Handouts:
Mitch Lopate
EDU 557.31
Lesson Plan 4 - Grade 8
Topic: The Copernican Revolution
Subjects: Science, History, Mathematics, Writing
Skills, Communications
Type of Lesson: Introductory, Reinforcement, and Evaluation
Purpose:
1.
To
familiarize students with the theory behind our solar system.
2.
To
introduce students to the Copernican Revolution and the differences between
medieval perspectives about the origins and nature of the universe.
3. To
enhance student's writing skills with other creative methods.
4. To let students practice being timed on
speeches.
5. To express student's ideas and knowledge
through oral communication.
Lesson Objectives:
1.
Students
will criticize or defend Copernicus to an audience living in the Renaissance by
describing the significant facts of the Copernican Revolution through an
editorial presentation of three minutes in a clear, concise manner with 100%
accuracy. (Affective: Responding/Organizing)
2.
After
viewing and discussing a video, students will summarize the significance of the
Copernican Revolution in a one-page essay with 100% accuracy. (Cognitive:
Analysis)
3.
After
reviewing a sample editorial on video, students will listen and appraise the
speaker's clarity of thought with a rubric as he or she performs his or her
presentation to the class.
(Affective: Analysis/Evaluation)
Lesson Introduction:
The teacher will ask the
students to name the planets and describe significant highlights of their
natures and orbits. In a previous
lesson, Ptolemy's theory about the rotation of the sun, moon and the earth was
discussed. The teacher will use the
timeline developed in Lesson Plan 3 to reintroduce Copernicus and how his
questioning of Ptolemy led to our understanding of the solar system today.
Materials:
Pen,
Paper
Handouts
of essay on the Copernican Revolution
Overhead
of Ptolemy's and Copernicus' epicycle theories
Copernicus
and His World. The Rise of Science Series, BBC-TV/Open University
Lesson Development:
1.
Teacher
will transcribe names of planets and parts of the solar system on board as
students provide them. This should
include stars, galaxies, comets, asteroids, moons.
2.
Teacher
will ask students to discuss the prevailing views of the Church and accepted
beliefs of Ptolemy and Aristotle regarding the nature of the universe as
indisputable sources.
3.
Class
will read short essay, view movie and review overheads about Copernicus and his
theories.
4.
Students
will prepare an outline of the Copernican theory to include:
a.
Copernicus
was the first to question to Ptolemic system.
b.
He
never advanced his theory that the earth was not the center of the universe; he
only discovered that mathematical calculations that would be correct if an astronomer
accepted the sun as a stationary point.
c.
The
nature of solar vs. earth-centered orbits (epicycles).
d.
Ptolemic
and Church-accepted doctrines
5.
Students
will use their outlines as a guide for an editorial to be researched and read
aloud within four days. Students will
choose the role of either:
a.
A
church official
b.
Ptolemy,
Aristotle, Pythagoras or other Greek philosopher/astronomer/scientist
c.
A
Renaissance student studying at a university
d.
A
nobleman
e.
A
contemporary astronomer
Lesson Closure/Summary:
1.
Did
students discuss the facts of the Copernican Revolution in their
presentation?
2.
Do
students comprehend the power and opinions of the Church as a deciding factor
in Copernicus' decision to withhold his data?
3.
Can
students write from the perspective of one of the characters, or do they need
more information on the role?
Assessment:
1.
The
rubric for the editorial will be as follows:
·
Student
spoke in specific detail about his/her decision to criticize or defend Copernicus
and offered at least five clear, concise examples as reasoning: (A)
·
Student
spoke with moderate detail about his/her decision to criticize or defend
Copernicus and offered five clear, concise examples as reasoning: (B)
·
Student
spoke in general terms about his/her decision to criticize or defend Copernicus
and offered no more than three clear, concise examples as reasoning: (C)
·
Student
spoke in general terms about his/her decision to criticize or defend Copernicus
and could not offer more than two clear, concise examples as reasoning: (D)
·
Student
did not participate to any degree: (F)
2.
Did
the class use creative ideas for the project?
Comprehend the material?
Personify the role they chose?
Take advantage of the extra information given to them?
Lesson Follow-Up:
1.
