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P123 Revision. Talents. Are you good at: 1. making connections between many ideas, 2. using pictures and diagrams to show concepts, 3. talking your way through challenging problems or 4. making up questions and quizzes to practice? If so... you’re making: concept maps diagrams speeches
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Talents • Are you good at: 1. making connections between many ideas, 2. using pictures and diagrams to show concepts, 3. talking your way through challenging problems or 4. making up questions and quizzes to practice? • If so... you’re making: • concept maps • diagrams • speeches • activities
Station 1: Theory Timeline • 1785: Hutton (Deep Time) • Carbon dating • Deeper is older • Earth Age: 4 Billion Years • 1912: Wegener (Continental Drift) • Argument: fossils, land bridge, meteorologist, slow moving continents, cause of movement • 1950s: Seafloor Spreading (Zebra Stripes) • The force that can move a continent. Jan 2008: 2
Guide 1 • Make a timeline to show the development of the theory. • Lay out Wegener’s argument and his opposition. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 2: Zebra Stripes • Earth’s magnetic pole changes. • This leaves a pattern in the rocks. • Scientists explain this data with the theory that the ocean is spreading. • June 2008: 1
Guide 2 • Connect multiple ideas • Try to clearly lay out how these ideas work together to support Wegener’s original idea. • Use an analogy like: • Tree Rings • A Growing Volcano • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 3: Theory of Plate Tectonics • Earth Structure • Convection Currents • 10cm per year • Constructive • Destructive • Rock Cycle • Mountains, Volcanoes, Earthquakes • Predicting Volcanoes • June 2008: 1 Jan 2008: 2
Guide 3 • Use multiple diagrams to show all different types of plate boundaries. • Explain what causes each effect. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 4: Fusion • “We are all made of stars.” • Heavy elements • hydrogen +hydrogen helium • Star Life Cycles • Star birth/death
Guide 4 • Use 1 idea about fusion to connect all these ideas • Diagram the life cycle of a star or use diagram from revision guide. • Why can our Sun never become a black hole? • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 5: Studying Stars • Distances: light year • parallax • brightness • Light Pollution • Earth v space telescopes • Shapley v Curtis • multiple galaxies • Big Bang • expanding universe • Hubble telescope • Jan 2009: 5 June 2008: 2 Jan 2008: 4 June 2007: 6
Guide 5 • Connect all ideas to how we study stars now. • Distinguish between data and explanations. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 6: Scientific Ideas • data- explanation • creativity- imagination • peer-review • Wegener’s theory was initially rejected. • Jan 2009: 2, 4 Jan 2008: 2 Jun 2007:7
Guide 6 • Use a lot of examples and the exam questions to help connect these ideas. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 1: Radiation Behaviour • emit: gives off source • reflect: bounce back journey • transmit: pass through journey • absorb: takes energy detection • 4 effects of radiation absorption • electric patterns • heating (intensity/duration) • chemical change • ionisation • 3 journey models: ray, wave, photon • intensity: energy arrives each second • number of photons • energy of each photon • distance • Jan 2009: 8 June 2007: 3
Guide 1 • Connect all these ideas to the original 4 behaviours. • Use numerous examples and diagrams. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 2: Cancer • Ionisation • radiation knocks an electron off an atom, making an ion • ions are unstable and take part in other chemical reactions • health effects of radiation (p.68) • Ionising Radiation: UV, X, Gamma • Non-Ionising Radiation: Radio, Microwave, Infrared, Visible Light
Guide 2 • Use diagrams to show the processes of ionisation and cancer growth. • cancer: ionisation, mutation, multiplication • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 3: Risks • perceived / actual risks • precautionary principle/ ALARA • factor/outcome • Reducing risk examples: • microwaves • X-rays • Global Warming • Jan 2009: 3, June 2008: 3, Jan 2008: 5, June 2007: 1
Guide 3 • Use lots of examples and a concept map to illustrate these ideas. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 4: Ozone Layer • ozone v oxygen • Which is better at absorbing UV radiation? • What’s the difference? • What are CFCs? Where do they come from? What do they do to ozone?
Guide 4 • Connect this idea to global warming and compare it to the greenhouse effect. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 5: Greenhouse Effect • keywords: source, emit, reflect, transmit, absorb, ultraviolet, infrared, radiation, greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, methane, water vapour, correlation, ocean conveyor belt • evidence • risks: ice caps melting, flooding, ice age • Jan 2009: 7 June 2007: 2
Guide 5 • A diagram or a concept map will be the best ways to show these ideas. • This is a process and all ideas are connected. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 6: Carbon Cycle • keywords: burning (combustion), decay (decomposition), respiration, photosynthesis, acid rain, dissolving • How can we reduce global warming? • Jan 2008:1
Guide 6 • Use a diagram to illustrate this concept and a lot of examples. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 7: EM Spectrum • order • highest/lowest energy • uses • risks • ways to reduce risk • X-rays • UV • microwaves • June 2008: 3,4 Jan 2008: 5 June 2007:2
Guide 7 • Organise the radiations into energies, risk and then uses. • Use and connect as many patterns as possible. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 1: Radioactivity • background radiation • radon case study (p.68-70) • German miners: ‘consumption’ • define: radiation, ionisation • 2 reasons the miners were at risk • dose measured in mSv • no safe dose • alpha radiation • homes adapted/unadapted: ALARA • Jun 2008: 6 • Jan 2008: 3 • Jun 2007: 4
Guide 1 • Use this case study to introduce the topic of radioactivity. • Focus on definitions, mSv and minimising risks. • Make connections. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 2: Types of Radiation • Alpha • a loss of two protons and two neutrons • very large, positively charged • stopped by air, paper and dead skin cells • Beta • one neutron becomes an electron and a proton • small, negatively charged • stopped by aluminium • Gamma • energy, no mass, no charge • stopped by lead • range in air, ionising power, dose factor • most dangerous inside/outside the body • badge
Guide 2 • Draw diagrams and a concept map to compare the three types of radiation. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 3: Changes in the Nucleus • atomic number = protons = name = symbol • isotopes = neutrons and atomic mass can change • atomic mass = protons + neutrons • alpha decay loss of 2 protons and 2 neutrons • atomic number down by 2 • atomic mass down by 4 • beta decay 1 neutron becomes 1 proton • atomic number up by 1 • atomic mass stays same • Jan 2009: 9 • Jan 2008: 7
Guide 3 • Show an element how it is drawn on the table show the atomic mass and number. • Use a concept map to show all the connections with protons (the most important) at the centre. • Complete two examples for alpha and beta decay showing the changes. (ie. U-238, Bi-212) • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 4: Nuclear Fission • keywords: neutron, uranium, unstable, nucleus, splits, two pieces, energy, chain reaction, boron control rods, absorb • Jan 2009:1 • Jan 2008: 6
Guide 4 • Use detailed diagrams to show the process of fission and the concept of chain reaction. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 5: Electricity • Primary/ Secondary Source • Nuclear Power Plant: coolant, waste created, turbine, generator • Sankey Diagrams • For/ Against Nuclear Energy • fossil, renewable or nuclear • Jan 2009: 1 • Jun 2008: 5 • Jun 2007: 5
Guide 5: • Connect all of these ideas to the energy debate. • Why should we or shouldn’t we use nuclear energy as our main source to generate electricity? • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams
Station 6: Radioactive Waste • Half-Life • graphs • activity • Level Waste • high, medium, low • Jan 2009: 6
Guide 6 • Use definitions and examples to show the concept of half-life. • Finish with a quiz or activity: • fill in the blank, jumble, role play, multiple choice, true/false, summary, diagrams