http://cen.acs.org/index.html
• Science for Kids:www.acs.org/kids
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• Historic Landmarks: http://acswebcontent.acs.org/education/chemical_landmarks/timeline/timeline2/timeline2.html
• ACS High School Chem Clubs (Free resources to start and run the chemistry clubs):www.acs.org/chemclub
• Journal of Chemical Education: http://pubs.acs.org/journal/jceda8
• ChemMatters video on nanotechnology (search YouTube for ChemMatters): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbcn7FR3pdg&feature=player_embedded
Bibliography
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• Chemmatters (stories to demystify everyday chemistry): www.acs.org/chemmatters
• Making Stuff (NOVA): http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/tech/making-stuff.html#making-stuff
• NISE Network: http://www.nisenet.org/
• NNIN: http://www.nnin.org/
Bibliography
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Tracy Halmi
Michael Tinnesand
Thanks to today’s presenters!
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Thank you to the sponsor of tonight’s web seminar:
This web seminar contains information about programs, products, and services offered by third parties, as well as links to third-party websites. The presence of a listing or such information does not constitute an endorsement by NSTA of a
particular company or organization, or its programs, products, or services.
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National Science Teachers AssociationGerry Wheeler, Interim Executive Director
Zipporah Miller, Associate Executive Director, Conferences and Programs
Al Byers , Ph.D., Assistant Executive Director, e-Learning and Government Partnerships
Flavio Mendez, Senior Director, NSTA Learning Center
NSTA Web SeminarsBrynn Slate, Manager
Jeff Layman, Technical Coordinator64