Multiple Representations And Misconceptions In Science Instructional Materials, originally presented at a high school Science Teacher Forum, January 2006.
Presentation given by Dr. Robert Root-Bernstein - Keynote Address @ AENJ Fall Conference 2011 The Hyatt Regency, New Brunswick, NJ
October 4, 2011
with permission of the author
Chapter Four – Enclosed is your assignment on Culture 1- What i.docxchristinemaritza
Chapter Four – Enclosed is your assignment on Culture:
1- What is the difference between “Culture and Society”?
2- What is Ethnocentrism vs Relativism, explain in your own words?
3- What is convention, Cultural diffusion, Cultural Universal, and Cultural Alternatives?
4- What are the five main “Social Institutions” and explain their functions to the Structure of “Society”?
5- View documentary below and compare and contrast this footage as it relates to your own “Cultural practices” One page reaction paper, make sure you include appropriate academic references. Note that the references will not count toward your page limitation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BM63f5SBlkw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYgQkH4S7cY
the Garifuna heritage pt.1
the Garifuna heritage pt.2
AD207a Spring 2017
FORMAL ANALYSIS ASSIGNMENT
Directions:
• Find an artwork in a public place we can both easily visit in person. You must
contact me about which piece you wish to use for this paper before you start writing.
You must visit the artwork in person, more than once if possible, to examine both
formal elements and principles of design used in the composition. Make sure you’re
looking very closely, taking detailed notes, and even drawing sketches. Depending
on where your artwork is located, you should be able to take a NO-FLASH photo for
reference. For help with formal elements of art and principles of design, see the
attached handouts from the J. Paul Getty Museum.
• Beyond just observing, you should begin to cultivate some ideas about the formal
qualities of the artwork and what effect they have. You will develop these ideas into
a thesis and use your observations of the formal qualities of the artwork to support
your argument. For reference, refer to Sylvan Barnet’s example of a “Formal
Analysis,” found in the Formal Analysis module on D2L.
• You will then write a 1000-word (1000 minimum, 1300 maximum) essay carefully
analyzing the formal qualities of the artwork and what effect they have. Along with
your formal analysis essay, you must submit an image of the artwork you have
analyzed.
This assignment is worth 20% of your final grade and will be submitted in two stages.
Stage 1 due: Sunday, March 26, 11:59 pm (100 pts. total)
Part A:
You must visit a writing center somewhere on campus with your rough draft
essay by this time and ask them to email me a copy of your meeting report.
Part B:
Upload your rough draft to D2L. This is the same version you took to the
WATL, uncorrected.
As soon as I verify that you visited the writing center with a rough draft and
uploaded it to D2L, you will be awarded full credit for this portion of the assignment.
Stage 2 due: Sunday, April 23, 11:59pm (100 pts. total)
You must submit a final, revised draft to D2L by this time.
AD207a Spring 2017
Grading Rubric
The following rubric will be used to assess the final ...
this power point seeks to give detail information about the elements of design, providing a wide range of visual examples. It further seeks to provide an assessment item by virtue of questions. This power point also serves in the form of lessons, in that an element and its activities may be thought for one specific class.
Photography and Art (graded)1. In the 19th century, the camera w.docxmattjtoni51554
Photography and Art (graded)
1. In the 19th century, the camera was a revolutionary invention. Did the invention of the camera change the arts? Why or why not?
Is there a relationship between movements such as realism and impressionism and the camera?
Imagining a world without modern technology
2. The reason it's good to pay attention to the course objectives is that they tell you what goals for the student are most important to the institutions and teachers that create the class. Therefore, they present obvious clues as to what will be tested, and the priorities by which papers are graded.
This week is a great example. One of the course objectives covered this week is, "given a significant technological advance (such as the printing press or camera), assess the effects of the technical breakthrough on culture and art."
Imagine what people and cultures were like without photography, recorded music, television, film, music videos, or anything electronic whatever. Much of what we take for granted would seem absolutely miraculous to them. Also, the whole nature and use of the human imagination has changed significantly.
You may want to use considerations such as this in responding to this particular discussion question. Or, take it in your own direction.
3. This is probably the kind of thing that only a Humanities teacher would be interested in, but the history of the development of color media for humanity's creative use is really a quite fascinating one - involving charred wood from ancient fires, naturally occurring vs. manufactured pigments, finishing a painting quickly before plaster dries, and even an essential creative use for eggs. And of course, much more.
Technological advances in the arts are not a recent phenomenon. They have been going on since the beginning:
Writing (ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt)
The tuba and the organ (Classical Rome)
The printing press (the 15th Century - one big reason the Protestant Reformation succeeded after several failed starts in previous centuries)
The modern piano (the 18th Century - a big part of the great emotion of Romantic music, like Beethoven)
Electronics (Think for a moment about how your experience of the arts - music especially - is affected by relatively recent advances in electronics)
There could be a whole course in history studying just such things.
