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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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Instead of taking students on a "tour" of the planet Jupiter, have them do research to find out what the planet is like and write descriptions of Jupiter based on the most recent scientific findings, including the Galileo spacecraft mission to Jupiter. |
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You can evaluate groups on their models using the following three-point rubric:
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Online from Jupiter Invite students to visit the Web site "Online from Jupiter," atnasa, to learn about the Galileo spacecraft mission to Jupiter. They will find field journals describing the day-to-day activities of Galileo personnel. Have them summarize what was learned from the Galileo spacecraft mission before the spacecraft was destroyed in Jupiter's molten core. Weighing In Explain to students that the bigger the planet, the stronger the pull of gravity on objects on its surface (if you could stand on Jupiter's surface, which you can't). Challenge each student to do research to find out how much he or she would weigh on Jupiter and each planet in the solar system. |
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Jupiter: The Giant Planet by Reta Beebe, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994. Secrets in the Night Sky: The Most Amazing Things in the Universe You Can See With the Naked Eye by Bob Berman, William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1995. |
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Online From Jupiter At "Online from Jupiter," you'll find field journals describing the day-to-day activities of Galileo personnel. You will also find featured activities and resources for learning, including curriculum materials about Jupiter and Galileo, and don't forget to visit the photo gallery. The Nine Planets - A Multimedia Tour of the Solar System Your students can visit each planet in the solar system at this Internet site. |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: Astronomers predicted that the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 would collide with Jupiter in July 1994.
Context: As the Voyager spacecrafts passed through this Jovian kingdom, they encountered a realm of alien worlds, the like of which we had never expected.
Context: The Galileo spacecraft was hearing the sound of lightening bolts rippling into the earth's magnetic field.
Context: As a space-watch astronomer, Jim Scotty commutes regularly to the summit of Arizona's Kitt Peak to look for comets and asteroids which might be heading in Earth's direction.
Context: In Australia, astronomers chose to observe Jupiter with an infrared spectrometer.
Context: A spectrometer is an instrument that takes light from Jupiter and breaks it up into its constituent wave lengths. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 6-8 Subject area: science Standard: Understands essential ideas about the composition and structure of the universe and the Earth's place in it. Benchmarks: Knows that nine planets of differing sizes and surface features and with differing compositions move around the Sun in nearly circular orbits; some planets have a variety of moons and rings of particles orbiting around them (e.g., the Earth is orbited by one moon, many artificial satellites and debris). Knows that the Sun's gravitational pull keeps the Earth and other planets in their orbits, just as the gravitational pull of planets keeps their moons in orbit around them.
Knows that many pieces of rock and ice orbit our Sun: some meet the Earth in its orbit, glow and disintegrate from friction as they plunge through our atmosphere; other objects have long, off-center orbits that bring them close to the Sun, whose radiation boils off material and pushes it into a long, illuminated tail. |
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