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#8849 OUR SOLAR SYSTEM Grade Levels: 4-8 15 minutes AIMS MULTIMEDIA 1999 DESCRIPTION Travel through the solar system, stopping at the sun and each of the nine planets. Computer graphics and space photography enhance the information about comets, meteors, asteroids, gravity, axis, orbit, and other related terms. ACADEMIC STANDARDS Subject Area: Earth and Space Sciences ! Standard: Understands the composition and structure of the universe and the Earth’s place in it • Benchmark: Knows characteristics and movement patterns of the nine planets in our Solar System INSTRUCTIONAL GOALS 1. To identify multiple properties of each planet in the solar system. 2. To compare and contrast planets in the solar system based on various properties. VOCABULARY 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. asteroids astronomers atmosphere axis celestial bodies comets core craters debris Galileo gravity 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. inner planets meteorites meteors observatories orbit prominences revolve rotate satellite telescope 1 Captioned Media Program VOICE 800-237-6213 – TTY 800-237-6819 – FAX 800-538-5636 – WEB www.cfv.org Funding for the Captioned Media Program is provided by the U.S. Department of Education BEFORE SHOWING 1. What is a system? List as many systems as you can (digestive system, stereo system, computer system). 2. What is a solar system? 3. Name as many planets and stars as you can. AFTER SHOWING Discussion Items and Questions 1. What are some celestial bodies you might see in the night sky? (Stars, planets, meteors.) 2. Explain how the telescope helped people in studying the motion of the sun and stars. (It enlarged the celestial bodies and brought them into focus.) 3. What objects make up our solar system? (Sun, nine planets, about 50 moons, meteors, comets, asteroids.) 4. Why is the sun the most important part of our solar system? (All planets move around the sun. It’s the center of universe.) 5. What is gravity? (Gravity is a force that pulls toward the center.) 6. How do scientists think craters were formed? (They were formed billions of years ago by bombarding debris or space junk.) 7. Compare and contrast the properties of asteroids, comets and meteoroids. 8. Why do people think meteoroids are falling stars? (They are chunks of rocks that enter the earth’s atmosphere so fast that they burn up and look like a flashing light in the sky.) 9. When does a meteoroid become a meteorite? (Meteors that reach the ground and possibly cause craters are meteorites.) 10. Name and give a characteristic of each of the five outer planets—in order. 11. Why are four of the outer planets called “gas giants”? (The planets are larger than the inner planets and are made of gas. They aren’t solid.) 12. How is Pluto’s orbit different from the rest? What is the result of this? (It’s elliptical or elongated. It crosses paths with Neptune periodically and then becomes the sixth planet.) Applications and Activities 1. Write two sentences for each vocabulary word. One sentence should contain an accurate definition of the word in context. The other sentence should be fictional. Students choose the sentence that best defines the word. They should then write the definition and give an example using their own words. 2. Write each vocabulary word on an index card. Have students choose a card and write several clues or questions related to the word on the back of the card. Students then get in small groups. The card holder gives one clue or question at a time and the group tries to guess the word. 2 Captioned Media Program VOICE 800-237-6213 – TTY 800-237-6819 – FAX 800-538-5636 – WEB www.cfv.org Funding for the Captioned Media Program is provided by the U.S. Department of Education 3. Make a large chart with the words “Solar System” in the center. In boxes surrounding this, write the names of the planets. Have students write down what they know about each planet in the appropriate spaces. Be sure to revisit the chart after viewing the video and make necessary adjustments. 4. Teach students the order of the planets by using the phrase “My Very Eager Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizzas.” Have them make posters showing the planets with an original verse for remembering the planet order. 5. Create note-taking sheets with the headings of information you want students to learn. Make one sheet for each planet. RELATED RESOURCES Captioned Media Program • • • • • An Alphabet of Space #2449 Our Sun and Its Planets #2577 The Solar System: An Introduction #2226 Sun, Earth, Moon #3301 Voyage to the Moon #3313 World Wide Web The following Web sites complement the contents of this guide; they were selected by professionals who have experience in teaching deaf and hard of hearing students. Every effort was made to select accurate, educationally relevant, and “kid-safe” sites. However, teachers should preview them before use. The U.S. Department of Education, the National Association of the Deaf, and the Captioned Media Program do not endorse the sites and are not responsible for their content. AMAZING SPACE http://amazing-space.stsci.edu/ • Learn the objects that make up the solar system; take the Astronaut Challenge; read a brief history of telescopes and other activities. STARCHILD http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/starchild/starchild.html • Select one of the two reading levels to know more about the sun, the moon, meteoroids, the planets, and other information. VIEWS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM http://www.solarviews.com/eng/homepage.htm • Presents a vivid multimedia adventure of the Sun, planets, moons, and more. Discover the latest scientific information, study the history of space exploration, read about early astronauts and more! 3 Captioned Media Program VOICE 800-237-6213 – TTY 800-237-6819 – FAX 800-538-5636 – WEB www.cfv.org Funding for the Captioned Media Program is provided by the U.S. Department of Education