| Module
3: The Earth and the Moon
Lesson
1: The reasons for the seasons
|

|
|
| Timeframe: |
|
This activity
will require approximately three 30-minute classes
- 1 class
to introduce the topic, demonstrate the processes with flashlight and
globe and to introduce the applet (activity 1 & 2)
- 1 class
period to have students work with the applet describing the reasons
for the seasons (activity 3)
- 1 class
period for closure activity (activity 4)
|
|
| Objectives: |
| |
Pan-Canadian
Curriculum Objectives: |
| |
301-20:
observe and explain how the relative positions of Earth, the moon, and the
sun are responsible for the moon phases, eclipses, and tides. |
| |
Pan-Canadian
Objectives
|
| |
|
| |
General
Objectives: |
| |
Students
will observe, sketch and explore the reasons for the seasons via the interactive
applet, in an attempt to better understand the relationships between the
sun, moon and Earth relating to the seasons. |
|
| Curricular
Connections: |
- Information
and Communication Technologies
- Use
of interactive applet
- Language
Arts
|
|
| Lesson
Overview: |
|
By engaging
students in a variety of activities targeting different learning styles
(kinesthetic, visual, and technological), students will become familiar
with the seasons, and will be able to explain the reasons for the seasons
depending on the orientation of the sun, moon, and Earth.
The lesson
plan is divided into four separate activities:
- Activity
1: demonstration of seasons (students participate)
- Activity
2: introduce the applet to later be used by students
- Activity
3: in the computer lab, students work with the Reasons for the Seasons
applet in groups of two
- Activity
4: closure activity, teacher uses the applet in a lecture style delivery
format stopping the animation at key moments and eliciting feedback
from the students as to an explanation for the current seasons in both
the Northern and Southern Hemispheres
|
|
| Materials
and Resources: |
- Reasons
for Seasons applet
- Reasons
for the Seasons handout

- Globe,
model of the moon (a simple ball will do), and a bright flashlight
|
|
| Vocabulary: |
- autumnal equinox
- vernal equinox
- summer solstice
- winter solstice
- lunar cycle
|
Astronomy
Glossary |
|
| Developing
the Lesson: |
|
Begin with
focus questions:
Have you
ever wondered why Canadians experience such vastly different weather
patterns during the seasons?
Do you know why it warmer in Canada during the summer?
Did you know that when Canadians are experiencing summer, our friends
in Australia are experiencing winter?
Did you know that a winter in the Southern Hemisphere is a fair bit
warmer than a winter in the Northern Hemisphere?
Explain the
nature of the activities that will be used to help students become better
acquainted with the reasons for the seasons:
Activity
1: students participate in a visual demonstration of the seasons with
globe and flashlight
Activity
2: teacher uses computer with projection system to display the Reasons
for the Seasons applet. Teacher explains how the applet works and
what students will do with the applet in Activity 3
Activity
3: teacher demonstrates the applet and distributes the Reasons for the
Seasons handout to the students. The students are given approximately
30 minutes to complete the handout using the applet.
Activity
4: simply mention to the students that there will be a final activity
that will help to reinforce what they have learned about the seasons
(Activity 4 should follow approximately 2 days after the completion
of Activities 1, 2 and 3.
Commence
the activities and remember to have fun.
Activity
1: click
here for diagram
- arrange
students into a large circle (students will need a piece of paper
and a black marker)
- place
a light source at the center of the circle
- darken
the classroom and turn on the light source
- students
will pass a globe around the circle being careful to maintain the
tilt of the Earth
- instruct
students to observe the globe as they pass it to their classmates
and to draw on their paper the shape of light impacting on the globe's
surface
- initiate
a short discussion as to why the light appear to impact the globe
differently as it is passed around the circle
- have
students write the season they observed on their diagrams (summer,
fall, winter or summer)
Activity
2: Reasons
for the Seasons applet 
- with
the classroom back in order, the teacher begins demonstrating the
applet
- identify
the key elements (moon, Earth, and sun)
- play
the applet animation straight through at least two times
- have
the students focus first on the Sun's rays impacting the Earth bottom
right of the applet
- then
have the students focus on the progression of the Earth around the
Sun.
- run
the animation a few more times stopping at key stages (Winter Solstice,
Vernal Equinox, Summer Solstice, and Autumnal Equinox)
Activity
3:
- provide
students with a brief review of the applet's functionality
- distribute
the Reasons for the
Seasons worksheet
- explain
that students will be required to complete the handout by the end
of the current class time
Activity
4:
- repeat
steps as per Activity 2
|
|
| Closure: |
| As
a closure to the activities, the teacher uses the applet in a lecture style
delivery format, stopping the animation at key moments and eliciting feedback
from the students as to an explanation for the current seasons
in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. |
|
| Evaluation: |
|
Evaluate
both student participation as well as the completion of the Reasons for
Seasons worksheet. Student participation can be evaluated during activities
1, 2 and 3, even when the students are working with the applet. Students
could also be presented with a short quiz in which they would have to
correctly identify and explain the reasons for the seasons.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
 |
|
|