Monday, December 5, 2016

Phases of the Moon Lesson

10/14/16 Drama Lesson Plan
Phases of the Moon

6th Grade, Mrs. Geer’s class

Objective: Students will be able to describe characteristics of phases of the moon correctly by participating in a moon myth narrative mime and modeling the phases of the moon with their bodies.

Drama Work/Content Introduction: Narrative mime on moon phase myth 12 min

1.       Entire class sits in a semi-circle, and teacher narrates the Indian myth of Ganesha and how the phases of the moon came to be. As the story is told, students come up when it is their part to act out a role and they use their bodies to communicate how their character feels in the story.

STORY: Once, Ganesha (elephant head), patron of sciences and arts, god of intellect and wisdom after an exceptionally heavy dinner served to him by worshippers (2 servers for dinner), decided to go on a round. He mounted his vehicle, the mouse, and set off. It was late at night (3 night sound-makers). On the way, he passed villagers. In the light of the moon, they (2) were telling stories to each other. The children were sneaking outside to gather a few more jujube fruits for late-night snacks (3). And, for those who were returning late from a day’s work, the light of the moon was lighting their path (3). Suddenly, a snake came in their path, and the mouse panicked. Ganesha fell off, and his stomach ruptured (cue sound)! Everyone in the village saw and was surprised. Nonplussed, Ganesha simply picked up the snake and tied it around his waist like a belt!
This scene was witnessed by the moon, Chandra, who found it extremely funny and laughed aloud! Ganesha, who, till then hadn’t been bothered, was extremely angry that the moon had laughed at him. He cursed Chandra that he would lose his luster at once! The moon began to slower start on one side and get darker. It was getting harder and harder to see. Chandra realized his folly and apologized, but he kept waning. The stars (2) tried to shine extra bright to help the humans see, but to no avail. Humans who went out at night began to become lost in the darkness (3). There were no more stories told. And the hungry children (3) had to stay inside rather than sneak out for more jujube fruits. The worshippers (2) were upset at losing the moon, and were less willing to give as many offerings and gifts to their god Ganesha. And as the moon continued to wane, putting earth in jeopardy, Ganesha relented.

Lifting the moon, Ganesha placed it on his forehead, and the contact made the moon regain his luster slowly. This began the process of waxing and waning, which continues till today, reminding us not to laugh at others. This incident also gave Ganesha the name –Bhalachandra – the one with the moon on his forehead!

Content Instruction: 15 min

We will now explore whether or not the moon actually gains and loses light during a month.
1.       All lights in the room are turned off and windows are covered except for one bright lamp in the middle of the room (the sun).

2.       The teacher demonstrates what the moon does as it rotates around the earth during a month by placing a styrofoam ball (moon) on a pencil, and rotating in place. The teacher is the earth, and the ball is the moon. It will be clear to students that half of the moon is always lit and half is always dark. Therefore, the basis of the myth is false. So then, why does the moon appear to change during the month?

3.       Each child grabs a white styrofoam ball and pokes a pencil into the bottom of it. They arrange themselves in a circle around the room, with a piece of paper and a pencil.

4.       The teacher leads the children through the parts of the rotation to demonstrate new moon (moon in between child and lamp), waxing cresent, quarter moon (90 degree turn to the left), waxing gibbous, half moon (children in between moon and lamp), waning gibbous, ¾ moon, and waning crescent, ending at new moon again. At each phase, children draw a sketch of what the moon looks like, and the label for the phase.

Drama Review Game: Guess the phase 12 min

1.       8 students are seated at the front of the room facing their peers with a phase of the moon written on the board behind them.

2.       The class has to give each person, in turn, hints about what phase they are. If the person guesses their phase correctly, they can sit down.

Standards-

Theater: 6.T.P.4 Communicate meaning using the body through space, shape, energy, and gesture.
Science 6.1. Explain patterns of changes in the appearance of the moon as it orbits Earth.
  1. Describe changes in the appearance of the moon during a month. 
  2. Identify the pattern of change in the moon's appearance.
Science 6.2

c. Model the movement and relative positions of Earth, the moon, and the sun. 

Mars Exploration Lesson

This lesson was the best lesson all semester- the kids LOVED it!

