Lesson Plan 1.3
Lesson Plan 1.3
3
Unit 1 : Energy in Society
Topic Title: Physics for Development
Time Frame: 1 day
I - OBJECTIVES
General Objectives:
1. Cite the role of energy in the development of human society from the industrial
age to the knowledge-based society.
2. Trace the development of technology in the country and relate it to international
and worldwide developments.
3. State some worldwide developments in Physics that had implications to society
and had changed humanitys thinking about nature.
Specific Objectives:
1. Cite the contributions of physics to society
2. Describe how physicists contributed to the body of knowledge called science and
to technology
II SUBJECT MATTER
A. Lesson Title: Physics for Development
B. References:
1.
Pabellon, Josefina Ll. and Genelita B. Tubal. Physics 3rd Edition. Diwa
Learning Systems. Pp1-10; 149-152
2.
http://www.timelinescience.org/years
3.
http://timeline.aps.org/APS/index.html
4.
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/newsite/physics_timeline.html
5. Materials:
Cartolina cut outs
Pentel pen
III LEARNING ACTIVITIES
A. Lesson/Activity Proper
1.
Prepare an area in the classroom for the Physics Timeline. Divide this area
into centuries or any appropriate timescale.
2.
Ask students or their groups to write the breakthroughs, contributions, etc. on
a piece of cartolina.
3.
Let the groups paste these along the timeline.
4.
After all of them have done their share, encourage them to ask questions or
clarify a particular discovery/event/contribution related to Physics.
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5.
B. Valuing
1.
Appreciation of the contributions of physicists to science.
IV ASSESSMENT
Give points for students who:
1) cited one contribution
2) explained or asked questions about a specific contribution
V ASSIGNMENT
Answer briefly but concisely:
1. Which do you consider as the greatest physics invention among all the ones
mentioned in the timeline? Why do you think so?
2. Who among the physicists do you admire the most? Why is this so?
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Teachers Handout
SAMPLE PHYSICS TIMELINE1
FIRST PRINCIPLES: Pre-1600
440BC
400BC
360BC
250BC
100
Hero of Alexandria describes experiments he has undertaken with air, and also
writes about light, mirrors and very simple machines
1015
The Arabian physicist "Alhazen" explains how lenses work and develops parabolic
mirrors
1150
1220
Nemorarius publishes "Mechanica", which contains the law of levers and the law of
composition of movements
1270
1355
1586
Stevinus notes that two items of different weights dropped at the same time
strike the ground together - first real observations of gravity
1590
Galileo's "De motu" (on motion) is published; this work refutes Aristotelian
physics
1592
Aristotle (384BC-322BC)
A mathematician and logician of great renown, Aristotle's ideas formed the basis for much
Western thinking for over 1500 years. He was born in Stagirus in Northern Greece in
384BC, the son of a doctor. Following his father's death a decade later, Aristotle was
educated by Proxenus and subsequently became a student at Plato's Academy in Athens.
Aristotle travelled widely, his movements often dictated by political uprisings; having
finally established his own academy, he taught and spoke on a huge array of subjects in his
later life, including mathematics, astronomy, physics, logic, zoology and economics, as well
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as the traditional Greek interests of poetry and philosophy. Much of his published writings
came to prominence after his death, particularly his work in physics and mathematics;
together with his great works on logic, these influenced the thinking and work of countless
generations of scholars.
Archimedes (c.287BC - c.211BC)
Born in Syracuse, Sicily, around 287BC, Archimedes was raised in a scientific
family; his father, Phidias, was an astronomer. He studied in Alexandria under
the followers of Euclid, and quickly gained renown as the greatest
mathematician of his age. His early work focused on mechanical problems and
calculus, and he is credited with many inventions, including war machines, the pulley system,
and the planetarium.
Archimedes is known for his work in the fields of hydrostatics and static mechanics and
published many writings in his time. He remains one of the top mathematicians and
scientists the world has seen.
THE FIRST GREAT DISCOVERIES: 1600-1800
1600
1608
1609
Galileo constructs his own telescope, which he uses to make a whole series of
discoveries
Galileo also establishes the principle of falling bodies descending to Earth at the
same speed
1621
1642
1643
Torricelli invents the mercury barometer and observes the first vacuum
1656
1662
1665
1676
Hooke's Law
1687
"Principia" published. Newtons' great work includes his 3 laws of motion and also
the law of universal gravitation [Newton's Laws]
1690
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1704
1714
1742
1748
1752
Benjamin Franklin performs his famous "kite experiments" and shows that lightning
is a form of electricity [Benjamin Franklin - A Documentary History]
1761
1787
1798
1800
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the tree is a legendary tale) and concluded that a force inversely proportional to the
square of the distance from a body to its centre of rotation kept the Moon and planets in
their orbits.
