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![]() Click on the link above to download a file you can open in your word processing program. This teacher’s guide contains three sections:
I. SITE OVERVIEWThe Energy Efficiency World website is designed to educate 8- to 12-year-old students about energy, motivate them to make energy-saving behavioral changes, and encourage their families to do the same. The site is geared for a range of interests and reading levels. Advanced vocabulary words are highlighted; clicking on these words can access definitions. Most of the site content is appropriate for students in grades 3-7 and supports several National Science Education Standards for these grades. Here’s what each section of the website covers. Learn About EnergyThe many forms of energy. Energy transfer. How renewable and nonrenewable energy sources are used to make electricity. How electricity is generated. Activities: Identifying sources of energy used in the home; simulating the motion of a turbine. Experiment: Building an electrical circuit. Use Energy EfficientlyWhat it means to use energy efficiently. How energy efficiency differs from conservation. How kids can save energy at home and at school. Energy-efficient appliances. Activities: Home energy inspection. Identifying the largest energy users in the home. Experiment: Home energy-saving program and utility bill analysis. Help the EnvironmentMaking the connection between saving energy and conserving natural resources. How saving energy reduces pollution. Recycling. Experiment: Make a greenhouse to learn about the greenhouse effect. Activity: Explore the energy used to make grocery bags. Want to Know More?For more advanced students interested in energy and efficiency. Includes a time line of significant energy events, detailed information on renewable and nonrenewable energy resources, and alternative fuel vehicles. Stop the Guzzler GameAn interactive game in which students race the clock to identify home energy wasters. Home Energy InspectionA checklist to help students and their families identify and correct energy waste. Energy Saver CertificateA checklist of the various sections of this website, which students can use to map their progress, plus an energy efficiency pledge. We recommend that students print the certificate before starting the site and have a teacher and parent or other adult sign it after they have visited all the sections. GlossaryDefinitions of energy-related words found on the site. Students can access these definitions by clicking on the words that appear highlighted on the site. Links to Related SitesHot links to related sites about the science of energy, energy efficiency, renewable energy resources, energy inventors, careers in the energy field, and so on. II. ACTIVITIES AND QUESTIONS TO REVIEW KEY PRINCIPLESThe questions below review key principles related to energy, efficiency, and the environment. Here are a few ideas for how to use them with your class:
Questions About Energy
Questions About Efficiency
Questions About the Environment
III. ACTIVITIES SETUP AND GUIDANCELearn About Energy: What Energy Sources Do You Use?This activity asks students to list energy-using items they use at home, and the energy sources that power these items. Students’ lists should look something like the first two columns below. (The third column is optional for more advanced students who wish to record the forms of energy that apply to each energy source on their list.)
Extension Students may include items like bikes or skateboards that require human energy to go. This is a good opportunity to discuss how people need food energy for physical activity, growth, healing, thinking, and so on—making food the most important energy source on the planet! Learn About Energy: Turning the Blades of a TurbineThis activity uses a plastic pinwheel to simulate the blades of a turbine in an electric power plant. Directions and Observations 1. Place the blades of a pinwheel under a stream of running water.
2. Fill the teakettle about half full of water and place it on the burner.
3. For this step, make sure to use an oven mitt to protect your hand. When the kettle boils, use the oven mitt to hold the pinwheel blades in the path of the steam.
