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Astronomy - 7th grade


krisperry
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We are secular homeschoolers. I am looking for great resources for astronomy - a whole curriculum, or just individual pieces that I can pull together. What have you used and loved? I'm also interested in hearing what you hated (so I can tuck that info into my pocket as well) :tongue_smilie:

 

Thanks!

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I'd love to find a middle school astronomy course that is secular, too! What I'm currently using is this:

 

http://www.amazon.com/Way-Universe-Works-Jayne-Parsons/dp/0789488906/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1266809543&sr=1-1

 

It seems to have the right level of complexity for my 6th grader, who is a strong reader. I'd prefer something with a workbook, reviews, etc., built in, but I'm not aware of a secular option.

 

What I haven't liked:

 

http://www.amazon.com/How-Universe-Works-works/dp/0751308366/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1266809710&sr=1-1

 

Each unit consists of an introductory 2-page spread of highly detailed backround and history in tiny dense print, followed by several pages of experiments. The contrast between the difficult intro and the way-too-easy remainder was just frustrating for us.

 

I'd be interested to hear of other options, too...

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Glad to see that I'm not the only one that is stymied. I know that there is the Science Explorer Textbook but I strongly prefer not using textbooks. I much much prefer using books and adding in the labs and activities. I like Noeo's approach and would love something that is "that type" of thing but quite challenging....

 

I have a feeling I might be pulling this together myself. Argh, I was hoping not :tongue_smilie:

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How the Universe Works (Reader's Digest)

There are a number of projects here that require too much! But the book was good. I coupled this with Janice VanCleave's book for upper level elementary.

 

Janice VanCleave's Astronomy for Every Kid

Nice book for hands-on study of astronomy

 

Mike Lynch's books: Iowa Starwatch, Minnesota Starwatch, Indiana Starwatch, Southern California Skywatch...

Find one that is close to your lattitude if you do not have one for your state--what you see will be the same. This is a book that a kid recommended to me; he was an astronomy geek, but he loved this book. LOL!

 

Skywatch '10 put out by Sky and Telescope (skyandtelescope.com). I don't ever go without one of these to help me know what is going to be in the sky each month. Just one little magazine put out annually--under $10.

 

Star Watch by Philip S. Harrington

Not written specifically for kids, but a great book. This would work best for those of you who have some dark skies. Take a look at the reading level if you plan to have your child do it on his own.

 

Simple Stargazing by Anton Vamplew

I love this book. Although it is not a kid's book specifically, I think it is written at a little easier reading level than Star Watch. Vamplew has come out with another title that I'd like to get. The author spends his time trying to get Great Britain to fall in love with astronomy--you can find his website and videos of interviews. He emailed me after I wrote a review of his book on my blog!

http://shadesofwhite.typepad.com/shades_of_white/2008/01/simple-starga-1.html

 

A planisphere is always helpful. And if you can buy a green laser pointer, you can point out the stars more easily. I buy a good quality one: betapointer.com (the GPA 5), but other astronomy websites and ebay sells them (although ebay's may not be calibrated as well and the light might be dimmer). At night when you are outside, always keep this tucked next to your skin. Even in summer, the warmed diode works better and is brighter. Keep this out of reach of little hands--the light is not to be shined into anyone's eyes.

 

There are a lot of other titles that I find on the shelf in our little Border's bookstore. If you have any bookstore in your area, go and sit down on the floor under the astronomy section and browse. You might find exactly what you want.

 

Jean

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How the Universe Works

Supplemented with Astronomy for Every Kid by Janice Van Cleave (JVC)

Read, do experiments and write brief notes.

 

Spaceship Earth

 

The living planet

 

Time and place

Earth as a magnet (2-in. nail, horseshoe magnet, ruler, play-dough, compass, thread)

JVC--#47 Night Lights (Paper punch, tissue paper, balloon)

Find your latitude (Scott’s viewer)

 

The time of day

Finding north

Sundial (paper plate, pencil)

 

The time at night

JVC--#59 Star Clock (Umbrella, chalk)

(We will map the Big Dipper as it goes around Polaris throughout the school year)

 

Year after year

(We will find and be able to locate the constellations on the Zodiac)

 

Our window into space

Why is the sky blue and the sunset red? (glass gallon jug, bleach, flashlight)

JVC--#45 Trapped (Straw, bar magnet, iron filings)

JVC--#93 Darkness

 

Light pollution

 

Breaking free

Rockets—made for 4-H (enasco.com)

 

Space laboratories

JVC--#97 Free Fall (plastic cup, clay)

The Moon

 

Earth’s satellite

 

The Earth and the Moon

 

The Moon’s orbit

JVC--#54 Face Forward

 

Lunar eclipse

 

Moon spotting

JVC--#50 Shiner (Bicycle reflector)

JVC--#52 Changes (Styrofoam ball or small ball)

Making a moon dial (Make a moon dial on paper. Observe 1 month. Mark dates.)

