Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Final Post on Flashcards (For Now)

Wow, that was a grueling experience. I just finished last night with the last of the 400+ vocabulary terms from the core curriculum. It was a tedious process, a struggle to come up with definitions that were sufficiently clear and understandable without being inaccurate. I suspect I failed on a number of items, and on a number of counts the core itself imposes a certain level of inaccuracy by the way a term is used in that document, which guided my definitions. In other cases the core omits words that seem absolutely essential for defining other words, and in those cases I felt it necessary to go ahead and use the term in question (example: chlorophyll is in the core but not "pigment.")


I still need to go through and proofread some of the entries - I did a spell check but I've also discovered grammatical errors that don't show up in spell check, I've simplified a few definitions, provided examples for a few more, etc. This kind of editing will probably go on for a long time, but I'm at a point where I'm willing to distribute the cards to my students. I'm hoping to get some input from other teachers in the fall.


I plan to keep the google spreadsheet up and available to all, and of course I have the flashcards posted here as well in the sidebar. I may decide for my own classroom purposes to cut back on some of the terms for which I feel students need only a passive knowledge, and focus on those terms that they need to know more intimately. At the same time, I am likely to find other terms in the NY State required labs that need to be added, along with some terms that occasionally show up on the exam, even though they are not in the core.


Problems


--The image cards are still a problem that I discussed earlier, namely the difficulty in getting good results with a variety of images exhibiting a range of contrasts outside the copiers abilities to render properly. It's a big problem that will take a while to fix.


--I priced card stock at staples recently, then looked online, and it's simply too expensive for me to use. So students will have to make their own card stock versions or accept them on regular paper.


Finally, having done all this work, I considering how I might use it as part of my masters project looking at how students learn (science). But that's another post...

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Shop Lowes

Or you local independent hardware store. Just keep on driving past that Home Depot, feel good knowing that your money isn't supporting the O'Really factor.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Awesome Science Blog

My science-obsessed son (8 yrs old) just started his own science blog. Go check it out and leave a nice comment - he'll be thrilled!

Snag

I tried photocopying flashcards at school copiers yesterday. The quality of the image cards is unacceptable. Even after experimenting with the output variables at different settings, some of the images are too dark, some are completely washed out. So, I don't know what the solution will be at this point. Some image styles are better than others - line drawings work pretty well, as long as there isn't much text. Flashcard exchange only allows jpeg format images, which doesn't render text sharply - GIF format is much better for that. Photos are a mixed bag, depending on the contrast in the original image. So that means taking more time to find appropriate image types, or in some cases just not including images. I could also make all the image sheets on a printer and then run through a copier for the text - not unreasonable using a laser printer. I really think the image cards are essential, even more so than the straight definitions, so I will keep working on them, but they will take even more time than anticipated. I may also think about making the image cards bigger, which would take care of some problems (text legibility) but not others (widely varying contrast between images makes copying difficult regardless of size).


The second snag is less of a problem. As I feared, the borders on double sided cards do not line up properly on the copier. Even though the office copier has options for adjusting the "offset," which would probably allow me to make it work, it seems a simpler solution to just get rid of the borders on one side of the cards, which I will do sometime today.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Naturalist


One son is really into nature, the great outdoors, frogs, bugs, the works. The other one prefers the physical sciences, particularly physics/chemistry. I don't have any good pictures of the other one in some sort of physics-y context, but I'll work on it. In the interest of equal time, I'm posting a random picture of him anyway. We're making a lava lamp this weekend or early next week, so I should have something better then...





Last night they both expressed interest (unprompted) in starting a website - I did suggest a blog would be the way to go for simplicity and ease of use. I'll link when they get them running. Only one wants to start a science blog, the other, the naturalist, wants to start an "Animorphs" blog. He's actually much more into the arts than science, although Animporphs is in the science-fiction genre.


UPDATE

Awesome Science Blog

He would be thrilled see a comment! (I moderate comments, just in case).

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Obsessive

I could not be satisfied until I got to a logical stopping point with the flashcards. Just finished the image card set for the first three units now posted in sidebar. It's the frickin weekend in summer and I couldn't let it go until Monday - I had to get it done. I need (mental) help! Well, it's over for now.


