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How long did it take to travel across the country before cars and planes?
Energizing Everything Unit | Lesson 7 of 8

How long did it take to travel across the country before cars and planes?

Energizing Everything Unit | Lesson 7 of 8
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DISCUSS:

What’s one place you’d like to visit in your life? How would you travel there?

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DISCUSS:

How could this device be useful?

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DISCUSS:

Moving air makes the spinner move. Does that give you any ideas about how heat could make the spinner move?

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If you need a natural stopping point!

Teachers: If you are short on time, this is a good stopping point. You can experiment with heat on another day.

If you’re continuing right now, advance to the next slide.

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# Extensions
Below are ideas for extending this topic beyond the Exploration and Activity you just completed.
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# Activity: Penny Popper

Can you make a penny move without touching it? Set up this simple activity station in your classroom to find out.

Print out the instructions here .

See an example of the penny moving and a variation on the experiment setup in this teacher video. (1:36, Keith Ramsay)

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# Watch, Read, & Discuss: Steam Locomotives at Work

Check out this clip (1:20, Ultimate Restorations) to see how steam can make a train go. Then find out what it’s like to be a train engineer and fireman in this video (3:31) about driving the Detroit and Lima Northern Locomotive Number 7, a steam-powered locomotive.

If you want to go further, have students read this article to explore the history of the steam engine and its importance during the Industrial Revolution. A recording and quiz are included.

Then discuss: Imagine you’re living in the 1800s and can ride trains for the first time. How would you feel about traveling this new way? How do you think your life might change?

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# Watch & Read: Hot Air Rising

How does a hot-air balloon work? Watch this video (1:37), and then read the online book How Does It Fly: Hot Air Balloon to find out. Included in the book are a glossary, creative mini-projects, and questions that can spark class discussions. (Ages 7–9; Both free with registration as an educator on Get Epic!)

When you’re done, take a moment to appreciate the beauty of the sport with this time-lapse video of a hot-air balloon festival in New Mexico. Watch for the bursts of flame that heat the air in each craft’s “envelope,” and see the sky fill with colorful, gigantic balloons. (2:42, NatGeo)

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# Resource: Books Your Students Might Like

For the adventurous readers in your class, this selection of books offers ideas for exploring the steampunk world of science fiction. Students can delve into fantastical adventures that mix Victorian-age technologies and sensibilities with futuristic science, all driven by steam power. (Ages 8+)

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Grade 4

Energy, Motion, & Electricity

Heat Energy & Energy Transfer

4-PS3-2, 4-PS3-4

1927 reviews

Activity Prep

Print Prep

In this lesson, students explore how heat is another form of energy that can make things go. In the activity, Heat Spinner, students first make a paper Heat Spinner and observe how air can create movement. Then, students use their Heat Spinners to experiment with a heat source (an incandescent bulb) and discover how heat energy can make the spinner move in different ways.

Preview activity

Exploration

11 mins

Wrap-Up

4 mins

Grade 4

Energy, Motion, & Electricity

Heat Energy & Energy Transfer

4-PS3-2, 4-PS3-4

1927 reviews
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