Its Elementary! Light and Optics for Kids

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Light is a fascinating and familiar topic for young kids. Its also rich and complex, which is great if you are teaching a graduate level course in Quantum Mechanics. But how do you lay the foundation for this exciting topic? What do you teach first to the youngest would be scientists and how do you do that? Starting with what even the youngest kids know about light... that it is for seeing, this presentation guides you through introducing the basics of light and color: reflection, refraction, shadows and vision in a series of fun, easy and very concrete lessons. Lessons can stand alone, or together make a fantastic elementary light unit. It's Elementary: Light and Optics for Kids was presented at the SPIE 2014 Photonics and Optics Conference in San Diego by the President and Founder of LASER Classroom, Colette DeHarpporte. The kit used for this presentation and the accompanying curriculum guide that is available for FREE on the LASER Classroom website (www.laserclassroom.com) is the featured kit for the UNESCO International Year of LIght, 2015. (IYL2015)

Transcript

It’s Elementary!

Light and Optics for Kids

WS-1142SPIE – Optics and PhotonicsSan Diego, CA

Teaching Young Students

• Ages 6-12• Light is a fantastic phenomenon for young kids

– Familiar, engaging, complex • Break it down, back to basics

– Your knowledge can work against you…– Know where to start and what you want to leave

students with– Laying a foundation

Content• Concrete

– Visible Spectrum– Experiential, kinesthetic

• One or 2 Big Ideas at a time– Light allows us to see and originates from a

source– Light travels in a straight line and spreads out – White light is made up of many colors, you can

make new colors by combining colors– Light interacts differently with different materials

Content Cont.

– Shadows are created when light is blocked or absorbed

– Shadows change shape and size when the position of the light or the object changes

– Light Bends as it passes from air into another medium– The shape of a lens determines how light bends– Light bounces and follows a strict rule about how it

bounces

Process

• Experience• Explore• Experiment

Move from experience to ideas

Experience

• What do they already know or have experience with?

• How do you know what they know? • Foundation – create a common experience• With experience comes misperception

– White light is colorless, “clear”– Only shiny objects reflect light– Shadows are “things” or objects

Explore

• Interactive, hands on unstructured time• Messy is GOOD!• What they figure out on their own will be

– The most interesting to them, the hook– The most enduring… they will remember it!

Experiment

• Add structure• Introduce a focused question• Record Observations• Quantify Observations• Change a variable

Classroom Cave• Classroom conversation

– You need light to see and light comes from a source

• Activity– Build a very dark space and allow students to

explore it.– Hide the dolls and invite students to predict

which ones they will find without a light source– Send them to test and record their findings– Send them in with a light source

Classroom Cave• Reinforces

– Light is required to see– Light originates from a source

• Gives a concrete experience of SEEING light that is reflected

• Predict, test, try again, conclude!!• Addresses the misconception: Only shiny objects reflect light

Follow the Beam!

• Light travels in straight lines• Light “spreads out” as it moves further

away and “condenses” as it gets closer• Give students some time to explore before

you hand out the worksheets and/or give specific instructions.

• Pose the question: How does light travel?

Light and Color• New experience of “white light”• May contradict their

understanding of color based on pigments (paints)

• FUN!!!!• Extension: sort the m&m’s…• Addressed the misconception:

White light is colorless and clear

Light and Materials

• Plenty of exploration time – let them play

• Don’t get hung up on vocabulary and definitions

• Other materials?? • Class discussion

Shadows

• Misconception: Shadows are objects

• Shadows are formed when light is blocked

• Shadows change shape and size as the relative position between the light source and the object changes.

Light BENDS!

• Kinesthetic model

• Refraction = bending

• Bending is caused by slowing down

Lenses Bend Light• Different shapes bend light in

different ways

• Start with exploration

• Introduce terms: concave and convex

• Follow the worksheet

• Share findings

• Draw conclusions

Light Bounces

• Reflection

• Exploration with the lights

• Structured Kinesthetic Activity

Light Everywhere!

• Light is all we see– From a Light Source– Reflected from a surface

• Constructing their own questions and conclusions– Can also be a beginning– Is the foundation of becoming a

STEM professional!

www.laserclassroom.com colette@laserclassroom.com

FREE Lessons and Activities for all ages

Thank You!

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