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Most
Classrooms have a Globe. These usually have the planet correctly
inclined (to show its tilt of spin in relation to the plane of our
orbit around the Sun), as well as a small plate on top, at the North pole, marked
off in hours.
For
children to visualize where their planet is in a year, in relation to
the Sun, it is useful to work with a model. A shared experience
makes the learning easier. This could be perhaps a weekly class
focus...where is the planet today in its orbit around
the Sun? To model this is relatively easy.
Pretend the
Sun is in the middle of the room. The globe can be moved around the
perimeter of the classroom, anti-clockwise, in a rough circle.
Either
select the front of the Classroom as North, or, more preferably,
determine true North where you are. Our planet is spinning at a tilt of
23.44 degrees (from the perpendicular to its orbital plane), and the
North pole of our planet is constantly pointing toward Polaris, the
North Star.
If the
front of the Classroom is "North", then that is the position where the
planet will be when it is our Winter Solstice, December 21 (usually).
Place the globe so that it is in
the middle of the front wall (or true North, depending how you are
modeling) tilted
directly away from the pretend Sun. (If you are modeling with true
North, the North pole of the globe itself will be pointing towards
Polaris.)
Our Earth
is moving around the Sun in an anti-clockwise
direction.
As it does so, it spins. (Conveniently to remember, it also spins in an anti-clockwise motion.)
The spinning brings us day and night at our specific locations on
the
spinning Earth.
The progression around the Sun, because of our tilted rotation, brings
us the changing Seasons.
All of this is a smooth motion, with our sightings of the Sun during
the time we are turned in its direction called "day"; and the times
when we are turned away and looking out into Space, shadowed by our
Earth from the sun's direct glare, able to now make out the light from
the numerous stars that are part of the Milky Way Galaxy in which the
Sun twirls, and broadcasting heat (lower energy light) out into Space
ourselves.
These
seasonal changes are a direct result of differences in solar energy
received
by different parts of the planet during different parts of the
yearly orbit. Simplistically, as more, or less, solar energy strikes a
surface during a day, so the temperature rises or falls.
Remember
that,
as the globe is moved around the outside of the class (circling the
pretend Sun in the middle of the class), it is always tilted in the same direction,
towards the front wall of the class (or, if you have selected, true
North).
At the back
of the class would be "South". Summer Time!! for us in the Northern
hemisphere. At that point in our annual orbit our Earth appears
tilted towards the Sun. Australia, on the other hand, experiences its least light in June.
Our planet is
always maintaining the same spinning tilt in the same polar
direction, always steadily spinning with no change in direction of its
tilt...it is
only by virtue of where Earth is in
it's orbit whether the North pole
of this spinning globe appears to be pointing away from or towards
the Sun. Again - the tilt of the Earth does not change with the Seasons - where we are in our orbit around the Sun does. The tilt is always in the same direction, throughout the year.
At the
mid-sides of the class would be the Equinoxes, when in Spring and Fall
(usually March 21 and September 21) the whole planet receives equal
sunlight during the daily spin.
The reason
it gets colder too, in the winter, can be seen by how the light from
the Sun, coming in approximately parallel lines towards the Earth, gets spread over
the curve of the globe. And how much more time, in the longer nights,
heat has to escape the surface into outer Space.
If an effort is made to mark off the room roughly into twelve parts of
a circle,
the children can track where the Sun is during our calendar year by
moving the globe to its new location slowly, as the days advance.
If the
front of the Classroom was selected as "North", as the solstice point,
then, moving counter-clockwise around the room, it will take three
months to reach the right side of the classroom (viewed from the
front), taking us to March 21. Where is January? Where is mid-January?
The beginning of February?
By
modelling, and then working with the model, children will see that
where
in the Earth's orbit we are determines the amount of solar energy we
receive at our location at any time of year.
If you have
a large lamp, and can darken the room, so much the better - one can
then model (only approximately - the lamp's light is near, and the rays
not parallel) the amount of sunlight falling on the different parts of
our rotating planet each day. The light from a slide or film
projector would serve this purpose.
[Note that
at the Summer Solstice,
the Tropic of Cancer (at 23.44 degrees north of the equator) is
perpendicular to the Sun, and during the Winter
solstice the sun's light strikes most directly the Tropic of Capricorn
(which is 23.44 degrees south of the equator).
During the Equinoxes, which part of the globe receives sunlight most
directly?]
As well, as
the hours of any day advance, the children can turn the globe just the
right amount by noting the dial at the top of the globe. For example,
if the class starts at 9 and ends at 12, which part of the planet was
experiencing "noon" when the class began? At 12, the part of the planet
the class is on should be facing towards the imaginary Sun in the
center of the room.
By
referring to the correctly positioned globe in this way, at various
times through-out the year, the children will form a picture of how the
planet moves as it goes around the Sun, and how the days and years go
by. There is nothing linear about our
existence - it's spinning while orbiting, all the way!
http://www.sunwindsolar.com
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