There
have been two sightings of new planetary objects in the solar system since
1977, the satellite Chiron and the heavenly body beyond Pluto, Persephone. Ask students to research their names and
suggest correlation between modern social patterns and the stories from
mythology (example: career fields,
areas of study; Chiron represents healing arts/martial arts, leading to
chiropractic, naturopathic medicine, Oriental healing) for these new objects.
2.
Introduce
class to theory of Immanuel Velikovsky and the erratic orbit of Venus. Reference the Mayan civilization's knowledge
of Venus' cycle and their astronomical computations. Ask history teacher to be a guest speaker to introduce class to
astronomical discoveries from Central American civilizations as basis for
multi-cultural Renaissance unit.
3.
Ask
class to create a graph with Y-axis showing number of moons for each planet,
and X-axis showing names of planets in solar system. Ask class to plot the coordinates for each planet, and speculate
on results and discrepancies between Mars and Jupiter.
4.
Ask
class to research the projects of Galileo and his discoveries as the basis for
the movie series, "From the Earth to the Moon" (HBO). Hand-outs will be provided from "The
Greatest Books since 1492" on Galileo.
Adaptation for Special
Students:
If a student is visually impaired, large printed dittos will be
available to allow a clearer understanding of the lesson and assignment. If the student is neurologically impaired,
he or she can have an untimed lesson or discuss the project orally with the
teacher. If the student is perceptually
impaired, he or she can read the material with a high level learner in the
class, an older peer tutor or the teacher for a better understanding of the
assignment.
NJ Core Curriculum
Standards:
3.1-All
students will speak for a variety of real purposes and audiences.
3.2-All
students will listen actively in a variety of situations to information from a
variety of resources.
3.3-All
students will write in a clear, concise, organized language that varies in
content and form for different audiences and purposes.
3.4-All
students will read various materials and texts with comprehension and critical
analysis.
3.5-All
students will view, understand, and use nontextual visual information.
4.3-All
students will connect mathematics to other learning by understanding the
interrelationships of mathematical ideas and the roles that mathematics and
mathematical modeling play in other disciplines and in life.
5.3-All
students will develop an understanding of how people of various cultures have
contributed to the advancement of science and technology, and how major
discoveries and events have advanced science and technology.
5.9-All
students will gain an understanding of natural laws as they apply to motion,
forces and energy transformation.
5.11-All
students will gain an understanding of the origin, evolution, and structure of
the universe.
6.4-All
students will acquire historical understanding of societal ideas and forces
throughout the history of New Jersey, the United States, and the world.
Bibliography:
Anderson, Margaret Jean. (1996).
Isaac Newton: The Greatest Scientist of All Time: Great Minds of Science. Springfield, New Jersey: Enslow Publishing.
Black, C.F., Greengrass, Mark, & Howarth,
David. (1993). Cultural
Atlas of the Renaissance. New York:
Macmillan General Reference
Boorstin, Daniel J. (1983). The Discoverers: A History of Man's Search to Know His World and Himself. New York: Random House.
Downs, Robert B. (1961). Famous Books Since 1492. New York: Barnes & Noble
Cornwell, Anne Christake & Damianakos,
Alexander N. (1993). The Renaissance/Audio Cassette (Western
Civilization). University Press & Sound
Durant, Will. (1953). The Story of Civilization (Series V) - The
Renaissance.
New York:
Simon and Shuster.
Durant, Ariel & Will. (1968).
The Lessons of History. New York: Simon and Shuster.
May, Nadia (Narrator) & Pater,
Walter. (1995). The
Renaissance. New York:
Blackstone Audio Books.
Velikovsky, Immanuel. (1950).
Worlds in Collision. New York: Pocket Books (division of Simon and Shuster.)
Weber, Eugen. (1995). The Western Tradition: From the Ancient World to Louis XIV. Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath and Company
http://www.twingroves.district96.k12.il.us/Renaissance/VirtualRen.html
http://bang.lanl.gov/video/stv/arshtml/galileo2.html
http://members.aol.com/worldciv/renaissance.html
http://members.aol.com/worldciv/game/1.html
http://www.mediaguild.com/copernic.html
Copernicus and His World. The Rise of Science Series, BBC-TV/Open University
From the Earth to the Moon. HBO Films, 1998.