UPDATE (7/23/07)
It's never over. Just one problem with google spreadsheets is that there's no spell check. So I have to save as excel, then do spell check and make corrections. So that was the real last task and I think I'm finished up through Unit 3. I will make some copies on the school copier tomorrow to make sure it all aligns properly. If not, I will need to make a few more adjustments.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Half-Way There

I've finished half the flashcard definitions (first 3 units), which covers at least half the school year. I'll leave the rest for later. The only thing I have remaining to do in the next week or so is finish the image cards for the first 3 units. A reminder that the spreadsheet is here - criticisms or suggestions welcome. You can download as excel file if you want (file-export-.xls).


I've printed the flashcards to pdf. Students will be able to access them and study online through Flashcard Exchange, but they cannot print from flashcard exchange, so I've uploaded the pdf files to this blog and my e-chalk class page for those kids who inevitably loose the copies I give them.


I've added a flashcard section to the sidebar, beneath My Lab List, rather than putting the links into this post.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Balloon Blow Up Lab

I use this lab as an introduction to the basic chemistry portion of the living environment curriculum. It is a pretty elementary experiment that many children have done in one form or another (Volcanoes!) but they may not have measured the results and considered the chemical reactions taking place or used a graph to estimate the equivalence point (the mass of baking soda at which the number (moles) of both reactants would be equal and hence used up). I calculated their molar masses and figured out that with 50 mL vinegar, that point should be somewhere between 5 and 10 grams of baking soda, unless I made an error somewhere. Please let me know if you find a mistake.


I also added the bromthymol blue piece to the lab, which I haven't done before. It’s optional if you don’t have any. It is added in the initial test (1 gram) only, just because I like to introduce indicators as early as possible to use as an example later on when I get the inevitable, “how do scientists know…?” It illustrates one example of the ingenuity that goes into seeing things that can’t be seen.


I've done this lab for a long time, back to my middle school days, but in writing it up this summer I took some of the introductory text from K-12 Outreach: NSF & Science and Technology Center for Environmentally Responsible Solvents and Processes (CERSP)


Here's my version. I'm getting a little fatigued from all the summer work. I am busily working on flashcards, curriculum mapping, etc., and writing these labs is mentally draining - this may be the last one for a while.



Chemical Reactions: Balloon Blow Up

Monday, July 16, 2007

Flashcard Update

Here's a link to my flashcard home page. You can view and study but not download or print unless you have an account ($19.95). There's even an rss feed for anyone who wants to subscribe and get updated as I add and refine cards. I'm about 1/4 of the way through the 400+ terms and have created some image cards. I decided to separate out the image cards - it's a long story but it's essentially a logistical issue - I can maintain the spreadsheet at google docs with vocabulary, and import the terms and definitions wholesale to keep up with revisions, but that doesn't work so well if image cards are mixed in with text-only cards.


So here are the updated files. Eventually I will post these in the sidebar:


UPDATE (7/20/07)

Cards now listed in sidebar


And just for illustation, here are the (incomplete) image cards (view at "100%" or they look crummy):



Vocabulary Flashcard Image Questions



Vocabulary Flashcard Image Answers

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Flashcards

I've tried in the past to have students make their own flashcards, but it's been a frustrating experience. First, getting all the index cards together is an ordeal in itself. Second, students ability to write a meaningful, relevant definition of a term is rather limited - they tend to look in a dictionary and copy the first definition they come to without regard to the fact that, for example, "bias" has a slightly more nuanced definition in the hard sciences than the social sciences. Third, their handwriting makes it difficult for them to use the cards effectively. They are sloppy, fill up the card by writing too large or make lots of mistakes and splatter the card with wite-out or scribbled out sentences - it's a mess.


So one of my long-term goals is to make a set of flashcards with NY State regents relevant definitions that I can print and copy onto card stock and let students cut out and use for studying terminology. I may even use color-coded papers for the different units. I'm also trying to enlist the help of my fellow biology teachers through the bioforum listserv.


I've posted the spreadsheet containing all the vocabulary terms found in the New York State Core curriculum on google documents (you need a free google account to view it). This allows me to invite others to "collaborate." In this context, that means contributing definitions or proofreading or editing existing definitions or suggesting images to use, etc. - kind of like a wiki. We already do a lot of sharing of work created individually through the listserv, but not much real collaboration. I'm really more concerned with the idea of collaboration in general than the flashcards in particular.


