Working with geoscience materials
Materials needed in (almost) every introductory geoscience lab
If you're setting up a lab from scratch or making an inventory of the equipment in your lab, you probably want to make sure that your lab has certain basic supplies. Fortunately, many of the basic expendable supplies are inexpensive, as is the basic equipment.
Learn more about equipping an introductory geoscience lab hereRocks, minerals, fossils and other earth materials
Almost every geoscience department has collections of hand samples of rocks, minerals and fossils for student use in introductory geoscience labs. Many also have reference collections of specimens, special collections (for instance, Beloit College's B. H. Beane crinoid collection), display specimens, and/or "rock gardens" of oversized specimens collected, donated or purchased by the department, for instance at Santa Fe Community College, Gainesville, Florida. All of these materials can be well used in introductory geoscience classes.
Learn more about using earth materials hereMaps
Another distinction between introductory geoscience and other introductory science courses is the use of maps of various kinds. Increasingly, maps of all types are available on-line, for download into GIS (geographic information systems) projects or readable by viewers included in a site itself. However, most geoscience departments maintain collections of (paper) topographic maps; oversize geologic and other specialized topic maps of the world, continents, states, etc.; and sets of geologic maps, etc. for other purposes.
Learn more about using maps hereAir photos and other images
Even more so than maps, air photos and remotely-sensed images of various kinds have migrated to computers. Many departments, however, maintain teaching collections of air photos of classic areas, or historical sets of photos from local sites.
Learn more about using photos hereGeoscience instruments
Geoscience departments maintain a variety of laboratory instrumentation that can be used both for teaching and for research purposes. Depending on the staff available for technical teaching and maintenacne, many of these instruments are useful for introductory geoscience students. The link below leads to resources for teaching use of scanning electron microscopes (SEMs), XRay diffractometers and fluorescence units, ion chromatographs, and others.
Learn more about using instruments hereData and models
Websites hosted by the Science Education Resource Center have rich resources for faculty wanting to teach indoor labs based on data sets and modeling. For example, two sites using data in the classroom and teaching with data have links to data sets, projects and labs using data sets, and suggestions (technical and pedagogical) about teaching with data. Similarly, teaching with models and the related sites about specific kinds of models (conceptual models, interactive demonstrations, mathematical and statistical models, and visualizations and visual models) have background technical and pedagogical information and links to many teaching examples from a variety of fields.