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Focus Plan Texarkana Independent School District GRADING PERIOD: WRITER: Biology – 3rd , Chemistry – 2nd, IPC – 2nd, Physics – 4th L. Petty PLAN CODE: COURSE/SUBJECT: 11th grade science GRADE(S): 11th TIME ALLOTTED FOR INSTRUCTION: 1½ hours TITLE: To The Race Track LESSON TOPIC: Kinetic and Potential Energy TAKS OBJECTIVE: Objective 5 The students will demonstrate an understanding of motion, forces, and energy. FOCUS TEKS AND STUDENT EXPECTATION: 11.6 The student knows the impact of energy transformation in everyday life. The student is expected to: (A) describe the law of conservation of energy Objective 1: The student will demonstrate an understanding of the nature of science. 11.1 The student, for at least 40% of instructional time, conducts field and laboratory investigations using safe, environmentally appropriate, and ethical practices. The student is expected to: (A) demonstrate safe practices during field and laboratory investigations 11.2 The student uses scientific methods during field and laboratory investigations. The student is expected to: (A) plan and implement investigative procedures including asking questions, formulating testable hypotheses, and selecting equipment and technology (B) collect data and make measurements with precision (C) organize, analyze, evaluate, make inferences, and predict trends from data (D) communicate valid conclusions SUPPORTING TEKS AND STUDENT EXPECTATIONS: CONCEPTS Energy ENDURING UNDERSTANDINGS/GENERALIZATIONS/PRINCIPLES The student will understand that Energy is the ability to do work or cause motion. Energy forms Energy comes in many forms but all can be identified as either potential or kinetic. Conversions Energy can be converted from one form to another. Efficiency No energy change is 100% efficient. Heat In any energy conversion, some energy is “lost” as heat. Law of Conservation The Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy can be neither created nor destroyed in a physical or chemical change. I. SEQUENCE OF ACTIVITIES (INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES) A. Focus/connections/anticipatory set When students get to class, have several candles burning. Explain that you are converting energy. B. Instructional activities (demonstrations, lectures, examples, hands-on experiences, role play, active learning experience, art, music, modeling, discussion, reading, listening, viewing, etc.) 1. Discussion Explain that the candle has potential (stored) energy. When a candle is lit, the stored potential energy is released and converted to kinetic heat and light energy. C. Guided activity or strategy Put Transparency Master – Energy Conversions on the overhead and lead students through the examples. D. Accommodations/modifications Students requiring accommodations may be given a copy of the Transparency Master with answers. E. Enrichment Students requiring enrichment may be assigned vocabulary words prior to the activity or may be assigned the Transparency Master for homework prior to the activity. II. STUDENT PERFORMANCE A. Description Complete Lab Worksheet – To The Race Track. B. Accommodations/modifications Students requiring accommodations may require a peer tutor. C. Enrichment Students requiring enrichment may serve as peer tutors. III. ASSESSMENT OF ACTIVITIES A. Description Grade Lab Worksheet – To The Race Track B. Rubrics/grading criteria Data table set up for each table should count as 10 each for a total of 20 points. Points should be given for each column heading (one each for label and one each for proper unit) and for filling in the independent variable (2 points). Questions should count as 4 points each. C. Accommodations/modifications Students requiring accommodations may need help setting up the data tables (work with a peer tutor) and may need some leniency on questions 9 and 10 since they are higher level questions. D. Enrichment Students requiring enrichment may serve as peer tutors and may also have to answer questions 9 and 10 for more than one height. E. Sample discussion questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. IV. What is potential energy? Energy that is stored or due to the position of an object. What is kinetic energy? Energy of motion or energy being released. What happens during an energy conversion? Energy is changed from one form to another. How does the Law of Conservation of Energy apply? During any energy conversion, no energy can be created or destroyed. The amount of energy before the conversion must equal the amount of energy after the