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Grades 68. In this unit students answer the question, "How can a magnet move another object without touching it?" During hands-on investigations, students explore magnetic forces and the connections between forces, energy, and magnetic fields, to develop an understanding that magnetic fields extend through space. Kit includes basic teacher access to instructional materials on CarolinaScienceOnline.com, plus enough materials to teach 1 class of 32 students per day.
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Grades 68. In Unit 8.3 Forces at a Distance, Carolina Certified Version*, students work to answer the Unit Driving Question: "How can a magnet move another object without touching it?"
Music has a central place in the lives of young people. It has never been easier for them to listen to their favorite songs in the car, on the bus, or in the schoolyard. Middle school students spend countless hours cycling through playlists on their devices, using headphones or Bluetooth® speakers that are designed for and marketed to young people. Speakers, in their various forms, work with the simple movement of a speaker membrane, or speaker cone. But what causes this membrane to move? Can a tiny headphone do something similar to the subwoofer speaker in a car to play music? As speakers have evolved over time, one thing has remained the same: the use of magnets to vibrate the speaker membrane.
Students are presented with an anchoring phenomenon that focuses on the vibration of a speaker and asked to think about what causes this vibration. The vibration of a speaker connects to a model of sound that students have developed previously, but this new unit opens the door for students to investigate the cause of a speaker's vibration as opposed to the effect. Students dissect speakers to explore the inner workings, and they build homemade cup speakers to manipulate the parts of the speaker. They identify that speakers of all kinds contain some of the same parts�a magnet, a coil of wire, and a membrane. Students investigate each of these parts to figure out how they work together in the speaker system. Along the way, students manipulate the parts (e.g., changing the strength of the magnet, number of coils, current direction) to see how this technology could be modified to apply to systems in very different contexts, such as maglev trains, junkyard magnets, and electric motors.
Through a series of hands-on investigations, students:
This 1-Class Unit Kit includes basic teacher access to instructional materials on CarolinaScienceOnline.com, plus the materials needed to teach 1 class of 32 students per day.
Building Toward NGSS Performance Expectations
Science and Engineering Practices
Focal Disciplinary Core Ideas
Focal Crosscutting Concepts
*All enhancements to materials and instruction for this Carolina Certified Version of the unit are approved by OpenSciEd to preserve the integrity of the storyline and the instructional model.
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