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Walking in the Footsteps of Galileo. Who was Galileo? 1564-1642.

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Presentation on theme: "Walking in the Footsteps of Galileo. Who was Galileo? 1564-1642."— Presentation transcript:

1 Walking in the Footsteps of Galileo

2 Who was Galileo? 1564-1642

3 Who were Galileo’s contemporaries? Nicolas Copernicus Tycho Brahe Johannes Kepler Galileo Galilei Isaac Newton 1473-1543 1546-1601 1571-1630 1564-1642 1642-1727

4 What do our students know about Galileo?

5 What did science look like at the time of Galileo?

6

7 How did Galileo change the practices of science then?

8 The Nature of Science These are key ideas identified in the Next Generation Science Standards draft: *Tentativeness *Using empirical evidence *Making observations and inferences *Using scientific methods *Creativity *Objectivity and subjectivity

9 A Moon Story Anna said, "I think the Earth would show phases, but it wouldn't move across the sky." Kedric said, "I don't think we would see phases of the Earth, but it would move in the sky. It would take about a month to cross it.” Emalee said, "I think we would see the Earth move just as fast across the sky as the Moon moves across our sky when we are home on Earth. We would be able to see phases.” Tanner said, " I have a different idea. The Earth would take about two weeks to cross the sky, and it would always be full, or almost full."

10 Jupiter as Seen by Galileo

11 Observing Jupiter Night 1

12 Day Time

13 Observing Jupiter Night 2

14 Day Time

15 Observing Jupiter Night 3

16 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 4 …

17 Observing Jupiter Night 4

18 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 5 …

19 Observing Jupiter Night 5

20 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 6 …

21 Observing Jupiter Night 6

22 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 7 …

23 Trying to Observe Jupiter Night 7

24 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 8 …

25 Observing Jupiter Night 8

26 Day Time Make a Prediction for Night 9 …

27 Observing Jupiter Night 9

28 Developing Questions Work with your team to: Develop 2-3 scientific questions that you can answer using your own data. Develop 2-3 scientific questions that you can answer using your own data. Share your data and questions. Share your data and questions. Develop more questions that you may be able to answer using data from other groups. Develop more questions that you may be able to answer using data from other groups.

29 Developing Explanations Based on Evidence Answer the question assigned to you. What is your claim? What is your claim? What is your evidence? What is your evidence? Explain how the evidence supports your claim. Explain how the evidence supports your claim.Share!

30 You will now watch a short video about Galileo's observations of the Moons of Jupiter. As you watch the video, think about what Galileo did as a scientist and why he did it. Reflecting on Galileo’s Observations

31 Galileo’s Notes

32 Reflections on the Video Why did Galileo look at Jupiter? Why did Galileo repeat his observation? What question(s) did Galileo ask? What did Galileo do that helped to answer his question(s)?

33 Reflections on the Video What was Galileo’s claim? What was his evidence? What were the implications of his claim? What did Galileo do with his work? How did society react to his work? What made Galileo the first modern scientist?

34 Optional Slide The next slide can be used instead of slide 16. It shows Night 7 instead of a cloudy night.

35 Observing Jupiter Night 7


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