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Using Heat from the Sun

Using Heat from the Sun
  • Grades:
  • Length: 60 Minutes

Overview

Environmental Science and Health

Students conduct a discovery activity that demonstrates how energy from sunlight can heat water. Student sheets are provided in English and in Spanish.

This activity is from The Science of Global Atmospheric Change Teacher's Guide. Although it is most appropriate for use with students in grades 3–5, the lessons are easily adaptable for other grade levels. The guide is also available in print format.

Teacher Background

We seldom think about the sun’s importance to our planet. It is the ultimate source of almost all the energy we use. Besides the sun, the only other sources of energy on the planet are radioactive rocks and the molten core deep below Earth’s surface. The sun keeps us warm. It is responsible for weather, which is caused by uneven heating of large masses of air. Our food and common fuel sources depend or depended on solar energy trapped by producers, such as plants.

This activity is designed to build student awareness of the importance of the sun as the ultimate source of almost all energy on Earth. It also provides insight into harnessing the sun’s power directly as a source of energy, as Mr. Slaptail does with his solar water heater in the Global Atmospheric Change unit's storybook, Mr. Slaptail's Curious Contraption.


Funding

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH

My Health My World: National Dissemination
Grant Number: 5R25ES009259
The Environment as a Context for Opportunities in Schools
Grant Number: 5R25ES010698, R25ES06932