12/2/16 Drama Lesson Plan
Mars Exploration Lesson
6th Grade, Mrs. Geer’s class

Objective: Students will present possible solutions to progress in the exploration of Mars in group skits using the correct vocabulary of space exploration vehicles.

Materials:
·         Space technology role assignments- 24
·         Space exploration vehicles chart- write on board
·         Elon Musk video emailed to Mrs. Geer

Content Introduction: Introduce Elon Musk- 5 min
Narration—Elon Musk’s story is introduced- Explain they will go to Mars in 10 years and NASA vs Spacex.
Watch video- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IRwUsQdzx4

Hot-seating—Students question teacher as Elon Musk to discover additional information about the plan.
Space Exploration Vehicles:- 3 min
Go through types of space exploration vehicles with chart.

Manned
Unmanned
Flies through space
Crew capsule
Probe
Orbits
Orbital vehicle
Space station
Satellite
Orbiter
Lands
Landing module
Lander
Rover

Drama Warm up/Content Review: A Big Wind Blows- 5 min.
Preparations: Have students all put chairs in a circle around you. (so there is one less chair then there are people including you)
Description: One person standing in the middle raises their hand and says, "a big wind blows ______" and they fill in the blank with something they have done or something they like. Then everyone who applies to that, if they have done it or like that thing as well stand up and switch chairs. For example, if they say, " a big wind blows to everyone who likes camping" then everyone who likes camping stands up and switches chairs. The person stuck in the middle then changes the sentence and so on.
Play the game, but first pass out small pieces of paper with one of the 6 types of space exploration vehicles on it. Say, "A big wind blows for____", and give a clue about one or several of the types of space exploration vehicles. If the clue applies to a students' vehicle in their hand, they must switch seats.
Clues: 
Flies through space
Orbits
Lands
Manned
Unmanned
What they landed on the moon with
The international space station
The mars rover
Satellite tv

Student Task: Exploration solutions to Mars- 15 min
Mantle of the Expert—Students are asked to take on the role of Spacex engineer employees who need to make progress on the 10 year plan to go to Mars, discovering how to actually colonize the planet.
(Objective- review proper names of space exploration vehicles, to decide what the major issues are with colonizing mars and come up with solutions to begin the exploration)
Explore possible ways to set up a civilization.
Requirements:1-2 minutes long, groups of 4?
Consideration of things humans need to successfully travel to, colonize, and survive on Mars. (1 problem that needs a solution).
Problems to consider: sources of power (chemically, solar panels), timing (takes 6-8 months to get to mars)- how long of a trip, the objective of your trip, humans needs for survival (food, water, etc), fuel, staying healthy along the way, air to breath once you’re on Mars, extremely cold at night, food for the journey, food production on Mars, water production on Mars, cost
Present your plan to begin exploring a solution. Not the answer- how you are going to start. Ex: If I don’t know how I am going to make a fire in the woods, the solution is find firewood and a match, but if I didn’t know that and just needed to begin exploration, I would present that I would experiment with what does and doesn’t light on fire with materials around me, and then I would walk around looking for fuel.
Use of at least one space exploration vehicles in their proper context.
Include a plan to explore possible solutions. You don’t need the answer- you just need to know a problem and have a plan to make progress on the problem through the use of technology. That’s how real science and engineering works. If they had all the answers, we’d be on mars now.
Drama guidelines: identify problems and solutions in first 3 min. Last 10 minutes to work on a skit. Characters: engineers, people running the spacecraft (astronauts if manned)
Context: engineering meeting considering possibilities, then start working on ways to test it
Example: Air for breathing: Meeting with crew, rover, setting up a big bubble thing/building that’s airtight. Put oxygen tanks inside and some plants that use the sunlight, see if the plant survives, then see if a mouse could survive the trip
Presentation of Skits- 10 min
Standards-
Theater: 6.T.CR.4 Define roles, identify responsibilities, and participate in group decision making.
Drama 6.T.P.2 Perform as a productive and responsible member of an acting ensemble in both rehearsal and performance situations.
Drama 6.T.CO.3 Investigate universal or common social issues and express them through a drama/theatre work.
Science: 6.S.3.2 a Relate science's understanding of the solar system to the technology used to investigate it. 
Science 6.S.3.2 b Find and report on ways technology has been and is being used to investigate the solar system.