4. Realism and Impressionism (graded)
For this week's discussion, choose realism or impressionism as a basis for your posts and discuss how your choice is manifested in any area of the humanities (i.e., painting, sculpture, literature, music, etc.), and give an example from any discipline in the humanities to illustrate how realism or impressionism influenced the work of art. Please be sure to give an analysis of how the work of art was influenced by the movement.
Here we go again. We get to look at more highfalutin academic words: Realism and Impressionism.
B. As I wrote before, though it's OK when you look.
Art, and especially visual arts, is the topic that requires both background knowledge and imagination. Most teachers are afraid of it, the same as most students are bored with it. However, with the concept maps and cause-and-effect sentences it may become a source of fun in the English classroom. So, to make teaching of art more effective, I suggest a couple of ideas, which will also be the key points for the workshop:
1) Basic history of art - it gives us not just facts but useful vocabulary for describing works of art.
2) Elements of design and what they mean.
3) How to describe a picture or a photograph.
Presentation given by Dr. Robert Root-Bernstein - Keynote Address @ AENJ Fall Conference 2011 The Hyatt Regency, New Brunswick, NJ
October 4, 2011
with permission of the author
Chapter Four – Enclosed is your assignment on Culture 1- What i.docxchristinemaritza
Chapter Four – Enclosed is your assignment on Culture:
1- What is the difference between “Culture and Society”?
2- What is Ethnocentrism vs Relativism, explain in your own words?
3- What is convention, Cultural diffusion, Cultural Universal, and Cultural Alternatives?
4- What are the five main “Social Institutions” and explain their functions to the Structure of “Society”?
5- View documentary below and compare and contrast this footage as it relates to your own “Cultural practices” One page reaction paper, make sure you include appropriate academic references. Note that the references will not count toward your page limitation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BM63f5SBlkw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYgQkH4S7cY
the Garifuna heritage pt.1
the Garifuna heritage pt.2
AD207a Spring 2017
FORMAL ANALYSIS ASSIGNMENT
Directions:
• Find an artwork in a public place we can both easily visit in person. You must
contact me about which piece you wish to use for this paper before you start writing.
You must visit the artwork in person, more than once if possible, to examine both
formal elements and principles of design used in the composition. Make sure you’re
looking very closely, taking detailed notes, and even drawing sketches. Depending
on where your artwork is located, you should be able to take a NO-FLASH photo for
reference. For help with formal elements of art and principles of design, see the
attached handouts from the J. Paul Getty Museum.
• Beyond just observing, you should begin to cultivate some ideas about the formal
qualities of the artwork and what effect they have. You will develop these ideas into
a thesis and use your observations of the formal qualities of the artwork to support
your argument. For reference, refer to Sylvan Barnet’s example of a “Formal
Analysis,” found in the Formal Analysis module on D2L.
• You will then write a 1000-word (1000 minimum, 1300 maximum) essay carefully
analyzing the formal qualities of the artwork and what effect they have. Along with
your formal analysis essay, you must submit an image of the artwork you have
analyzed.
This assignment is worth 20% of your final grade and will be submitted in two stages.
Stage 1 due: Sunday, March 26, 11:59 pm (100 pts. total)
Part A:
You must visit a writing center somewhere on campus with your rough draft
essay by this time and ask them to email me a copy of your meeting report.
Part B:
Upload your rough draft to D2L. This is the same version you took to the
WATL, uncorrected.
As soon as I verify that you visited the writing center with a rough draft and
uploaded it to D2L, you will be awarded full credit for this portion of the assignment.
Stage 2 due: Sunday, April 23, 11:59pm (100 pts. total)
You must submit a final, revised draft to D2L by this time.
AD207a Spring 2017
Grading Rubric
The following rubric will be used to assess the final ...
this power point seeks to give detail information about the elements of design, providing a wide range of visual examples. It further seeks to provide an assessment item by virtue of questions. This power point also serves in the form of lessons, in that an element and its activities may be thought for one specific class.
Photography and Art (graded)1. In the 19th century, the camera w.docxmattjtoni51554
Photography and Art (graded)
1. In the 19th century, the camera was a revolutionary invention. Did the invention of the camera change the arts? Why or why not?
Is there a relationship between movements such as realism and impressionism and the camera?
Imagining a world without modern technology
2. The reason it's good to pay attention to the course objectives is that they tell you what goals for the student are most important to the institutions and teachers that create the class. Therefore, they present obvious clues as to what will be tested, and the priorities by which papers are graded.
This week is a great example. One of the course objectives covered this week is, "given a significant technological advance (such as the printing press or camera), assess the effects of the technical breakthrough on culture and art."
Imagine what people and cultures were like without photography, recorded music, television, film, music videos, or anything electronic whatever. Much of what we take for granted would seem absolutely miraculous to them. Also, the whole nature and use of the human imagination has changed significantly.
You may want to use considerations such as this in responding to this particular discussion question. Or, take it in your own direction.
3. This is probably the kind of thing that only a Humanities teacher would be interested in, but the history of the development of color media for humanity's creative use is really a quite fascinating one - involving charred wood from ancient fires, naturally occurring vs. manufactured pigments, finishing a painting quickly before plaster dries, and even an essential creative use for eggs. And of course, much more.
