|
|
Topic: Weather Type of Web activity: obtaining current data Materials / Software needed: Web browser Audience: Student / Teacher Grade Level: 8 - 12 Time involved: 2 - 3 days Created on: 8/3/00
The Web Science Workshop lessons were created in cooperation with the Exploratorium Teacher Institute .
This site
developed and maintained by
Deborah
Hunt
and
Eric
Muller
.
3601 Lyon
St.
©2000 The Exploratorium |
|
What do those little symbols mean!!?? Looking at weaher maps is a good way to get students to see all of the different variables of weather at once. No matter where you live, there is measureable weather. Having students look at their own are mapped ou always brings it a little closer to home. The University of Illinois has a great weather lesson site set up. Towards the end of a weather unit is a good time culminate it all into weather maps to reinforce what they learned, plot isobars or even make forecasts. The site has a weather symbol lesson which ends with an optional extension, interpreting a weather map. The type of map needed is a map of surface data . There are a variety of things that can be done with this:
The CoVis site makes the best maps, but it seems to not have enough data a little too often. Surface Map Maker sites CoVis project map maker (first choice, but it tends to be testy) UNISYS (very convoluted maps) The world of weather can be yours! |