1
A Hands-on Approach to Teaching Electricity and Conductivity in 8th Grade Science
Olivia Ritter
CURENT Summer RET Program 2013
Unit Outline: Electricity, Conductors, and Insulators
Estimated time: 3-5 class periods (74 minutes each), depending on selection and number of hands-on activities
Standards addressed:
Embedded standards:
- T/E.1 I can identify the tools and procedures needed to test the design features of a prototype.
- T/E.2 I can use the engineering design process that incorporate design constraints, model building, testing, evaluating, modifying, and retesting.
- Inq.5 I can review an experimental design to determine possible sources of bias or error, state alternative explanations, and identify questions to further investigate.
- Inq.1 I can design and conduct an open-ended experiment to answer a question that includes a control and variables (independent and dependent).
- Inq.2 I can use appropriate tools and techniques to gather, organize, analyze, and interpret data.
- Inq.3 I can interpret and translate data into a table, graph, or diagram.
Direct standards:
- 12.1 I can explain the relationship between magnetism and electricity.
- 9.1 I can identify atoms as the fundamental particle making up all of matter. (can relate electrons to electricity here)
- 9.9 I can describe the properties of the main groups of elements (including alkali, alkaline, transition metals, halogens, noble gases, actinide series, and lanthanide series). (relate to insulators and conductors and electricity)
- Pre-assessment and Pre-Survey
- Introduce/review electricity
- Ask students for prior knowledge and ideas about electricity
- Key questions
- What is electricity?
- Where do we get our electricity?
- How is electricity transmitted from source to appliance/technology we use?
- What are some renewable and nonrenewable sources of energy?
- Lecture and discussion
- Make connections to electrical engineering
- Introduce conductivity
- Define new vocabulary: conductivity, conductors, insulators, semiconductors, circuits, thermal energy, electric energy
- Ask students for prior knowledge and ideas about the above terms and their relationship to one another
- Lecture and discussion
- Key question: what makes some materials better conductors than others?
- Hands-on activity: Exploring the conductivity of various materials
- This activity could be done more as an inquiry activity before the lecture/discussion in part III.*
- Static electricity – balloons, bending water
- For “Charge it!” activities and a list of materials that give up or gain electrons, see:
- Energy balls and circuits to test conductivity
- More advanced activity to test conductivity of materials (including liquids) from sciencelearn.org
- Engineering connection: why do you think these concepts would be important for an engineer (especially an electrical engineer)?
- Hands-on activity (taking it a step further): Squishy Circuits
- Given the materials, make a circuit using both types of dough (conductive and insulating dough). The dough can be different colors to distinguish one from the other, but don’t tell students which dough is which.
- What happens with each type of dough?
- Does one type of dough conduct electricity better than the other? Which one?
- Key question/goal: Given the ingredients in each dough, have students develop an idea about why one dough allows electricity to flow through it (conducts), while the other dough does not allow the flow of electricity (insulates).
- Hands-on activity: Build an electrical quiz game
- Students practice more with circuits and create their own quizzes using the terms and concepts of the unit. *This is helpful and accessible to all levels of learners because students can put the concepts and their ideas in their own words.
- Adapted from
- Which materials used to make your quiz game were insulators? Which materials were conductors?
- What are the necessary parts of a circuit?
- Hands-on activity: Touchscreen Simulation
- Introduce solar (PV) panels
- Ask students for prior knowledge and ideas about solar energy
- Lecture and discussion
- How do PV panels work?
- What materials are PV panels made of?
- What are photons?
- Make connections with atoms, electrons, electricity, and conductivity (semiconductors)
- Hands-on activity: making a Solar Cell
- Students experiment with a solar cell made from sheets of copper and salt water.
- Hands-on activity: making a Solar Car
- Use solar car kits from Kelvin.com
- Hands-on activity: making a Solar Jitterbug
- Students use inexpensive and easily accessible materials to make a device that turns solar energy into motion using a solar panel and motor.
- Encourage student creativity and independence for completion of this activity.
- Possible data collection and graphing: Have students investigate various angles of the PV panels to see which angle produces the highest current. This could be done quantitatively using a multimeter and PV panel or qualitatively using descriptions of relative movement in their jitterbug apparatus.
- Have students outline the steps of the engineering design process as they design, build, and improve their jitterbug.
- Challenge students to find ways to move the jitterbug in specific ways by changing or manipulating the materials used in building their device.
- End-of-unit-assessment
- Post-survey at the end of school year