[meteorite-list] Sigh
From: lebofsky at lpl.arizona.edu <lebofsky_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2008 11:41:40 -0700 (MST) Message-ID: <1311.128.196.250.86.1214246500.squirrel_at_timber.lpl.arizona.edu> Hi All: In mid-Auguest there will be a conference held in Maryland: The Great Planet Debate: Science as Process. I will be there and will be presenting as a scientist and science educator. I hope to write this up as an article for the November issue of Meteorite. Dispite the IAU, this is not a dead issue. Larry On Mon, June 23, 2008 11:25 am, Darren Garrison wrote: > "Liam's teacher Rachel Kaplan said, "I was really sad when Pluto was > declassified as a planet, because I've studied astrology for a number of > years."" > > http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,370213,00.html > > > Pluto's Identity Crisis Hits Classrooms, Bookstores > > > Pluto was once a planet. Then a dwarf planet. And, as of this month, a > plutoid. > > The fall from grace has teachers, parents and educational publishers > struggling to keep up, while kids remain loyal to their favorite, the > ninth planet. Underscore "planet." > > > On June 11, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) announced Pluto > should now be called a "plutoid," two years after the organization voted > to demote Pluto to "dwarf planet" status. > > > Meanwhile, many kids are nearly certain Pluto is still a planet. > > > "I think it's a planet. But me and my friends, we talk about it sometimes > and we go back and forth," said Natalie Browning, 9, sitting in a park in > Manhattan > with her family. > > "Right now, I'm not 100 percent. I'm just 75 percent" sure that Pluto is > a planet, she added. > > Natalie's mom, Bobbie Browning, said, "You've got kids with textbooks > saying that Pluto is part of the solar system and a planet, and teachers > have to say it isn't [a planet]." > > Science teachers and publishers already worked to update their resources > to read "dwarf planet." And now, boom, that category is out of favor among > astronomers. > > "Students who have just learned about the concept of dwarf planets must > now be taught the new concept of 'plutoid,'" said Janis Milman, who > teaches Earth Science at Thomas Stone High School in Maryland. "This will > lead to confusion in the classroom and resistance to learning the new > terms, because the students will question, 'Why learn something that might > change again in a year or so?'" > > A cursory survey at a large chain bookstore here revealed three out of > four books published in 2006 or later were updated, with Pluto designated > as a dwarf planet and the solar system said to include just eight planets. > > > Chronicles of Pluto > > > Discovered in 1930 by Clyde W. Tombaugh at Lowell Observatory in Arizona, > Pluto > was always considered an oddball of sorts, with its tiny size (smaller > than some moons) and eccentric orbit. > > During its 248-year trek around the sun, Pluto swings from its farthest > point from the sun at 49.5 astronomical units (AU) to as close as 29 AU > from the sun. > > One AU is the average distance between the Earth and sun, or about 93 > million miles (150 million kilometers). > > More than 70 years later, in August 2006, 424 astronomers at an IAU > meeting voted to demote Pluto to "dwarf planet" status. > > Two weeks ago, the IAU Executive Committee reclassified Pluto as a > plutoid. The other object in the plutoid club, Eris, is larger and more > massive than Pluto. > > Astronomers expect to find hundreds of Pluto-sized objects. And so the > fate of Pluto will determine how these worlds are classified. > > > For instance, new computer modeling suggests an object up to 70 percent > of Earth's mass is lurking beyond Pluto. This "Planet X," if confirmed, > would be called a plutoid under the IAU's scheme. > > No matter what the scientists say, many kids won't let go. > > > "It's a planet," said fifth-grader Emily Mitchell, whose mother Laurie > agreed, saying, "I grew up learning it was a planet." > > "It's the smallest planet," said Liam, a 4-year-old who is "about to be > 5." > > > Liam's teacher Rachel Kaplan said, "I was really sad when Pluto was > declassified as a planet, because I've studied astrology for a number of > years." > > Aileen Wilson said her 7-year-old son is interested in Pluto's label. > "He's > interested in why it was a planet and why it's not a planet anymore." > > "I know that it was demoted and it's not a planet. But I don't know what > it's called," said Erin Kelly, a pre-school teacher sitting on