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<?xmlspysps C:\Program Files\Altova\AUTHENTIC\sps\template\TeachEngineering\lesson.sps?>
<lesson xmlns="http://www.teachengineering.org" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.teachengineering.org C:\PROGRA~1\Altova\AUTHENTIC\sps\template\TeachEngineering\lesson.xsd" xml:lang="en-US" version="1.0">
	<title>I Don&apos;t Believe My Eyes!</title>
	<header>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="../cub_images/cub_air_lesson03_clip1.jpg" description="Graphic of a gas pump and a gas can." horizontal_alignment="right" vertical_alignment="wrap" rights="Microsoft Corporation, 1983-2001." width="200"/></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</header>
	<grade realm="k12" target="6" lowerbound="4" upperbound="6"/>
	<lesson_number rank="3" total="10"/>
	<time total="50" unit="minutes"/>
	<summary>Students develop their understanding of the effects of invisible air pollutants with a rubber band air test, a bean plant experiment and by exploring engineering roles related to air pollution. In an associated literacy activity, students develop visual literacy and write photograph captions. They learn how images are manipulated for a powerful effect and how a photograph can make the invisible (such as pollutants) visible.      Note: You may want to set up the activities for Air Pollution unit, Lessons 2 and 3, simultaneously as they require extended data collection time and can share collection sites.  </summary>
	<engineering_connection>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Engineers design methods to measure invisible air pollutants and monitor air quality; they use these tools to measure emissions from vehicles and industry. For example, engineers design the equipment that is used when your car gets an emissions test. The equipment analyzes the substance discharged into the air by the internal combustion engine to determine whether the vehicle emissions include too many dangerous pollutants.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</engineering_connection>
	<engineering_category_TYPE category="Category1_Relating_Science_Concept_to_Engineering"/>
	<keywords>
		<keyword>air pollution</keyword>
		<keyword>air</keyword>
		<keyword>atmosphere</keyword>
		<keyword>carbon monoxide</keyword>
		<keyword>environment</keyword>
		<keyword>invisible air pollutant</keyword>
		<keyword>ozone</keyword>
		<keyword>pollution</keyword>
		<keyword>volatile organic compounds</keyword>
	</keywords>
	<edu_standards>
		<edu_standard identifier="S1141717"/>
		<edu_standard identifier="S11424E8"/>
		<edu_standard identifier="S114254F"/>
	</edu_standards>
	<learning_objectives>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>After this lesson, students should be able to:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Identify the major types of invisible air pollutants.</text_element>
				<text_element>Describe how some invisible air pollutants affect our health. </text_element>
				<text_element>Describe how engineers interact with invisible air pollution. </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</learning_objectives>
	<introduction>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Ask students to recall a visit to a gas station: Have they ever pumped the gas themselves or helped someone else do it? Have they ever taken a close look at the gas pump handle? Have they ever noticed that when they travel to other states or countries the pump nozzle may appear different? In Colorado (and many other places), the pump handles are equipped with a &quot;rubber collar,&quot; designed by an engineer to prevent volatile organic compounds (VOCs, such as benzene) from escaping into the air while gas is pumped. This collar protects you from serious health effects that may result from inhaling fumes and also protects the environment from the smog caused by VOCs.</text_element>
				<text_element>Create an idea web: Ask students to brainstorm a list of invisible pollutants. What effects do these pollutants have on us and our environment? What are some possible solutions for reducing these types of pollutants? (Refer students to the <link url="cub_air_lesson03_refsheet.pdf" type="pdf">Common Air Pollutants Reference Sheet</link> or see the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Air Trends website at: <link url="http://www.epa.gov/airtrends/" type="internet">http://www.epa.gov/airtrends/</link>.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</introduction>
	<lesson_background>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>The atmosphere is almost completely composed of invisible gaseous substances. Most major air pollutants are also invisible, meaning you cannot see or smell them. However, when large amounts of them are concentrated in areas such as cities, they can be seen as smog.<bold> Invisible air pollutants</bold> are among the most dangerous to our health.</text_element>
				<text_element>The EPA set national air quality standards for six principal air pollutants (also referred to as criteria pollutants): <bold>carbon monoxide (CO)</bold>, lead (Pb), nitrogen dioxide (NO<subscript>2</subscript>), sulfur dioxide (SO<subscript>2</subscript>), <bold>ozone </bold>(O<subscript>3</subscript>) and particulate matter (PM). Four of these pollutants (CO, Pb, NO<subscript>2</subscript> and SO<subscript>2</subscript>) result primarily from direct emissions from a variety of everyday sources. Particulate matter results from direct emissions, but is also commonly formed when emissions of nitrogen oxides (NO<subscript>x</subscript>), sulfur oxides (SO<subscript>x</subscript>), ammonia, organic compounds and other gases react in the atmosphere. Ozone is not directly emitted, but is formed when NO<subscript>x</subscript> and<bold> volatile organic compounds (VOCs)</bold> react in the presence of sunlight.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_background>
