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Customizable Graphic Organizer for Virtual Fieldwork

Customizable Graphic Organizer for Virtual Fieldwork. Provided by ReaL Earth System Science http://virtualfieldwork.org / & http://teacherfriendlyguide.org / Adapted from work by Sarah R. Miller. Connect to Big Ideas & Overarching Questions.

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Customizable Graphic Organizer for Virtual Fieldwork

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  1. Customizable Graphic Organizer for Virtual Fieldwork • Provided by ReaL Earth System Science • http://virtualfieldwork.org/ • & • http://teacherfriendlyguide.org/ • Adapted from work by Sarah R. Miller

  2. Connect to Big Ideas & Overarching Questions • The next slide offers one (carefully developed) take on what are the most important ideas to understand about Earth. • Read the Big Ideas and connect them to what you see in your study of the environment.

  3. Earth System Science Profound Ideas

  4. VFEs Are Question Driven These are important questions! • Ultimately, we want learners to be able to read the landscape: by looking at it’s shape, and the rocks and other materials that compose and move through it, a story can be unearthed. • “Why does this place look the way it does” is the driving question for the project. • Sub-questions vary in size, scale and purpose. Some questions may have a one or two word answer, but those questions should be followed with questions of how we know and what those simple answers imply. • For all of these questions: • How do you know? (What evidence is there?) • What does it tell you about past environments? • What does it imply about the future?

  5. When scientists work in the field... • ...answers are often unclear as to why a place or thing came to be the way it is. • That’s true here too. • This virtual fieldwork is intended to raise questions for you to explore.

  6. Are there mountains, valleys, or hills? • What are the valley shapes? • What can form valleys? • What can cause mountains or hills to form? • Are the mountains or hills young or old? • What role do tectonics play in shaping the site? Why does this place look the way it does? What effects has life, including human life, had on the landscape? Describe the shape of the land. • For all of these questions: • How do you know? (What evidence is there?) • What does it tell you about past environments? • What does it imply about the future? What types of rock are there? • How have plants shaped the landscape? • How have animals generally, and humans in particular, changed the landscape? • On what scale? What effects has water had on the landscape? Do the rocks seem to form a sequence? What effect has the climate had on the landscape? • Sediments & Sedimentary Rocks • Is it clastic or organic/chemical? • If clastic, what is the grain size? • If organic, what minerals is it made out of? • Are there fossils? • Is water depositing material, eroding material, or both? • Is the action of water primarily chemical, primarily physical, or both chemical and physical? • Metamorphic • Is it foliated or non-foliated? • What was the parent rock? • Igneous • Did the rock form above or below ground? • Is it felsic or mafic? • Where would you find the oldest rocks? • Youngest rocks? • Are there different kinds of rocks at different outcrops? • Was the past climate different? • What factors may have been affected or caused by climate?

  7. What effects has water had on the landscape? • Is water depositing material, eroding material, or both? • Is the action of water primarily chemical, primarily physical, or both chemical and physical?

  8. What effects has water had on the landscape? Link to a ZoomImage of this photo. It is a high resolution photo that you can zoom in and pan around.

  9. Describe the shape of the land. • What can cause mountains or hills to form? • Are the mountains or hills young or old? • What is the valley’s shape? • What can form valleys? • What is the role of plate tectonics in shaping the land?

  10. What do you think the climate is like here? Why? • What factors influence the climate? • Identify features shaped or determined by climate. • Was the past climate different? How can you tell? • How is climate change likely to affect this place?

  11. What types of rock are there? • A common question for all rock types: • What do the characteristics of the rock tell you about past environments? • In this template, there is at least one page for each general rock type (metamorphic, igneous, and sedimentary) • Many field sites have only one of these three types of rocks. • Sedimentary • Is it clastic or organic/chemical? • If clastic, what is the grain size? • If organic, what minerals is it made out of? • Are there fossils? • What do the rocks indicate about past environments? Chart of common rock textures • Igneous • Did the rock form above or below ground? • Is it felsic or mafic? • Metamorphic • Is it foliated or non-foliated? • What was the parent rock?

  12. Common Rock Textures Chart by Jim Ebert, SUNY Oneonta

  13. What types of rock are there?Metamorphic

  14. What types of rock are there?Igneous

  15. What types of rock are there?Sedimentary • Sedimentary • Is it clastic or organic/chemical? • If clastic, what is the grain size? • If organic, what minerals is it made out of? • Are there fossils? • What do rock characteristics tell you about past environments? Scheme for Sedimentary Rock ID

  16. What types of rock are there?Sedimentary

  17. Do the rocks seem to form a sequence? • Where would you find the oldest rocks? • Youngest rocks? • Are there different kinds of rocks at different outcrops?

  18. What effects have humans had on the landscape? • On what scale? • Which human impacts were intentional? • Which human impacts were unintentional?

  19. Suggestions for improvement are welcome! • There’s ample room for improvement! • Please send suggestions for additions and other improvements, including suggested photos of the Arbuckles, to: • Don Duggan-Haas at: dugganhaas@museumoftheearth.org.

  20. Suggestions that haven’t been worked in as yet... • What would this place look like if ______________ (some process or event) hadn’t happened? • Please send suggestions for additions and other improvements, including suggested photos of the Arbuckles, to: • Don Duggan-Haas at: dugganhaas@museumoftheearth.org.

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