 

Mapping the Moon

Mapping the moon (photocopy p. 49 & enlarge for maps)

 

The Moon’s surface

 

Gravity and the Moon

Measuring the Acceleration caused by gravity (2 balls—same size different weights)

 

Going to the Moon

How much can you lift on the moon? (1/2 gallon Orange Juice, jugs)

JVC--#48 Moving Target (String, washer)

 

Review/Test

The Solar System

 

A planetary family

 

The Solar System to scale

Size of planets (peppercorns, peas, plums—2, grapefruit—1, large orange—1)

 

Planets on the move

JVC--#5 Quicker

JVC--#22 Curves(small paper cup, dark paper)

 

Mercury

JVC--#6 Hidden

JVC--#7 Cover Up

Venus

JVC--#9 Hot Box (2 thermometers, tall jar with lid)

(Observe the phases of Venus with binoculars or telescope)

 

Mars

Why Mars is red (sand, steel wool)

 

Exploring Mars

Testing for life (3 jars, sand, salt, yeast, baking powder, labels, sugar)

 

Jupiter

JVC--#15 Red Spot (1-gal. Jar, tea bag)

JVC--#16 Glimmer (Flashlight, baby powder)

JVC--#19 Charged (Wool cloth, plastic)

 

Saturn

JVC--#20 See Through (Poster board)

 

Uranus

Backlit rings (clear litter bottle, candle, flashlight)

 

Neptune

The condensing atmosphere on Triton

JVC--#27 How Far? (Tack board, tacks, string)

Pluto and Planet X

 

Planetary probes

JVC--#87 Bouncer (Flashlight, mirror)

 

Comets

(Build a wall with play-dough on a study piece of cardboard. Rotate a marble inside.)

 

Shooting stars

Why meteors are hot

The Sun

 

Our local star

 

The Sun’s energy

The heat of the sun (Chocolate bar, magnifying glass)

 

A star close up

A sunspot projector (poster board—2, binoculars)—2 days

 

The Sun’s Light

(Prism)

 

Inside the Sun

Ringing like a bell (cooking oil)

 

The solar cycle

 

Solar eclipse

JVC--#35 Blackout

 

Review/Test

The Stars

 

Starlight and star life

 

Star theater

 

The constellations

 

Dialing the stars

(Learn to use the planisphere)

 

Starlight

JVC--#62 Spreader

JVC--#63 Brighter (Aluminum foil, black paper

 

How far are the stars?

JVC--# 61 Distant Stars (Modeling clay)

 

Red giants and white dwarfs

 

Double trouble

 

Star birth

How stars are born (bicycle pump)

JVC--#70 Silhouette (Lamp)

 

Star death

Why stars explode (2 balls)

 

Pulsars and black holes

JVC--#60 Shrinking (2 balloons, glass jars)

JVC--#68 Unequal (9 in. balloon)

The Cosmos

Galaxies and beyond

 

The Milky Way

JVC--#67 Hazy (Paper punch, black paper)

Mapping the Milky Way

 

The structure of our Galaxy

 

Galaxies galore

Galaxy Spotting

 

Clusters of galaxies

 

Quasars

 

The expanding Universe

 

Big Bang to Big Crunch

 

Is anyone there?

 

Stars of the northern skies

(Child needs to be able to find basic summer and winter constellations)

 

Stars of the southern skies

 

Review/Test

 

 

Possible projects: Telescope (p. 12); Building your own Galileo model (p. 83)

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Have you checked NASA's website? When we went to Cape Canaveral many years ago, they had educational packets available for homeschoolers/educators. I think I had to fill out a form and they sent it to me, but it's not exactly a curriculum. We used what was sent.

There have been many great suggestions posted.

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There is Math & the Cosmos, but I've never used it.

 

http://www.wildridge.com/mc_overview.html

 

My 12yo dd is just finishing this as one component of our astronomy study this year. She loves it! She's learning a lot and I'm pleasantly surprised at her retention, as well as her ability to discuss the topics intelligently with the rest of us (or, rather, *teach* the topics... ;-)

 

Diane

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Wow, lots of information. Thank you. I can't wait to sit down and sort through it all. I did check out the Math & Cosmos link. How long did it take you to go through this study. I see an outline of what it covers but I'm really left guessing as to the length of time it would take....

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