Investigate the role of scale, quantity, and proportion during an interactive activity. Explore how to make simple, but useful, estimates of quantities that are too large to observe directly. The activity is part of a new free high school curriculum called Scientific Thinking for All: A Toolkit. The course provides a toolkit of cognitive strategies applied to real-world issues such as water quality, energy use, and student well-being. Students utilize scientific approaches for interpreting evidence, engaging in probabilistic reasoning, identifying sources of uncertainty, and developing iterative solutions. They develop skills in reasoning and collaboration, equipping them to deal with the challenges of the 21st century. The material is an adaptation of a University of California, Berkeley course created by Nobel Prize winner Saul Perlmutter and is being developed by the UC Berkeley Lawrence Hall of Science.
TAKEAWAYS:
Investigate the role of scale, quantity, and proportion during an interactive activity. Explore how to make simple, but useful, estimates of quantities that are too large to observe directly. The activity, a part of a 10-lesson unit on modeling in the context of ecology, is free for download.
SPEAKERS:
Janet Bellantoni, Sarah Metz