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Welcome to
Stars, Galaxies, & Cosmology
As you come in, please:
• Pick up handouts & sit toward middle of classroom.
• Complete info sheet and start diagnostic test.
You Are Here
A Widely Believed Incorrect Model of
Teaching and LearningB
ill W
atte
rson
from How People Learn
“Students enter your lecture hall with preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information that are taught, or they may learn them for the purposes of a test but revert to their preconceptions outside the classroom.”
HOW PEOPLE LEARN, National Research Council, National Academy Press, 2000
Just-in-Time Teaching:A Research-Validated Teaching Strategy
The Feedback Loop: Students respond electronically to assignments due shortly before class, and the instructor reads the student submissions "just-in-time" to adjust the classroom lesson to suit the students' needs. (www.jitt.org)
For this to work, you have to try to learn the material on your own first.
I have constructed a system to reward you for initial effort and also give you credit for learning and fixing your work.
I’ll seek your input at the time of the first midterm to improve the feedback loop.
M.C
. Esc
her
Key results from cognitive science and education research
1. Knowledge is associative: it is linked to prior mental models and formal structures
2. Learning involves production/construction: it requires mental effort
3. Most people require social interactions in order to learn effectively
Think-Pair-Share
Which of the following statements is false?
A) The professor may disagree with the textbook; it is not a perfect guide to the course or exams.
B) If prep homework is not emailed in pdf form by 9am on class day, it receives a zero regardless of the reason, but that zero may be one of four scores dropped.
C) If you retype your prep homework when you correct it, the grader will appreciate that.
D) You should save your voting card and use it all semester.
Peer Learning
• Astro 301 students will learn/review certain concepts during
office hour problem-solving sessions that Astro 102 students
will learn in a more conceptual/less mathematical context.
• Astro 301 students will cement their conceptual
understanding via peer leading in class, enabling deeper
concept learning for both Astro 301 and Astro 102 students.
Peer learning is group work in which each group member is responsible for everyone’s learning, with a peer leader facilitating the discussion. A peer leader facilitates Q&A and critical thinking in the discussion and does not “lecture.” This person is not expected to act as a teacher, but as a more advanced learner.
Example: Frequency & Wavelength of Light
Work with your group to reconstruct the equation relating the frequency ν and wavelength λ of light. Use unit analysis to check that you have the equation right, where the units of ν are Hz (=1/sec). Then read & answer the question below.
A student says to you “This equation tells me that the higher the frequency ν, the greater the wave speed c. Since visible light has a higher frequency than radio waves, that means visible light travels faster than radio waves.” Which is true?
A) The student is correct because visible light travels faster than sound (for example lightning and thunder).
B) The student is correct because the speed of light is only constant between reference frames, not between frequencies.
C) The student would be correct but the equation does not apply to radio waves.
D) The student is incorrect because the wavelength changes so thatradio and visible light waves travel at the same speed.
Back to
where we
started…
You Are Here
Goals for today:0. Review c=λν and the constant, finite speed of light.1. Describe the Earth’s location in the hierarchy of
astronomical structures, and say what they consist of.2. Remember what a light year is (and isn’t).3. Use powers of ten notation to relate the size scales of
different structures.
Zooming
in…
Henbest&
Couper
1994The fact that the Sun lies in a bubble of thin hot gas makes it easier to see stars. Perhaps we should thank the Local Bubble for the existence of astronomy on Earth…
Light Year (LY) = distance light travels in one year
Confusing! Not a unit of time!
Dirty Little Secret: LY used only by educators!
Real astronomers use parsecs (pc), or kpc, Mpc, etc.
Like yards and feet �
pc bigger than LY by a factor of ~3.3
What is a light year?
Think-Pair-Share
In the original Star Wars movie, Han Solo says to Obi-Wan Kenobi, “You've never heard of the Millennium Falcon? She's the ship that made the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs. She's fast enough for you, old man. What's the cargo?”
What is wrong with Han Solo’s statement? Pick the word that should be changed (to what?):
A) less B) parsecs C) fast
Watch and discuss the movie at:
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/
On your own time, you may also want to check out Richard Powell’s Atlas of the Universe (www.atlasoftheuniverse.com)
The Universe loves powers of 10!
Think-Pair-Share
Match one description to each structure:A.contains the Andromeda Galaxy B.region of thin hot gas containing well-known starsC.made of stars and gas arranged in spiral armsD.consists of planets around a star
1.The Local Bubble2.The Local Group3.The Milky Way4.The Solar System5.The Universe
Pencil & Paper Problem
Consider the Earth and the Solar System. The Earth has diameter 107 m and the Solar System has diameter 1013 m. Using powers of ten, how many times larger is the Solar System than the Earth? In this question, is there a word that is not specific enough, and why?
Some closing words of wisdom from
Monty Python
Check out the Galaxy Song on youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44DlSj6bnn4