a park > bench with her students in New York. > > In the classroom > > > Even as scientists are arguing over the "plutoid" designation, with some > saying they won't use the term, educators are already latching onto it. > > Change is the name of the game in science, according to Gerry Wheeler, > the executive director of the National Science Teachers Association. > > "Basically, it's a teachable moment for science teachers, because it > shows the dynamic nature of science," Wheeler told SPACE.com. > > He added the NSTA will spread news of the plutoid category to science > teachers in the fall. > > Elementary school science teacher Lucy Jensen agrees: "Pluto has made it > interesting studying our planets this year." She teaches at Joliet Public > School > in Montana. > > "Our only problem we now have is buying new material, such as posters, > videos, DVDs and game/study materials that need to be updated," she said. > > > Jensen added that while her fourth-grade students were more upset than > the third graders about Pluto's demotion, the parents were the most upset. > > > "It is hard to teach old dogs new tricks, and we like what we know," she > said. > > "Time has always been taken in the classroom to ponder the origin of > Pluto. When > Pluto became a dwarf planet, along with Eris and Ceres, it made it easier > to explain why an object of Pluto's small stature could be classified," > high-school teacher Milman said. "Now we will just need to teach them more > new definitions." > > Milman added that "dwarf planets" is an easier term for students to grasp > compared with plutoids. > > "Objects of Pluto, Eris and Ceres' size are too small to be called > planets so they were called dwarf planets. That was easier for the > students to understand," she said. > > Yet many students are still unaware of the change made in 2006. > > > "My fourth graders still consider Pluto a planet," said Bev Grueber, a > science teacher at North Bend Elementary in Nebraska. "We do extensive > oral reports on the planets to meet a state standard, and everyone jumps > for joy when they get Pluto. Last year, I left Pluto out of the draw and > they asked where it was, so they still consider it a planet regardless of > what the space scientists tell us the definition of that planet is." > > Aram Friedman, who founded Ansible Technologies Ltd. in New Jersey, > travels to schools to teach about astronomy using a portable planetarium. > In a typical > fifth-grade class, he teaches students the features of the inner planets > and the outer planets. > > Pluto, he says, doesn't fit into those categories. That makes sense to > kids. > > Publishing lag > > > Many science textbooks have only recently caught up with the dwarf planet > concept. > > For publisher McGraw Hill Education, the 2008 elementary and secondary > school science textbooks describe Pluto as a dwarf planet. > > Middle schools with the current Holt Science and Technology textbooks > would see Pluto defined as a dwarf planet. McDougal Littell Science took a > slightly different approach. > > "We didn't say how many planets there were, so we didn't have to make a > lot of changes. We explained, historically, that it had been classified as > a planet when it was discovered," said Dan Rogers, vice president and > director of Holt McDougal's science and health product development. > > > McDougal's teacher's edition included a detailed explanation of Pluto's > dwarf planet status. > > "One of the reasons we were cautious is because we thought the whole > thing was unresolved and was going to change again," Rogers said. "We're > in the process of developing a brand new program, a new set of books." > > In "Traveler's Guide to the Solar System," an astronomy book published in > 2007 > for kids age 8 to 10, the author notes, "Earth is the third of nine > planets (some say eight, some say ten, but nine is kind of traditional), > orbiting our local star, the Sun." > > Starry Night, astronomy software that includes educational resources, > refers to Pluto as a dwarf planet, according to content director Pedro > Braganca. (Starry > Night is a division of Imaginova Corp., which also owns SPACE.com.) > > > And soon, educational publishers may need to re-update material. Word has > it astronomers are vowing to pursue a reinstatement of Pluto as a planet. > > Copyright ? 2008 Imaginova Corp. All Rights Reserved. This material may > not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > > Received on Mon 23 Jun 2008 02:41:40 PM PDT |
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