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Título del libro: Teaching And Learning Astronomy: Effective Strategies For Educators Worldwide
Título del capítulo: Teaching astronomy in other cultures: Archeoastronomy

Autores UNAM:
JULIETA NORMA FIERRO GOSSMAN;
Autores externos:

Idioma:
Inglés
Año de publicación:
2005
Resumen:

Some of the varied astronomy teaching methods are examined here, starting with Paul J. Francis 's paper, Using games to teach astronomy. I have been experimenting with using role-playing games to teach introductory university astronomy. The idea is this: rather than simply telling students about some topic (e.g., the climate of Venus), I tell the class to ?imagine that you are world experts on Venus, gathered together here at great expense to solve the baffling mystery - why is Venus so much hotter than the Earth?? The class is divided into small groups, and each group is given a briefing paper. A group, for example, might be experts on infrared radiation, or atmospheric transparency, with their briefing paper giving them a set of clues on this topic (along with lots of red herrings - to teach students the art of extracting meaningful information from noise). No single briefing paper contains enough information to solve the puzzle - students have to wander around the room, exchanging clues, and slowly putting together a plausible theory, which they then present to the rest of the class. How does it work? Fabulously well, in general. It really gets students thinking, and interacting with each other. It permanently changes the whole classroom dynamic. At first there was concern that studentswould go berserk (and a security guard once tried to close down one of these lectures, thinking it was a riot in progress), but even poorly motivated high-school students seem to find these exercises interesting enough to keep their attention. © Cambridge University Press 2005.


Entidades citadas de la UNAM: