High School • Gas Laws • Legacy Series

Nov 18, 2016

These videos are part of a Legacy Series, meaning that they were produced earlier than the other case studies you see on this website. These have been so popular with our viewers that we’ve included them here.

This is a high school Chemistry class and Bethany is teaching a unit on the Gas Laws.

Traditionally 
in
 Chemistry 
students 
learn
 about
 the
 behavior
 of
 gasses
 through 
investigating gas 
laws. 
But 
a 
law 
is 
a 
description
 of
 a
 phenomenon
 and 
if 
taught
 through
 a
 “lens
 of 
laws”
 students 
focus 
their
attention
 on 
correlations
 among
 variables.
 For
 example,
 as
 pressure
 increases
 volume
 decreases.
 Theories
 provide
 explanations
 for
 laws.

 Explaining
 gas
 laws
 requires
 a
 keen
 understanding
 of
 molecular
 movement
 and 
how
 energy 
influences this
 movement.
 One 
of the
 challenges
 is 
that 
many
 of 
the
 gases 
we
 interact
 with 
on 
a 
daily 
basis 
are
 not
 visible.
 For
 this unit 
of 
instruction
 Bethany
 chose
 to 
have
 students 
reason
 with 
familiar
 gases
 first. 
She
 posed
 a
 puzzling
 phenomenon
 about
 a railroad tanker car that
 collapsed
 after
 being
 steam-cleaned
 and
 sealed.

Students
 developed
 initial
 models
 about
 what
 could
 cause
 the
 tanker
 to
 collapse
 and
 then
 did
 experiments
 with
 pop
 cans
 crushing
 with
 the
 aid
 of
 steam
 to
 add
 to
 the
 initial
 models.
 The
 pop
 can
 experiments
 helped
 students
 link
 an
 observable
 phenomenon
 with
 theoretical
 components
 such
 as
 the
 role
 of
 phase
 changes
 and
 the
 speed
 of
 gas
 molecules— but
 to
 reason
 with
 the
 role
 of
 pressure
 inside
 and
 outside
 of
 a
 system
 students
 did
 additional
 experiments
 and
 read
 about
 pressure.
 Over
 time
 students
 constructed
 a 
rich
 explanation 
for the 
oil
 tanker
 collapsing,
 while
 also
 considering 
similar phenomena. Students 
were 
then
 ready
 to 
apply 
what 
they 
learned 
to 
less
 similar
 observable
 phenomena.
 Bethany
 chose
 a
 set
 of
 relevant
 phenomena
 to
 students’
 lives
 and
 had
 students
 explain
 modifications
 made
 to
 race
 cars
 based
 on
 their
 understandings
 of
 the
 gas
 laws.
 Students
 could
 choose
 to
 think 
about 
modifications
 to
 tires
 or
 engines.

Pre-unit interview with teacher
We get oriented to the teacher, her students, and to the unit she is about to teach.

Here we get oriented to the teacher, her students and school, and to the unit she is about to teach. Bethany explains her goals and how she intends to shape the unit.
Bethany’s
 practice
 is
 characterized
 by
 a
 constant
 press
 for
 why
 explanations.
 Each
 activity
 aims
 to
 add
 to
 an
 explanation
 and
 each
 interaction
 with
 students
 either
 starts
 with
 a
 press
 for
 why
 or
 help
 students
 first
 explain
 what,
 and
 how,
 then
 why.
 
 Students
 constantly
 transition
 back
 and
 forth
 between
 observable
 and
 unobservable
 features
 of
 an
 explanation.

Day 1 Eliciting students' ideas

Eliciting students ideas about gas behavior

Activities:
1) Elicitation of student ideas.
Describe
 what
 you 
already 
know 
about 
how
 gasses 
behave.
(Think
 about:
 How
 do 
they 
move?
 What 
affects
 their
 movement?
 What 
is
 a 
gas?)
2) Explaining an oil tanker crushing phenomenon. Students 
watch
 video.
Unprompted 
they 
start 
thinking
 about
 why 
this 
happened.
Students
 then
 record
 initial 
ideas.
Students
 then
work 
in 
groups 
to 
draw
 before,
middle
 and
 after
 pictures.
3) Whole‐class debrief.
Students
 share
 posters 
of 
their 
initial 
ideas.
4) Homework:
Students
 did 
a
reading 
about
 the
 behavior 
of 
gases.

Discussion questions for teachers: 1) What general ideas do most students seem to have about the behavior of gasses? Which of these ideas can be built on? 2) How does Bethany uncover students’ ideas? What kinds of questions does she ask when students give incomplete responses or reveal an alternative conception? What does she do when she first enters a group/ exits a group?

Day 2 Building a consensus model
Building an initial consensus model and linking together parts of the causal story.

Activities
1) Warm-up Yesterday you heard different groups present their ideas about why the tanker crushed. You also read about the behavior of gases as homework. What are 3 new ideas you have about why the tanker is crushing? Teacher reviews student ideas from previous day.

2) Making an initial consensus model. Teacher reviews student posters using 2 guiding questions: A) Make a list of what’s causing the tanker to crush. B) Does anything seem to be linked together? Does one thing happening seem to cause another thing to happen?
3) Pop Can Activity: Back pocket questions are used to a) help students link together parts of the causal story b) identify gaps in the students’ causal stories and c) help students begin to think about how they could further study the phenomenon.

Discussion question for teachers: In the video Bethany works with two groups as they consider the relationship between phase changes and pressure changes. How does she tailor her back‐pocket questions in response to each group’s line of thinking?

Days 3, 4, 5 Explaining pop can crushing
Explaining pop can crushing.

1) Warm‐up, Day 3. “How is the pop can similar to the crushing tanker? How is it different?”
2) Examining variables. Teacher helps students hypothesize about 5 experiments inspired by student ideas from the previous day.
3) Pop can Activity II. As students conduct experiments the teacher poses back pocket questions to a) help students link together parts of the causal story b) help students identify gaps in their causal stories.

  • Experiment #1: Amount of water in the can
  • Experiment #2: Temperature of the water bath
  • Experiment #3: Amount of time on the hot plate
  • Experiment #4: Volume of the can
  • Experiment #5: Amount of seal

4) Warm‐up, Day 4. Teacher prompts students to consider 4 key ideas in their explanations. The warm‐up asks students to “Choose one of the following ideas and explain how it relates to the experiment you did yesterday.

  • Temperature change‐ speed of molecules
  • Temperature change‐ phase of matter
  • Pressure inside
  • Pressure outside

5) Complete pop can Activity II. As students finish experiments the teacher poses back pocket questions to a) help students link together 4 parts of the causal story.

Day 5. Think back to your experiment with the cans.State your results as a rule. How did changing the manipulated variable affect the amount of crushing? When _________________the can crushed more because ____________________.

Reporting out and connecting experimental findings. Teacher coordinates discussion of findings across groups. Teacher describes what happens and presses student to say why.

Discussion questions for teachers: 1) Record the questions Bethany asks, group them into conceptual categories, and then consider her reasoning for asking these rounds of questions in this particular order. 2) Which questions seemed to be most productive for helping students move their thinking forward?


Days 3, 4, 5 Continued...
Continues…

This video continues activities from the previous scenes…

Days 5, 6
Increasing content understanding about air pressure

Increasing content understanding about air pressure (as opposing forces) and relationships with volume, and temperature.
PV=nRT
1) Increasing content understanding about air pressure.
 Students 
struggled 
to 
reason
 with 
internal
and
 external 
air 
pressure.
Teacher
 reviews 
homework
 assignment
 about
 pressure.
Teacher 
has 
students
 show
 work
 to
 class 
as
 a
way
 to
 “work 
on 
student 
ideas.”
Then
 teacher helps 
students
 reason
 with
 forces
and
 pressure.

2) Balancing Act.
Teacher 
asks
 students
 to 
reason
 with
 number 
of
 molecules,
 temperature,
 volume,
and
 pressure
(in 
terms
 of
 pulling
 and
 balancing 
internal
 and 
external
 pressure)
throughout
 4
experiments.

Station
1
 Balloon
 Blow
up
Station
2
 Marshmallow
 vs.
 Pebble
Station
3 
Expanding
 Balloon
Station
4
 Balloon 
in 
Flask
3) Warm‐up, day 6.
Draw 
a
 diagram
 to 
explain
 why 
this 
tire
 would 
inflate.
Draw
 the 
air
 molecules
outside
 the 
tire,
 draw 
the 
air
 molecules 
inside
 the 
tire.
Use 
arrows 
to 
indicate
 where 
pressure 
is
 higher
or
 lower
.

4) Returning to air pressure experiments and explanations.
Students 
completed 
diagrams
 and questions for 
the 
air
 pressure 
experiments.

Discussion questions for teachers: 1) What are different strategies Bethany uses to plan for as well as in‐the‐moment work on students’ ideas? 2) What kinds of ideas do students wrestle with during the experiments? Do the conversations move beyond procedural talk? When, how?

Day 7 Applying new ideas to a model
Applying new ideas to a model

1) Warm up, day 7.
Students review air pressure experiments. Specifically the relationships between pressure and the a) number of molecules, b) volume and c) temperature.
2) Adding to the model. Teacher facilitates a whole class discussion about the information that needs to be added to their initial model. Then students work in small groups to add to their models of the can crushing for the experiment they conducted. NOTE: The teacher notices students are trying to apply ideas about kinetic molecular theory to the can crushing experiment. They reason with partial understandings about the speed of molecules, how the temperature influences speed, why the space is important to molecular movement. The teacher helps students link these ideas to the experiment but also directs their focus to a different but related underlying explanation (the number of molecules) to explain why the can crushes.