Extension In this experiment, the energy source that was used to create the steam is whatever energy source is used to run the stovetop: probably electricity or natural gas. In power plants, the steam that is used to run generator turbines can be created from a variety of energy sources, including coal, oil, natural gas, and nuclear power. Even geothermal energy and biomass can be used to provide steam. Learn About Energy: Build an Electrical CircuitThis activity shows students how to build an electrical circuit. The materials (a D-cell battery, a 1.2-volt lightbulb with matching base, and 2 pieces of insulated wire for each experiment setup) are available from Radio Shack or other electronics stores. Setup Strip 2.5 cm of insulation off the ends of each piece of wire before giving them to students. In order for the bulb to light, there must be a solid connection between the wire and each terminal of the battery, and between the wire and bulb base. Remind students to use tape to secure these connections. If a connection is broken in any way, the circuit will not be complete and the bulb will not light. Directions and Observations Students should be able to predict that energy from the battery will travel through the wires to light up the bulb. They should also be able to extrapolate that if you want more bulbs to light up you need to add more batteries. Extension Add bulbs to the circuit until the bulbs draw more power than the battery can supply. Depending on the number of bulbs added and how they’re wired together, you might discover that the bulbs don’t burn as brightly or that they don’t light up at all. Use this activity to make parallels about the importance of using electricity and other resources wisely and efficiently. You can relate the need for more batteries to power more lightbulbs to what happens in a community when the demand for energy increases. Increased demand occurs when more and more homes and businesses are built in an area, and when people add energy-using appliances and equipment to their homes and businesses. To make sure there is enough electricity, utilities must increase the amount of power they produce, or people must use less electricity, or both. Use Energy Efficiently: Fun TestsThe “Fun Tests” activity includes two tests that students can do at home. The first test measures the water flow of their showerhead. If the shower fills a 2-litre milk carton in less than 10 seconds, it is using more water than an energy-efficient showerhead would use. The second test has students search for air leaks around doors, windows, and air conditioners and notify their parents of any leaks they find. This activity can be done at home or at school. Use Energy Efficiently: The Energy PieThe “Energy Pie” activity asks students to guess at how much of home energy use goes to power various activities in a typical home. Encourage students to print the Energy Pie and label it with their guesses before they click the answer key. Remind students that these figures are based on national averages. If your climate is extremely hot and/or cold, you will use more energy for heating and cooling than the numbers show. Likewise, if your climate is quite moderate, your heating and cooling energy use will be smaller than that shown on the pie chart. Use Energy Efficiently: Pocket Your Energy SavingsThe “Pocket Your Energy Savings” activity asks students to implement a home energy saving program for three months and track actual savings on energy bills. The objective of this activity is to make students aware that people pay for the energy they use, and that this usage can be reduced with some simple energy conservation measures. Please note: If students have moved recently, this activity will not be successful. Also, some parents may be reluctant to send to school personal information such as that found on utility bills. Teachers will need to assess the possibilities for success with this activity before assigning it to all students. Utility Bill Analysis Make sure students understand why they should compare the same three months of this year’s and last year’s bills—so they are comparing periods that have roughly the same weather patterns and family habits. Ask students to bring their utility bills to class so you can help them with the analysis part of the activity. Make sure students are comparing actual energy used, not dollar costs. Help them look for these totals, which will show up in kWh used. Results In some cases students may find that even though their household energy use went down for the months they saved energy compared to those months in the prior year, their bills went up due to increased energy costs. Some students may find that despite their energy conservation efforts they were not able to reduce household energy use compared to last year. Solving this mystery will take some detective work:
Help the Environment: Make a Mini GreenhouseThis experiment helps students understand how the greenhouse effect works. The ice in the covered bottle should have melted faster. Students should be able to explain that the plastic wrap holds the heat in the bottle just as the clear greenhouse gases trap heat in the earth’s atmosphere. Directions and Observations If students think the uncovered bottle will let in more sunlight, they may predict that temperatures will be higher and the ice will melt faster in this bottle. Conclusions
Help the Environment: Bag It—Paper or Plastic?The purpose of this activity is to help students understand the many ways that energy is involved in manufacturing grocery bags, and to motivate them to reuse and recycle these bags. Encourage students to follow the instructions and write down all the ways they think energy might be used to make each type of bag before they click on the answers. Extension This activity could be the springboard for a class discussion of how energy is used in other types of manufacturing, or (for older students) for research projects on energy use in various industries. |
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