Having discarded his ideas for over a decade, the Cambridge-resident Newton collaborated
with Hooke in 1679 to revive his interest in elliptical orbits, but it was under the influence
of Edmund Halley that he developed his ideas for publication. In September 1687,
Newton's "Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica", known simply as the "Principia",
was published. This work contained the three laws of motion and a discussion of orbital
motion. The two subsequent volumes dealt in turn with the motion of fluids and with
gravitation, the latter probably the most significant scientific breakthrough to that time.
Newton's theory of gravitation finally provided the theoretical basis for the Copernican
system and Kepler's laws, and heralded the birth of celestial mechanics. The Principia can
thus be regarded as arguably the most important scientific work ever published, and
Newton as one of the most important and influential scientists to date. Intriguingly,
Newton never mentioned Hooke's contributions to the inverse square law, fuelling a feud
between the two men which raged for many years. Newton died in London in March 1727.
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
Although most renowned in the scientific world for his work with electricity
and lightning, Franklin had many other interests and stimuli, including
printing, economics, music and politics - indeed he is one of America's
Founding Fathers and signed the Declaration of Independence. Born in 1706
in Boston, he took up an apprenticeship as a printer with his brother at age 12, before
moving to Philadelphia and then London. Having returned to Philadelphia, he started his own
printing company in 1728.
Having focused on family life in the 1730s, Franklin turned his attention to science, and
began work on electrical experiments, publishing his first results in 1747. In June of 1752,
Franklin performed his famous kite experiment, when he held up a metal rod attached to a
child's kite in the midst of an electrical storm, allowing lightning to strike it. Having
invented the lightning rod as a safety device, Franklin travelled the world as a
representative of the Philadelphia Assembly and latterly the American Philosophical
Society. He entered politics and in 1775 was elected to the Continental Congress. He signed
the Declaration of Independence in 1776.
Having performed many great acts of statesmanship, including the fight against slavery and
negotiating treaties with Britain, France and other European states, Franklin died in
Philadelphia in 1790.
MAJOR BREAKTHROUGHS: 1801-1900
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1801
1808
1816
1819
1820-23
1821
1827
1829
1831
1833
Faraday introduces the laws of electrolysis and coins terms such as electrode,
anode, cathode, ion, cation, anion, and electrolyte
1836
The first reliable source of electric current is produced, using copper and zinc.
This becomes known as the Daniell Cell
1842
1843
1849
1851
1859
1861
1873
1887
1895
1896
1897
J. J. Thomson discovers the electron [Life, the Universe and the Electron]
1899
1900
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1905
Einstein puts forward his special theory of relativity [Dummies Guide to Special
Relativity]
1908
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1910
1911
1913
Niels Bohr puts forward the orbiting electron atomic theory [Bohr Theory]
1914
1915
1916
1918
1925
1926
1927
1931
1932
1933
1934
1937
1938
1942
1943
1945
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombed using the first (and only existing!) nuclear
fission bombs
1946
1952
Development and explosion of the world's first thermonuclear device - the "H
bomb"
1954
1955
1960
1964
1979
1980
1983
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validates the link between weak nuclear force and electromagnetic force
1986
1989
The Large Electron Positron (LEP) collider comes into operation at CERN. This is
a particle accelerator with a diameter of almost 17 miles
1991
1992
1993
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Having published his special theory of relativity in 1905, Einstein finally returned to
academia in 1909, as Associate Professor at Zurich. He began to meet and consort with
prominent scientists, and finally made his major breakthrough in 1915, when he completed
his general theory of relativity, published the following year - this of course included the
famous E=mc2 equation.
After the end of WW1, Einstein became a German citizen, but the hostile attitude of the
Nazi party led him to leave Germany in 1932, renouncing his citizenship. He moved to the
US in 1933, eventually acquiring citizenship in 1940. His passionate debates with the likes
of Bohr, Heisenberg and Pauli occupied much of the 1920s and 1930s, and ultimately led to
Einstein's involvement in atomic research during the Second World War. Despite playing a
major role in the development of the atomic bomb, Einstein was an advocate of nuclear
disarmament and the foundation of the United Nations. He died in 1955, one of the most
celebrated scientists of the 20th century.
Niels Bohr (1885-1962)
A Danish physicist who proposed the Bohr model of the atom while working with
Rutherford in Manchester. Bohr postulated that a hydrogen atom consisted of a
central proton nucleus with a single electron in a circular orbit; he also said that
the electron energy was quantized.
Having escaped Denmark in WW2, Bohr helped to develop the atomic bomb, though he was
dismayed by its subsequent use.
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