Stimulating
Understanding of
Computational science through
Collaboration,
Exploration,
Experiment, and
Discovery for students with
Hearing
Impairments
|
a collaboration of the Shodor Education Foundation, Inc., Eastern North Carolina School for the Deaf, Barton College, the National Technical Institute for the Deaf, and
Interpreters, Inc.
|
For Teachers!
Forests,
Mining Carbon from the Air
Objectives:
In the last few decades, computers and computer modeling have had a profound effect on the science that is being done. Many experiments, like growing forests, are so expensive and time consuming that direct experimentation is limited or impractical. Computer models take the formulas scientists have developed through field research and allow us to perform hundreds of simulated experiments. This lesson introduces the students to the new form of science called Computational Science.
In this lesson the students will learn to "mine data" by looking at tables of numbers and rendering them into graphs in order to see trends and patterns. This is called visualization. This is the kind of skill your local weather person uses when he/she explains the weather maps that are computer generated.
Your students will also change the parameters that define how the forest is managed in order to recommend local and national policy. By working with professional models on current issues, the students will learn how scientists work and how science is done.
National standards addressed:
Science
THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF ORGANISMS
-The atoms and
molecules on the earth cycle among the living and nonliving components of the
biosphere.
-Organisms both
cooperate and compete in ecosystems. The interrelationships and
interdependencies of these organisms may generate ecosystems that are stable for
hundreds or thousands of years.
-Living
organisms have the capacity to produce populations of infinite size, but
environments and resources are finite. This fundamental tension has profound
effects on the interactions between organisms.
-Human beings
live within the world's ecosystems. Increasingly, humans modify ecosystems as a
result of population growth, technology, and consumption. Human destruction of
habitats through direct harvesting, pollution, atmospheric changes, and other
factors is threatening current global stability, and if not addressed,
ecosystems will be irreversibly affected.
MATTER, ENERGY, AND ORGANIZATION IN LIVING SYSTEMS
-The
distribution and abundance of organisms and populations in ecosystems are
limited by the availability of matter and energy and the ability of the
ecosystem to recycle materials.
-As matter and
energy flows through different levels of organization of living systems--cells,
organs, organisms, communities--and between living systems and the physical
environment, chemical elements are recombined in different ways. Each
recombination results in storage and dissipation of energy into the environment
as heat. Matter and energy are conserved in each change
NATURAL RESOURCES
-Human
populations use resources in the environment in order to maintain and improve
their existence. Natural resources have been and will continue to be used to
maintain human populations.
-The
earth does not have infinite resources; increasing human consumption places
severe stress on the natural processes that renew some resources and it depletes
those resources that cannot be renewed.
-Humans use
many natural systems as resources. Natural systems have the capacity to reuse
waste, but that capacity is limited. Natural systems can change to an extent
that exceeds the limits of organisms to adapt naturally or humans to adapt
technologically.
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
-Natural
ecosystems provide an array of basic processes that affect humans. Those
processes include maintenance of the quality of the atmosphere, generation of
soils, control of the hydrologic cycle, disposal of wastes, and recycling of
nutrients. Humans are changing many of these basic processes, and the changes
may be detrimental to humans.
-Materials from
human societies affect both physical and chemical cycles of the earth.
-Many factors influence environmental quality. Factors that students might investigate include population growth, resource use, population distribution, over consumption, the capacity of technology to solve problems, poverty, the role of economic, political, and religious views, and different ways humans view the earth.
National Science Standards were taken from: http://www.nap.edu/html/nses/html/
Mathematics
Formulate Questions that can be
addressed with data and collect, organize, and display relevant data to answer
them
Understand the
differences among various kinds of studies and which types of inferences can
legitimately be drawn from each
Use Visualization,
spatial reasoning, and geometric modeling to solve problems
Understand
Measurable Attributes
of objects and the units, systems, and processes of measurement
National Mathematics Standards were taken from:
http://standards.nctm.org/document/chapter7/index.htm
Copyright © 1999-2001 by The Shodor Education Foundation, Inc.
by the National Science FoundationOpinions expressed are those of the authorsand not necessarily those of the National Science Foundation. |