Day 8 Applying new ideas to a model
Applying new ideas to a model

Warm up, day 8
1) In response to how students were reasoning with molecules, the teacher designed a warm up to help students think about the number of molecules at each stage in the can crushing. “Say I started with 10 water molecules (X’s) in the bottom of the can and 20 air molecules (O’s) in the can and then I heated it up to boiling and let it boil for 2 minutes. Draw a picture of a can and mark where you think the X’s and O’s would be after these 2 minutes.”
2) Adding to the model. Students return to diagrams and continue to add information to their models using a checklist with key concepts for the students to include.

Discussion questions for teachers a) How is the explanation check list developed How is it used? b) Generally speaking, compared to days 1 & 2 how have students built on their original ideas? And what new ideas are they entertaining now?

Day 9 Using mathematics to understand gasses
Using mathematics to understand gasses

Increasing content understanding about number and speed of molecules and relationships with pressure, volume, and temperature.
PV=nRT
1) Warm up. The teacher asks a warm up that helps connect ideas about kinetic molecular theory with the gas laws. “When you flip over the can into cold water, describe what happens to the phaseand speed of the gas molecules (both X’s and the O’s) inside.”

2) Pressure and Collisions. Students talk about correlations between pressure and number of collisions on a container and then reason with three ways the pressure/number of collisions can decrease—the amount of space (V), the number of molecules (n) and the temperature (T). Students then look at these relationships in a computer simulation. http://www.phy.ntnu.edu.tw/ntnujava/index.php?topic=25

3) Can you compress water? Teacher helps student reason with the differences between air molecules and water molecules. Need to think about pressure of water in can puts on the can and why this is an important part of the explanation for why the can does not crush.

4) Return to posters to add new knowledge. Teacher highlights 2 parts of the explanation checklist that students are generally not attending to in their explanations. She also provides each group with 3 sheets of fill in the blank sentences to make sure students are reasoning with a full explanation for each of the 3 can crushing stages.

Discussion questions for teachers 1) Bethany adds an additional scaffold to the check list by giving students sentence starters. How does this shift the ways students participate in class?

Days 10, 11, 12 Generalizing to the behavior of all gases
Generalizing to the behavior of all gases

Piecing it all together.
1) Teacher facilitates whole class conversation of a full explanation of the tanker Generalizing to the crushing.

2) Review of learning. Teacher has students refer back to initial explanations. behavior of all gasses.

3) The Behavior of Gases. Teacher reviews general ideas about what influences the behavior of gases and bridges to scientific language. Then the teacher introduces the Ideal Gas Law.

4) Focus on correlation between P & V. Pressure Volume Student do activity with syringe and scale to Pressing students for evidence examine the relationship between P & V. Students graph results and talk about an inverse relationship. based explanations

5) Warm up, Day 11. Explain from data the previous day how we know that pressure and volume are considered inversely proportional.

6) Review lab and introduce Boyle’s Law. Teacher introduces the idea of P1V1=P2V2. Teacher asks questions that help students reason conceptually and mathematically with the equation. Students then record notes on a master table with the ideal gas law broken down in to 3 different relationships.

7) Volume and Temperature. Teacher introduces the idea of Kelvin by having students think back to volume and pressure lab and whether or not 0 pressure or 0 volume is possible. Students then do mathematical calculations to examine the relationship.

8) Warm up, Day 12. Your car tire ahs 10L of air and it’s 0 degrees Celsius outside. Later that day the temperature has increased to 26 degrees Celsius. What will happen to the volume of the tire? Why? 9) Review of Volume and Temperature. Students take notes on Charles’s Law. V1/T1=V2/T2.

10) Pressure and Temperature. Students take notes on P1/T1=P2/T2 and then do practice problems.

Discussion questions for teachers: 1) Thought experiment: Typically in Chemistry students learn each gas law and do calculations. Compare this to Bethany’s “concept first” approach. Also think about the difference between learning about a theory about the behavior of gasses versus laws.

Days 10, 11, 12 Generalizing to the behavior of all gases, cont...
Continues from the previous video…

This video picks up from the previous one.

Days 13, 14 Applying gas laws to car engines
Applying gas behavior principles to car engines

Applying gas behavior principles to car engines.
1) Warm up, Day 13. What are the gases in the engine? What gas(es) are present during intake, compression, combustion, and exhaust?

2) Engine Modification Challenge. Students select 3 modifications and describe why each modification helps a car have more power. They also need to describe why a pressure sensor is needed on tires. Students read background information on each modification and complete a fill in the blank form that helps students reason with P,V,T and n. tire pressure monitoring system bore out cylinders cold air intake high performance exhaust system intercooler nitrous oxide system turbocharger supercharger

3) Warm up, Day 14. Why is getting more oxygen into the engine beneficial? (Think about the combustion reaction).

Final interview
Final interview with Bethany

Final interview with Bethany

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