conversion. If a 50 kg object is dropped from a height of 10 m and reaches a speed of 29.4 m/sec in 3 seconds, how much potential and kinetic energy does it have? GPE = mgh KE = ½mv2 2 GPE = (50 kg)(9.8 m/sec )(10 m) KE = ½(50 kg)(29.4 m/sec)2 GPE = 4900 Joules KE = 21,609 Joules TAKS PREPARATION A. Transition to TAKS context 1. Mechanical energy is converted into heat energy when ____. (a) charcoal is burned in a grill (b) lasers are used to make a colorful display (c) food is stored in fat cells (d) hands are rubbed together 2. The kinetic energy of an object increases as the object ____. (a) speeds up (b) slows down (c) loses mass (d) stops moving 3. Raising or lowering a flag on a pole changes the flag’s _____. (a) chemical energy (b) potential energy (c) electromagnetic energy (d) nuclear energy Question 4 is based on the following basketball drawing. 4. At what point does the basketball have the most potential energy? (a) Point A (b) Point B (c) Point C (d) Point D 5. An example of kinetic energy continuously being changed to potential energy and back might be ___. (a) a moving train (b) electric charges moving along a path (c) a girl jumping on a trampoline (d) a rock poised at the top of a mountain B. Sample TAKS questions Spring 2003 1. Which process best shows the conversion of solar energy to chemical energy? (a) Prevailing winds causing windmills to spin (b) Green plants making their own food (c) Uranium producing heat to make steam (d) Tides generating electricity 2. What is the potential energy of the rock? (a) 59,900 joules (b) 64,600 joules (c) 93,100 joules (d) 121,600 joules Spring 2004 1. Which of the following is an example of solar energy being converted into chemical energy? (a) Plants producing sugar during the day (b) Water evaporating and condensing in the water cycle. (c) The sun unevenly heating Earth’s surface (d) Lava erupting from volcanoes for many days. . C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O Glucose Oxygen 3000 kJ 300 kJ Carbon Dioxide 200 kJ Water 150 kJ 2. Why is the sum of the products’ energy in this reaction less than the sum of the reactants’ energy? (a) Energy is given off as heat. (b) The products absorb available energy. (c) Energy is trapped in the reactants. (d) The reactants’ energy is less than the melting point of glucose. 3. An inventor claims to have created an internal combustion engine that converts 100 kJ of chemical energy from diesel fuel to 140 kJ of mechanical energy. This claim violates the law of conservation of ______. (a) momentum (b) inertia (c) energy (d) mass Solar Radiation and Earth Effect Solar radiation reaching Earth Radiation reflected back into space Radiation heating atmosphere, landmasses, and oceans Radiation producing winds and ocean currents Radiation used in photosynthesis Radiation resulting in evaporation of water Amount of Energy per Second (terajoules) 173,410 52,000 81,000 370 40 ? 4. Assuming the chart contains all energy transformations in the Earth system, how much solar radiation goes toward evaporating water? (a) 40,000 terajoules (b) 92,410 terajoules (c) 121,410 terajoules (d) 133,410 terajoules V. KEY VOCABULARY gravity kinetic energy mass VI. potential energy velocity RESOURCES A. Textbook None needed B. Supplementary materials/equipment Transparency Master – Energy Conversions Instructor’s Copy – Energy Conversions Lab Instructions – To The Race Track Lab Worksheet – To The Race Track Instructor’s Copy – To The Race Track C. VII. Technology FOLLOW UP ACTIVITIES (reteaching, cross-curricular support, technology activities, next lesson in sequence, etc.) A. Reteaching Go over graded labs with students. B. Next lesson in sequence Biology – energy change in the body. Chemistry and IPC – endo- and exothermic energy changes. VIII. TEACHER NOTES Before lab: 1. Pieces of race tracks can be picked up at garage sales or resale shops. If race tracks can not be found, it is possible to alter the lab to use flexible clear tubing and various weight ball bearings or marbles. 2. Run of the Transparency Master – Energy Conversions 3. Run off a class set of Lab Instructions – To The Race Track. 4. Run off enough Lab Worksheet – To The Race Track for each student to have one. 5. Practice the lab several times with the materials to get an idea of the approximate answers students should get. During lab: 6. Make sure students assemble the tracks so that the car will stay of the track through the whole distance (the track angle can be adjusted by moving the ring stands. 7. Spot check that students are measuring the final height accurately.