This was a Grade 7 group of 16 students last October. Students were working on a unit called 'The Universe and Me'

lots of information about astronomy (names of famous astronomers & major discoveries) - that it has been in use/applied by humans for 10's of 1000's of years (for a variety of reasons, but primarily survival)- it is/has been a source of great controversy (belief systems & Galileo/Hypatia/Copernicus) - recording of history can be 'hit and miss' and/or systematically altered by groups (gaps in information = missing/lost information NOT that there isn't any)

variables (how to identify and make use of them) - how to analyse and evaluate a source (in terms of information/reliability/bias/effectiveness etc) - how to compare sources - how to contrast sources - how to analyse information from a range of sources - how to build a more reliable information source of your own (synthesis/creating) 

7 timelines found on the internet (this activity grew out of my own search for a link to a good astronomy timeline for the pupils - the timelines I found all had major gaps/omissions/biases)

1. http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072482621/student_view0/astronomy_timeline.html

2. http://www.rundetaarn.dk/engelsk/observatorium/timeline.htm

3. http://www.windows2universe.org/the_universe/uts/timeline.html

4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Solar_System_astronomy

5. http://www.timetoast.com/timelines/109067

6. http://www.spaceandmotion.com/cosmology-history-astronomy-universe-space.htm

7. http://space.about.com/od/astronomyspacehistory/a/timelinea.htm

2. Lesson / task description – after

3. Overall reflection on the lesson / task

to a large extent - students were able to extend idea of variables to a non-numerical context (analysis) - all students learned or revised how to construct a scoring rubric using the variables and understood how the rubric could be used to evaluate sources -

Next time I do this activity I will ask the students to score their final product and look for ways to publish it.

Also as a further thinking aim I would have them write out the steps (algorithm) for source analysis and evaluation - this was definitely an opportunity I missed here!! They could have definitely used their algorithms in languages and humanities tasks. It would have allowed for physical as well as mental transfer of thinking processes and an opportunity for meta-reflection.

I did not see this opportunity until I had reflected on the task myself in terms of showing it to others.

Comments  

# Deidre Jennings 2014-04-16 14:11
I use this exercise every year now with grade 7 kids (age 12-13).

I have added the source evaluation stage and a supporting worksheet to differentiate/scaffold the activity for kids who are not up to drawing the table for themselves.

I found a further use for this in teaching parents. It is not a science task really so it (a) doesn't make them nervous and (b) at first glance it looks terribly easy to an adult (it's just words).

The objective is that the adults come to an understanding of concept based task rather than a content based task. The timelines are just illustrative detail and the concepts (function of a timeline - bias - what is good research - variables and values in texts - the need to evaluate every source and how to do that) and thinking training (identification - analysis - evaluation and synthesis) are what really matter.

In going through it with a group of parents I 'short-circuit' parts of the exercise ;
1. when I see they have the concept of a variable I then jump to the list created by the kids,
2. when I see that they have the concept of values - same thing
3. I then show them an evaluation rubric created by the kids and explain how the students select only some variables from their lists using the function of the timeline as a guide.
4. Finally explain to parents how 'seeing' the difficulty of evaluation without a process (Step 1) compares to ease of evaluation & synthesis with a process AND that this is metacognition - thinking about HOW they learn.
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