Transportation
|
Objectives
|
- To learn about three different modes of transportation:
water, land and air.
- To experiment with different means of power for
the different modes: pushing, wind, and rubber bands.
|
Books : (In kit)
|
- Ferryboat by Betsy Maestro
- I Fly by Anne Rockwell
- Truck by Donald Crews (Big Book)
|
Equipment : (In kit)
|
- 7 Wooden cars
- 3 Wooden sailboats
- 1 Cloth Sail
- 4 Wooden paddleboats (with extra propeller)
- 4 Tubs
- 4 Plastic boats (tops of yellow, green, red)
- 8 Balsafoam airplanes
- 10 Rubber bands
- 32 Wheels
- 1 Bag of medium foam airplanes (need slight assembly)
- 1 Bag of small triangle airplanes
- 1 Bag of large blue & yellow foam airplanes (need
slight assembly)
- 4 Yellow and blue styrofoam rockets
- 4 Black and orange styrofoam rockets (small)
- 1 Wing glider (fluorescent orange)
|
Consumables : (To be supplied
by you)
|
- Paper for paper airplanes
- Water for water tank
|
Resource Book : (Contact your
local library to borrow)
|
- Ardley, Neil. Science Book of Motion. Gulliver Books,
1992
- Evans, David. Make It Go. Dorling Kindersley, 1992.
- Irving,
Jan. Full Speed Ahead: Stories and Activities for Children
on Transportation. Teacher
Ideas Press, 1988.
|
Bookmarks : (In kit)
|
- Paper copies of the bookmark are included in the kit.
PDF and JPEG copies are available here.
- PDF - 4 bookmarks per page. Ready to print in
color.
- JPG - single high quality jpeg image.
|
Program
|
- Objectives
- To
learn about three different modes of transportation: water, land
and air.
- To experiment with different means of power for
the different modes:
pushing, wind, and rubber bands.
- Introduction
- Talk
about how we can get from one place to another in a sensible
fashion. Start with small, such as across the room – crawl,
walk, run. What if we wanted to go faster? Add wheels for roller
skates. What if we had a large load to carry? Carry in arms
or push
in a wagon.
Now go through the same steps for a longer distance.
You still could walk, skate, bike, or bus/car/train (motorized
wheels). Now
go for
a longer distance and add the element of speed, which
should bring airplanes into the discussion. Also add water to
cross which
should
bring in boats, which again could be paddled, sailed
or motorized. Try to get the children to do as much brainstorming
on this
discussion as possible.
- Ask about combining modes of transportation.
Can cars ever be in the air or on water? Yes, with cargo jets
or ferryboats and barges.
Can planes
ever be on the water or land? Yes, when planes are taxiing
or with pontoons. Can boats be in the air or on the land? Only
when boats are in planes
or are pulled on trailers.
- Talk about size of each kind
of vehicle which is a major factor in choosing the means of
transportation.
- Program
- Read
story – FERRYBOAT by Betsy Maestro.
- Show a wooden car minus
the wheels and how it is difficult to move across the table.
Add wheels and see how much faster it moves.
- Show different airplanes – paper,
and blue/yellow foam ones which are powered by pushing.
- Show flying
the wooden airplanes powered by the rubber bands.
- Show boat pushed
in water.
- Show sailboat being pushed by wind power (have someone
blow on it).
- Show paddle boat with rubber band power chugging
through the water.
- Let the children explore
all the vehicles, trying the different types and powering methods.
Remind
children not
to throw airplanes at classmates,
but they can fly them to a partner (classmate
who is expecting to receive the plane).
- General
- A large room with few tall objects is nice
for flying the airplanes.
- The water tank needs just a bucket
of water since it really needs to be about 6” deep to
allow the paddle boat enough clearance.
- The joys of throwing
airplanes and playing in boat water
far exceeds the interest in cars, so be aware for
dividing children and rotating
them around to different areas.
- The paper airplanes
were just as popular with the children as the other airplanes.
Instructions
are included
for airplanes
with different
abilities. It is nice to hand out instructions
to participants for further “research” at
home. If time allows, make enough paper airplanes
ahead of time to give one to each child to take
home.
- This is not a quiet program!
- An additional “BIG” book
for children to enjoy with this program is Donald Crew’s
TRUCK.
- Or, read I FLY by Anne Rockwell, a fictional
look at a young boy’s
plane trip. It includes scientific information
about the speed of the plane, cruising altitude,
etc.
|
Evaluation
|
| Please print
this evaluation, complete
it and return to MVLS in the SWS red envelope. |