On my own I have defined all the terms in Unit 1: Science and The Living Environment. The definitions are from my own head, the images were downloaded from the Creative Commons website. Once the terms are defined, I copy them to Flashcard Exchange, where I paid a $19.95 one time fee for an account that allows me to print the flashcards to pdf. I also add the images at Flashcard Exchange, since they can't be embedded in the spreadsheet, and even if they were that wouldn't translate to the flashcard template very well.


I am sharing those pdf's here, even though they may change again if anyone goes in and edits my definitions and finds errors, or better descriptions, etc. I probably will not finish another unit this summer unless I get some help - it's a tremendous amout of time to write out definitions alone, and finding and downloading images takes an additional, sizeable chunk of time. I also need to investigate a little more how easily I can copy the pdf's on my school's riso machines, which I will do later in the summer - If that's a hassle, I may look for alternatives.


Here's how it works. For making a single copy from a printer, print the questions file. Then turn you paper over, re-insert into printer and print answer file on the back of the the question sheets. They align absolutely perfectly on my printer - your mileage may vary. If you have trouble, let me know and I will make a copy where the question side has no lines. For making multiple copies on a copier, I always make single sided documents and then copy back-to-back from the copier. Just make sure they align properly before ruining a large batch.


UPDATE (7/20/07)


See sidebar for links to flashcards.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Cooling off to ThinkFree

I don't know if it's because they are still in beta or it's summer or what.


First, my initial enthusiasm was based on their compatibility with MSWord. I tried google docs and I also tried Zoho - neither one preserves the formatting that was in my original word document, but ThinkFree does that - beautifully. And then you start to edit it and the formatting spazzes on you. For example, I tried to change the bullets in a single paragraph, but it went in and converted all my numbered lists to bullets. And my numbered lists are a little complex so no way do I want to go in and re-format them in a clunky online word-processing program. I approached it in a couple of different ways, but every time I changed a bullet the whole document was afffected.


Second, I've had some difficulties getting the collaboration settings in order - I really wanted to use ThinkFree in a "wiki" sort of way, and allow others to edit the lab online and see how it evolved. Not sure anyone would be interested in this type of work, but it shouldn't be that much effort to set it up and see if there are takers. But the collaboration settings are not intuitive and not user friendly. Very few options and not easy to navigate to the place where those settings are. Along the same lines, the "send invitation" function was not working for me last night as I was trying to figure out what an invited user would experience using my wife as a guinea pig.


Third, the whole process is still too slow. I have broadband and there's a huge loading time (relatively speaking) for the JAVA application that lets you edit the file. Of course, this might be a minor detail if everything else worked like a charm once you invested that time in waiting for it. Unfortunately, I've spent far more time trying to figure it out than just about anybody I might hope to bring into the process, and I'm still frustrated by the quirks and bugs.


Lastly, and this may have to do with my computer rather than ThinkFree, but on my home computer I was unable to save edited changes. The program just hangs. Tried several different times. Oddly, it works on the computer at school, so there may be some security settings or something getting in the way on my computer, but there are no warnings or troubleshooting guidelines for this possibility. I didn't have any trouble on the same computer with google docs.


With any luck, these are beta problems that will be ironed out, but I'm not optimistic at the moment. I will keep checking in on them and see what happens by summer's end.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Acid Rain Lab

The acid rain lab is adapted from fellow NY State LE teacher Frank DuRoss. As I've mentioned repeatedly in the past, I like the idea of having a standardized lab format, and so I took one of Frank's labs and molded it around my lab template, changing a bit here and there along the way but preserving much of Frank's introductory text and the basic set up. I asked Frank's permission to post the lab and he graciously agreed.


As I mentioned here, I'm switching my labs to an online office suite, so in order to get the full featured lab with correct formatting, you have to click the "Power Edit" button and then allow a painless installation of the JAVA application that makes it all possible. It's a one-time deal. Please let me know how you like it, it's a new concept for me and I'm doing it on a trial basis.


Acid Rain Lab


ThinkAgain

Here's the traditional:


Acid Rain Lab (MSWord)

Paradigm Shift - ThinkFree

OK. I've decided to make the leap to an online office suite from ThinkFree. It allows me to upload my labs and other materials that I post on the blog AND it allows me to edit them online without having to go back and re-upload the files as I do now whenever I edit a document.


The only downside is that anyone wanting to use one of my documents will have to take an extra step to allow the JAVA software to be installed on their computers. Otherwise some of the formatting gets lost as the basic mode displays documents in html only, but you want them for printing to be displayed in full editing mode, as if you opened up an MSWord doc for example. You can also upload spreadsheets and powerpoint presentations. I'm moving slowly on this, and have so far uploaded only one lab, described in this post: Acid Rain Lab.

