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E-raamat: Exploratorium Science Snackbook: Cook Up Over 100 Hands-On Science Exhibits from Everyday Materials

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Oct-2009
  • Kirjastus: Jossey-Bass Inc.,U.S.
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780470541630
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Oct-2009
  • Kirjastus: Jossey-Bass Inc.,U.S.
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780470541630

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Kids and teachers can build their own science projects based on exhibits from San Francisco's premiere science museum

This revised and updated edition offers instructions for building junior versions, or "snacks," of the famed Exploratorium's exhibits. The snacks, designed by science teachers, can be used as demonstrations, labs, or as student science projects and all 100 projects are easy to build from common materials. The Exploratorium, a renowned hands-on science museum founded by physicist and educator Frank Oppenheimer, is noted for its interactive exhibits that richly illustrate scientific concepts and stimulate learning.

  • Offers a step-by-step guide for building dynamic science projects and exhibits
  • Includes tips for creating projects made from easy-to-assembly items
  • Thoroughly revised and updated, including new "snacks," images, and references
Introduction vii
What's in a Snack? (Sample Page) ix
Icon Key x
Tips and Tales---By Teachers, for Teachers xi
Part One: The Cheshire Cat and Other Eye-Popping Explorations of How We See the World
Afterimage
3(2)
Anti-Gravity Mirror
5(2)
Benham's Disk
7(4)
Bird in the Cage
11(2)
Blind Spot
13(2)
Bronx Cheer Bulb
15(2)
Cardboard Tube Syllabus
17(4)
Cheshire Cat
21(2)
Color Contrast
23(2)
Depth Spinner
25(4)
Disappearing Act
29(2)
Everyone Is You and Me
31(2)
Fading Dot
33(2)
Far-Out Corners
35(2)
Gray Step
37(4)
Jacques Cousteau in Seashells
41(4)
Mirrorly a Window
45(2)
Moire Patterns
47(4)
Peripheral Vision
51(2)
Persistence of Vision
53(2)
Pupil
55(2)
Size and Distance
57(4)
Squirming Palm
61(4)
Thread the Needle
65(2)
Vanna
67(2)
Whirling Watcher
69(6)
Part Two: The Cool Hot Rod and Other Electrifying Explorations of Energy and Matter
Charge and Carry
75(4)
Circles of Magnetism I
79(2)
Circles of Magnetism II
81(2)
Cold Metal
83(2)
Convection Currents
85(2)
Cool Hot Rod
87(2)
Curie Point
89(2)
Eddy Currents
91(2)
Electrical Fleas
93(2)
Electroscope
95(2)
Fog Chamber
97(2)
Gas Model
99(2)
Give and Take
101(2)
Hand Battery
103(2)
Hot Spot
105(2)
Magnetic Lines of Force
107(2)
Magnetic Suction
109(2)
Motor Effect
111(2)
Radioactive Decay Model
113(2)
Short Circuit
115(2)
Stripped-Down Motor
117(6)
Part Three: The Magic Wand and Other Bright Explorations of Light and Color
Blue Sky
123(2)
Bone Stress
125(2)
Bridge Light
127(2)
Color Table
129(2)
Colored Shadows
131(4)
Corner Reflector
135(2)
Critical Angle
137(2)
Cylindrical Mirror
139(4)
Diffraction
143(2)
Disappearing Glass Rods
145(2)
Duck-Into Kaleidoscope
147(2)
Giant Lens
149(4)
Inverse-Square Law
153(2)
Look into Infinity
155(2)
Magic Wand
157(2)
Parabolas
159(2)
Pinhole Magnifier
161(2)
Polarized Light Mosaic
163(4)
Polarized Sunglasses
167(2)
Rotating Light
169(2)
Soap Film Painting
171(4)
Spectra
175(2)
Spherical Reflections
177(2)
Touch the Spring
179(2)
Water Sphere Lens
181(4)
Part Four: The Spinning Blackboard and Other Dynamic Explorations of Force and Motion
Balancing Ball
185(2)
Balancing Stick
187(2)
Bernoulli Levitator
189(2)
Bicycle Wheel Gyro
191(2)
Bubble Suspension
193(2)
Bubble Tray
195(2)
Center of Gravity
197(2)
Coupled Resonant Pendulums
199(2)
Descartes Diver
201(2)
Downhill Race
203(2)
Drawing Board
205(4)
Momentum Machine
209(2)
Non-Round Rollers
211(6)
Resonant Pendolum
217(2)
Resonant Rings
219(2)
Resonator
221(2)
Soap Bubbles
223(2)
Spinning Blackboard
225(2)
Strange Attractor
227(2)
Take It from the Top
229(2)
Vortex
231(2)
Water Spinner
233(4)
Part Five: The Wire-Hanger Concerto and Other Ear-Splitting Explorations of How We Hear the World
Anti-Sound Spring
237(2)
Bee Hummer
239(2)
Coffee-Can Cuica
241(4)
Conversation Piece
245(2)
Designer Ears
247(2)
Doppler Effect
249(2)
Falling Rhythm
251(2)
Head Harp
253(2)
Make Your Own Rainstick
255(2)
Organ Pipe
257(2)
Pipes of Pan
259(2)
Radiohead
261(2)
Sound Sandwich
263(2)
Speaker
265(2)
Stereo Sound
267(2)
Straw Oboe
269(2)
Water-Bottle Membranophone
271(2)
Wire-Hanger Concerto
273(2)
About the Exploratorium and the Exploratorium Teacher Institute 275(2)
Contributors 277(2)
National Science Education Standards 279(12)
Concept Index (Snacks coded by icon) 291(6)
References and Resources 297(8)
Content Index 305
The Exploratorium, founded in 1969, is an internationally renowned museum of science, art and human perception, rated the "best science museum in the world" by Scientific American.  Its hundreds of hands-on exhibits are designed to promote science discovery.  It has an annual attendance of about 650,000 per year and its website attracts approximately 20 million visitors annually. The Exploratorium Teacher Institute, which was organized in 1984, brings science and math teachers from middle and high schools all over the country to workshops at the museum and will be having its 25th anniversary in 2009.  About 200 teachers participate each year, and about 3,000 teachers stay in touch as alumni.  The institute also includes a mentor program for beginning teachers, a leadership training program, and an online curriculum and it offers professional development credits through local universities. The editors of the Exploratorium have created numerous popular books on science, from the original Science Snackbook to the interactive Explorabook to their latest effort: Exploratopia.