Technological advances in the arts are not a recent phenomenon. They have been going on since the beginning:
Writing (ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt)
The tuba and the organ (Classical Rome)
The printing press (the 15th Century - one big reason the Protestant Reformation succeeded after several failed starts in previous centuries)
The modern piano (the 18th Century - a big part of the great emotion of Romantic music, like Beethoven)
Electronics (Think for a moment about how your experience of the arts - music especially - is affected by relatively recent advances in electronics)
There could be a whole course in history studying just such things.
4. Realism and Impressionism (graded)
For this week's discussion, choose realism or impressionism as a basis for your posts and discuss how your choice is manifested in any area of the humanities (i.e., painting, sculpture, literature, music, etc.), and give an example from any discipline in the humanities to illustrate how realism or impressionism influenced the work of art. Please be sure to give an analysis of how the work of art was influenced by the movement.
Here we go again. We get to look at more highfalutin academic words: Realism and Impressionism.
B. As I wrote before, though it's OK when you look.
Art, and especially visual arts, is the topic that requires both background knowledge and imagination. Most teachers are afraid of it, the same as most students are bored with it. However, with the concept maps and cause-and-effect sentences it may become a source of fun in the English classroom. So, to make teaching of art more effective, I suggest a couple of ideas, which will also be the key points for the workshop:
1) Basic history of art - it gives us not just facts but useful vocabulary for describing works of art.
2) Elements of design and what they mean.
3) How to describe a picture or a photograph.
Cristina Giosue proposes Donkey Milk for Italy--includes fascinating analyses of milk's energy content and systematic feedback analysis of animal husbandry.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
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http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
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This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
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Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
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An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
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You See It – But Do You Believe It
1. You See it – But Do You Believe It? Multiple Representations and Misconceptions in Science Instructional Materials High School Science Teacher Forum for North San Diego County Teachers Dr. Larry Woolf [email_address] www.sci-ed-ga.org (click on presentations) General Atomics Presented 1/11/05 at North County Professional Development Federation
25. Place a cyan film over a magenta film What color of light do you start with? What colors of light are subtracted? What color of light remains? How can you describe this mathematically? How can you describe this pictorially?
38. Color Wheel Model for Subtractive Colors R Y M B G C What are the limitations of this model? Does it show all the possible colors? Does this model explain how our eyes see color?
43. From: http://www.physics.indiana.edu/~hake/ “ Interactive-engagement vs traditional methods: A six-thousand student survey of mechanics test data for introductory physics courses ” Richard R. Hake Department of Physics, Indiana University, Scientific evidence: interactive engagement is more effective than passive lecture for understanding of conceptually difficult subjects
44. Why is it hotter in the summer than the winter?
47. Are the rays from the Sun ever *indirect*? Is Earth’s orbit egg-shaped? At Earth’s surface, are the Sun’s rays parallel? Can you make a scale drawing of the Earth, Sun, and Earth-Sun distance? Does the amount of atmosphere the sunlight passes through contribute to the seasons (i.e. more atmosphere to pass through in the winter so less intense sunlight)? What do you think about these questions? Let’s see what the experts say …
48. From: A Private Universe Teacher’s Guide, p. 18 Misleading terms: “indirect rays” and “direct rays”
54. Misleading scales and diagrams Overly distorted Sun position and elliptical orbit http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr161/lect/time/seasons.html Note: egg-shaped orbit. This type of diagram is common in Earth and space science texts. Even though the text of this figure states it is not to scale, we only remember the incorrect misleading image!
58. From GEMS: The Real Reasons for Seasons p. 92 Sun’s rays are parallel Conflicting models for the sun’s rays
59. From: “What is Light and How Do We Explain It” by Bill G. Aldridge; Scope Sequence and Coordination High School Project of NSTA, 1996 Sun’s rays are not parallel Conflicting models for the sun’s rays
60.
61.
62.
63. Incorrect Explanations? According to MSNBC, NOAA, and NASA, the amount of atmosphere the sunlight passes through is a primary cause of the seasons. Is this true? From: http://www.msnbc.com/news/251727.asp
64. From: Earth Science Seventh Edition by Tarbuck and Lutgens Incorrect Explanations? According to this Earth Science textbook, the amount of atmosphere the sunlight passes through is a cause of the season: true? Does the atmosphere deplete the solar energy more in winter than summer because rays pass through more atmosphere in winter than summer? WINTER at 40 ° SUMMER at 40 °
65.
66. Data indicate that the amount of atmosphere that sunlight passes through is not a major cause of the seasons L. Woolf, 2005, unpublished analysis The amount of atmosphere does not substantially change the amount of solar energy striking the ground.
67. More complete data that indicate that the amount of atmosphere that sunlight passes through is not a major cause of the seasons L. Woolf, 2005, unpublished analysis The amount of atmosphere does not substantially change the amount of solar energy striking the ground.