Plant Respiration

Another lab that I have not yet tried, it comes from The American Biology Teacher (Lisa Weise, The American Biology Teacher, Volume 68 No. 5, May 2006) I've written an introduction and added my usual lab formatting, keeping the basic experimental design from the original article. It looks like a very clever way to measure relative CO2 production in radish seedlings in a modified pipette.


Plant Respiration Lab


A cotton swab soaked in an NaOH solution is loaded into the bulb of several pipettes, followed by several seedlings. The tips of the pipettes are then placed (using a home-made, cardboard holder) in a petri dish containing water. As CO2 is produced by the seedlings, it reacts with the NaOH to form baking soda, essentially removing the gaseous CO2, causing a decrease in the pressure inside the pipette. Voila, water rises in the pipette proportional to the amount of CO2 produced. Remember that the initial production of CO2 simply replaces a molecule of O2 with a molecule of CO2 so the pressure differential only comes about when the CO2 is removed.


In a related story, I'm trying to get my school to invest in Vernier's new LabQuest probeware. If that happens, I may or may not use this particular set-up. In some ways it is better for bringing in the chemistry, but on the other hand chemistry is such a big mystery to 8-10th graders, it may actually distract from the lesson. I could always do both...

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Mello Jello in a Test Tube

I had been doing the mello jello lab in a petri dish as called for in the original published lab, but found it rather difficult in terms of materials management and set up. I re-worked it after "can't-remember-who's" lab using similar principles but set in test tubes instead of petri dishes. Much of the introductory material is lifted directly from the original lab. I've given full credit, so hopefully they won't come after me!


Mello Jello in a Test Tube

Haloscan

I noticed the "comments" links were missing so I tried to go to Haloscan to see what the problem is and lo, Haloscan is the problem - their website is inaccessible. Others have reported similar problems. Will keep trying...

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Protein Synthesis Lab

I've put this lab together over a the last couple of years. It annoys the kids a bit -transcribing DNA into mRNA and then translating into amino acid sequences can be a little tedious. I tried to make it a little interesting with some silly word game analogies, but still.


I have also been adding some regents exam questions at the end of each lab but I haven't got around to it yet on this one. I will automatically update the link when I get to it. Keep in mind in NY state past regents exams have used both the circular codon table I use in this lab as well as the more typical square table, so kids need familiarity with the other one as well.


Protein Synthesis Lab

Diffusion Lab

I did this lab last year without lab sheets and had students record observations in their journals. I've put the lab sheets together. As usual, I may add to it next year - for example, I'd like to add a section on calculating the rate of diffusion, but I haven't had the time or energy to put it in yet. I may also play around with putting some starch into the mix and using starch indicator instead of food coloring. Still, the basic set-up will be the same.


I've seen other labs out there that use gelatin cubes placed in food coloring or other substances and incorporate surface area:volume ratios. For now I'm keeping it simple. I use a petri dish with gelatin and add food coloring to a well in the center, then measure the distance it diffuses over a 5 day period.


An added bonus, if you wait long enough, is the growth of mold on the surface, which is a whole other science lesson in itself on extra-cellular digestion and enzymes. I generally do this lab after the detergent enzymes with jello lab, so I try to get students to make the connection before I have to point it out to them. Anyway, here it is.


Diffusion Through Gelatin

Summer Planning

As you can probably tell (the two of you who "subscribe" to my blog anyway), the period of time from end of May to beginning of July is a stressed out frenzy of regents prep, graduation prep (12th and 8th grade), prom, final grades, marking regents exam, cleaning up the room, etc. This flurry of activity is followed by the sudden emptiness I feel at the end of each year. It always takes me a few days to adjust to change in pace.


I haven't wasted any time though, getting to work on planning for next year. The older I get the shorter the summers are. I want to have everything in place this September and finally get my master's project finished sometime this academic year - the deadline is fast approaching for me to complete all the requirements for my permanent license. I am thinking of completely changing my topic, but I'll have more time to worry about it later in the summer.


So, rather than load everything into a single posting, I'll be adding a few little tidbits over the next few days - I've got new labs to upload and describe, results from this year's regents exam, some ranting about New Yorkers (especially the pedestrians!) and and more.