I was so excited when I read this assignment! I found a tornado machine at a garage sale that was a student’s science fair project. With all of the horrible weather and tornadoes that we have been experiencing, my students have been asking a lot of questions about them. And the best part is that it aligns with my science standards! In order for the tornado simulator to work, I needed to purchase dry ice. I finally found and ice cream place that sells it to the public. I also needed a way to educate the students about important information on Tornadoes before I demonstrated with the model. I found the perfect website at National Geographic Society (2011). This website offers an interactive lab that also displays six different learning tools that are all centered on tornadoes. Everything the students need to learn about a tornado is all included in this site. It is wonderful! The following is the lesson that I created using the the models of an interactive National Geographic website and a tornado simulator.
I was so excited to share this lesson with my students. I used a perfect, interactive website to demonstrate all of the information about tornadoes. The website was a National Geographic site called Forces of Nature: Tornadoes (2011). This website includes six different instructional parts. The first part shows a picture of a tornado with all of the basic information stating what a tornado is. The second part zooms in on the United States in the path where most tornadoes occur. The video demonstrates the movement of air needed to cause a tornado. There is also information included describing what causes a tornado. The third part demonstrates the characteristics of a tornado. After reading the informative information provided, the students may choose the level of tornado they would like to watch on the Fujita Scale, ranging from an F0 to and F5. Each scale not only demonstrates the destruction, it also states the type of damage that type of cell will create. The fourth section describes the damage that a real tornado will cause. It included details along with real videos of tornadoes and picture of their amazing destruction. The fifth part discusses how tornadoes are forecasted and also includes pictures of stations and moving satellite images of a tornado cell’s satellite imagery. The sixth and final section allows the students to create a tornado by selecting the conditions that create a tornado. After the students select the perfect conditions to create a tornado, they watch their tornado of varying intensity pass through a farm. The students can assess the damage and size of the tornado cell to determine what level the tornado was. We did this section as a class so many times that the students knew the formula by heart. Air mass one needs cold, dry air. Air mass two needs warm, moist air. The barometric pressure must quickly fall. And variable wind speeds are required.
When I showed this lesson on the Smart Board, all of the students payed close attention, especially during the part where they got to create a tornado. We kept creating the formula repeatedly until the students got to see each type of tornado. This took a while because it repeated many types before it made its way through each kind.






Unfortunately, dry ice that I purchased did not last very long in my hot classroom so my later periods did not get to experience the lesson and were completely bummed about it. So I found another supplier of dry ice and bought more to perform the activity again the next day. This dry ice came in huge blocks of ice and created a much bigger and more amazing tornado than the day before. Unfortunately, I did not think to take pictures that day when the model tornado was really remarkable.
This was an amazing lesson and completely impressed not only my students, but also my Administrators all of the way up to the Superintendent! The use of good, effective models has a great affect on students learning! After the lesson was over, the students all raised their hands to ask if they could practice creating a tornado on the Smart Board using the Tornado website! They rushed up to participate and play with the website until the bell rang! I could not believe they wanted to keep learning and practicing!

Shannon-
ReplyDeleteLoved seeing pictures of you and your family! Jaycie is adorable!!!!! I especially love the picture of her lying on a hand- reminds me of an Ann Geddes picture!
What a great activity!!! If I ever teach earth science I will have to create or buy a tornado simulator. There are so many more tornadoes than ever before that the students are even more interested in learning about them. Could be a great segue into global warming.