+ All Categories
Home > Education > Weather Headlines

Weather Headlines

Date post: 27-May-2015
Category:
Upload: lisa-gardiner
View: 93 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
This presentation, part of a workshop for science educators at National Science Teachers Association conferences in 2013, describes interdisciplinary classroom activities that get students thinking about how weather events are covered by news media.
Popular Tags:
20
Weather Headlines: A Tool for Science Learning Becca Hatheway and Lisa Gardiner Spark – UCAR Science Education spark.ucar.edu/workshops
Transcript
Page 1: Weather Headlines

Weather Headlines:A Tool for Science Learning

Becca Hatheway and Lisa GardinerSpark – UCAR Science Education

spark.ucar.edu/workshops

Page 2: Weather Headlines

National Center for Atmospheric Research– Researching the atmosphere, weather, climate– A non-profit research lab, funded primarily by NSF.

Spark - UCAR Science Education• Goal: to increase public understanding of

atmospheric science and engage communities with research.– Sharing science content, activities, and teacher PD. – Providing education at NCAR in Boulder, CO.– Offering research internships for college students.– Working with communities that are partnering

with researchers.

Page 3: Weather Headlines

Weather is always making headlines.

• Weather is…– accessible science.– visible science.– happening now!– always changing.– in the headlines.

Page 4: Weather Headlines

Weather affects everyone.

• Weather impacts daily life.• It’s also relevant to national

security and global politics.• Cross cutting between social

studies, science, and geography.

Page 5: Weather Headlines

About climate change & weather events:

• When an extreme weather event occurs, people ask whether it was due to climate change.

• No single weather event is due to climate change. All weather events are affected by climate change, some more than others.

Page 6: Weather Headlines

The weather on steroids

An analogy…Climate warming is changing the weather like steroids change a baseball player.

http://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/attribution/steroids-baseball-climate-change

Page 7: Weather Headlines

Weather events are not equally affected by warming. We are still learning how they are, or are not, affected.

Page 8: Weather Headlines

Weather Headlines Workshop Outline

• Activity #1: Weather in the News– Compare stories about weather events from different

media sources and different perspectives• Hurricane Sandy• Joplin Tornado• Snowmageddon

• Activity #2: Tracking Hurricane News– Make a timeline based on news coverage of Hurricane

Irene as it moved up the East Coast in 2011

Page 9: Weather Headlines

Activity #1:Weather in the News

http://spark.ucar.edu/activity/weather-news

Snowmageddon , Washington, D.C., 2010

Page 10: Weather Headlines

Weather isn’t covered the same way in different news sources

• What’s the perspective?– Local news versus national news

• What’s the point of view?– Reporting versus opinion/editorial

• What’s the focus?– People focus versus science focus

Page 11: Weather Headlines

Oct 28, 2012, front page of Huffington Post

Page 12: Weather Headlines

Oct 28, 2012, front page of The New York Times

Page 13: Weather Headlines

Activity Instructions: Weather in the News

• Each small group reads the articles in their case study (there will be three case studies in the room)

• To conserve workshop time, skim the first side of the worksheet and focus on the four questions on the reverse.

• As a group, record your answers to those questions on chart paper and post on the wall.

Page 14: Weather Headlines

Activity #2:Tracking Hurricane News

http://spark.ucar.edu/activity/tracking-hurricane-news

Page 15: Weather Headlines

Tracking Hurricane News

1. Each student reads a news story about Hurricane Irene.

2. Students present information from their articles to the rest of the class.

3. Each student constructs a timeline to describe the hurricane’s story over time and across geographic area based on all the news stories.

Page 16: Weather Headlines

Meet Hurricane Irene• On Aug 20, 2011 Irene

became a tropical storm

• Strengthened to a Category 3 storm

• Made landfall many times along its path (Puerto Rico, Bahamas, North Carolina, New York and New Jersey)

Page 17: Weather Headlines
Page 18: Weather Headlines

Activity Instructions:Tracking Hurricane News

• Objective: Create a timeline of Hurricane Irene through quotes from the news about how the storm affected people and places. – (note: we are keeping it simple for the sake of time!)

1. Read an article and take notes on Worksheet 1. Can you summarize it in one sentence?

2. Choose a quote from the article that interests you. Add it to the timeline with the date and location of your news story.

Page 19: Weather Headlines

Other ideas for including weather news in the classroom

• Students investigate how news describes people during a storm.– Who is involved when a storm hits? (forecasters, emergency

managers, government officials, community members)– What’s did they have to say?

• Classroom debate: Should winter storms have names? – The National Weather Service doesn’t name them. The Weather

Channel does. – Have students research why storms are named, and decide whether

it’s helpful for winter storms as it is for hurricanes.

Page 20: Weather Headlines

Thanks!

• Lisa Gardiner [email protected]• Becca Hatheway [email protected]• For workshop resources, visit Weather Headlines

at spark.ucar.edu/workshops


Recommended