Teaching Activities
Earth education activities from across all of the sites within the Teach the Earth portal.
Grade Level Show all
- College Introductory 9 matches
College Lower (13-14)
13 matches General/OtherOnline Readiness
Resource Type: Activities
Subject Show all
- Assessment 6 matches
- Faculty Development 1 match
Education
10 matches General/OtherActivity Review
Results 1 - 10 of 16 matches
Geoscience education research project part of Undergraduate Research:2014 Workshop:Activities
Karen Kortz, Community College of Rhode Island
Students complete a scientific research project including asking a question, developing methods, collecting data, analyzing and interpreting data, and communicating results. The research question begins "What ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities, Project
Subject: Education
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Syllabus Quiz part of Online Teaching:Activities for Teaching Online
Karin Kirk, Freelance Science Writer and Geoscientist
This quiz helps students make sure they understand the important policies of the course before they embark into the course. Because students in online courses need to digest all of the course rules by reading ...
Online Readiness: Online Ready
Resource Type: Activities: Assessments:On line, Activities
Subject: Geoscience, Education:Assessment:On Line
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Teaching geologic time and rates of landscape evolution with dice part of Rates and Time:GSA Activity Posters
Kate Ruhl, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Landscape evolution provides a convenient framework for understanding geologic time and rates because students can observe how processes like erosion and deposition shape their surroundings. In this example, students build 3-D sandbox models based on topographic maps and design and stage a "virtual adventure race." Sandbox landscapes are used to illustrate erosional processes,while local examples are used to discuss landscapes as transient or steady over different time- and length scales. Dice experiments illustrate radioactive decay and the shape of the age equation curve, and 14C dating, geochronology and thermochronology are introduced as "stopwatches" that start when a plant dies, a crystal forms, or a rock nears the surface and cools to a certain temperature. The sandbox model and thermochronometer "stopwatches" are combined to measure erosion rates and rates of landscape change. Ultimately, model rates (cm/hour) calculated from stopwatch times on the order of seconds can be related to geologic rates (km/My) calculated from real million-year-old samples.
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity, Lab Activity
Subject: Geoscience:Geology:Geomorphology:Modeling/Physical Experiments, Education, Geoscience:Geology:Geomorphology:Dating and Rates, Landscape Evolution
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review
Learning About Thinking and Thinking About Learning part of Affective Domain:Activities
Karl Wirth, Macalester College
A document about learning provides background information for classroom activities to help students be more intentional about their thinking and learning
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity
Subject: Education
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Challenging Pre-Conceptions part of Metacognition:Activities
Perry Samson, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Students carry into class pre-conceptions based on stories they've heard, articles they've read and experiences they've had. One of the best opportunities to teach metacognition is at a 'gotcha' moment when they come to realize their pre-conception is amiss.
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity
Subject: Education
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review
Guided Discovery and Scoring Rubric for Petrographic Analysis of a Thin Section part of Metacognition:Activities
Dave Mogk, Montana State University-Bozeman
A guided discovery approach is used to "unpack" the methods and observations used by "master" petrographers in the petrographic analysis of a thin section. A series of spread sheets are used to ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Lab Activity
Subject: Geoscience:Geology:Mineralogy:Phase Equilibria/Thermodynamics, Geoscience:Geology:Structural Geology:Microstructures, Deformation Mechanisms, Fabrics, Geoscience:Geology:Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology, Education:Assessment:Rubric, Geoscience:Geology:Mineralogy:Optical Mineralogy, Geoscience:Geology:Sedimentary Geology
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Lab using Volcano Scenarios: Hazard Maps and Communicating Risk part of Student Learning: Observing and Assessing:Activities
LeeAnn Srogi, West Chester University of Pennsylvania
This is a lab activity in which small groups of students work with maps, rocks, photographs of volcanic deposits, and textual data to construct a hazard map and a risk communication plan for a specific volcano. Each group is assigned a "volcano scenario," which is based on real volcanoes.
Resource Type: Activities: Assessments, Activities, Lab Activity
Subject: Education:Assessment, Geoscience:Geology:Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology:Volcanology
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review
What Do You Know Now? part of Metacognition:Activities
Developed by Perry J. Samson
Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences, University of Michigan
An opportunity to offer metacognitive teaching arises from the simple question "what do you know now that you didn't before (whatever)"? This simple question can be asked after a reading, a lecture, a lab or other unit of student activity. The thrust is to force the student to consider what they've been exposed to and reflect on what they've learned. Did the activity change their opinion? Did this activity help them identify an analogy?
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity
Subject: Education
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review
Peer Instruction part of Metacognition:Activities
Developed by Perry J. Samson
Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences
University of Michigan
Peer instruction may offer some of the richest opportunities for metacognitive teaching. Reciprocal (peer) teaching forces the instructor to use a whole series of metacognitive processes such as determining what ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity
Subject: Education
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review
Geological Map Problem part of Student Learning: Observing and Assessing:Activities
Robert Filson, Green River Community College
This is a lab activity that is designed to help introductory, non-science majors integrate their geological knowledge near the end of the course. In this activity, students work in self-selected groups of up to four per group on the history of a sketch geological map.
Resource Type: Activities: Assessments, Activities:Lab Activity
Subject: Education:Assessment, Geoscience:Geology
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review