	<vocabulary>
		<definition word="Carbon monoxide (CO)">A colorless, odorless and poisonous gas made of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom.</definition>
		<definition word="Invisible pollutants">Air pollution that cannot be smelled or seen with the naked eye.</definition>
		<definition word="Ozone (O3)">Ground-level ozone is the principal component of smog, created from chemical reactions of pollutants, VOCs, and NOx.</definition>
		<definition word="Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)">All VOCs contain carbon, the basic chemical element found in living beings. Carbon-containing chemicals are called organic. Volatile chemicals escape into the air easily. Many are also hazardous air pollutants that can cause very serious illnesses.</definition>
	</vocabulary>
	<child_documents>
		<link url="../../activities/cub_air/cub_air_lesson03_activity1.xml" type="activity" description="Students develop their understanding of the effects of invisible air pollutants with a rubber band air test and a bean plant experiment.">What&apos;s Hiding in the Air?</link>
		<link url="../../activities/cub_air/cub_air_lesson03_activity2.xml" type="activity" description="In this literacy activity, students develop visual literacy and write photograph captions. They learn how images are manipulated for a powerful effect and how a photograph can make the invisible (pollutants that form acid rain) visible (through the damage they cause).">Tears in Rain</link>
	</child_documents>
	<lesson_closure>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Ask students if they would like to add anything new to the idea web. Assign the <link url="cub_air_lesson03_worksheet.pdf" type="pdf">Carbon Monoxide Emissions Worksheet</link> as homework.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_closure>
	<summary_assessment>
		<text_section name="Pre-Lesson Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Discussion Topic</italic>: Ask students to recall a visit to a gas station. Have they ever pumped gas themselves or helped someone else do it? Have they ever taken a close look at the gas pump handle? Have they ever noticed that when they travel to other locations the pump nozzle may appear different? Why?</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Post-Introduction Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Idea Web</italic>: Ask students to brainstorm a list of invisible pollutants. What effects do these pollutants have on us and our environment? What are possible solutions for reducing these types of pollutants?</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Lesson Summary Assessment">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Idea Web Revisited</italic>: Ask students if they would like to add anything new to their idea web.</text_element>
				<text_element><italic>Informative Flyer</italic>: Have students create a flyer to inform other students, the school or their community about the presence of visible and invisible pollutants in the air. Include some of the ideas they generated in the idea web. Display these flyers in the classroom or the school&apos;s common area.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Homework">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Worksheet</italic>: Assign students to complete the <link url="cub_air_lesson03_worksheet.pdf" type="pdf">Carbon Monoxide Emissions Worksheet</link>. Discuss findings during the next class period, paying particular attention to questions 3 and 6.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</summary_assessment>
	<extensions>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Take a field trip to a vehicle emissions testing site. Or, invite a speaker from a vehicle emissions testing site to speak to your class about how they measure the invisible pollutants from vehicles. What determines whether or not a car passes the inspection?</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</extensions>
	<references>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>Air Trends. Updated May 4, 2004. Environmental Protection Agency. Accessed July 13, 2004.</reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://www.epa.gov/airtrends/" type="internet">http://www.epa.gov/airtrends/</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>The Plain English Guide to the Clean Air Act, The Common Air Pollutants. Updated May 13, 2002. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA-OAQPS. Accessed July 13, 2004.</reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://www.epa.gov/air/caa/peg/" type="internet">http://www.epa.gov/air/caa/peg/</link>
		</reference>
	</references>
	<attachments>
		<link url="cub_air_lesson03_refsheet.pdf" type="pdf">Common Air Pollutants Reference Sheet</link>
		<link url="cub_air_lesson03_worksheet.pdf" type="pdf">Carbon Monoxide Emissions Worksheet</link>
		<link url="cub_air_lesson03_answers.pdf" type="pdf">Carbon Monoxide Emissions Worksheet Answers</link>
	</attachments>
	<owner name="Integrated Teaching and Learning Program" organization="College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder"/>
	<contributors>
		<contributor name="Amy Kolenbrander"/>
		<contributor name="Janet Yowell"/>
		<contributor name="Natalie Mach"/>
		<contributor name="Malinda Schaefer Zarske"/>
		<contributor name="Denise Carlson"/>
	</contributors>
	<copyright owner="Regents of the University of Colorado." year="2004" desc="The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government."/>
</lesson>

