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| Teacher’s Guide | |||
Welcome, teachers, to the Image Composite Editor (ICE). We designed ICE to help teach lessons—for classroom use or homework assignments—about Earth system science concepts as well as the basics of the electromagnetic spectrum and satellite remote sensing. Depending upon the complexity of the topics to be covered, and how well these topics are introduced by the ICE Web host, ICE can be used at the middle school, high school, and possibly even undergraduate level. We strongly encourage educators to thoroughly play test the tool, and any lessons using it, before introducing it to their students. Refer to the Table of Contents (right margin) for Teachers’ Guides for specific lessons. The sections below describe the goals and objectives of the ICE lessons and how their relevance to National Science Education Standards. The goals of the ICE tool are to:
The anticipated outcomes are that the student will be able to:
Standards National Science Content Standards Content Standard A: Content Standard B: Content Standard C: Content Standard D: Content Standard E: | Image Composite Editor Teacher’s Guide Additional Slides as Needed (Microsoft PowerPoint files) This presentation is an overview of remote sensing, what it is, why we use it, and how it works. Slides include the definitions of common remote-sensing terms, and examples of images captured by different remote sensing instruments. The presentation also highlights key steps in the history of remote sensing and ends with a spectacular global image of the Earth’s surface combined with ocean temperatures, both of which were captured by the MODIS sensor on the Terra satellite. This presentation addresses how and why vegetation interacts with sunlight the way it does, and how that interaction determines what a satellites “sees” when it looks at vegetation. The presentation includes examples of how vegetation looks different in different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, and how using “invisible” parts of the spectrum can distinguish vegetated from non-vegetated surfaces as well as one type of vegetation from another. The presentation also includes brief discussion of photosynthesis, including schematic drawings of the process and structures involved, as well as graphs showing the range of sunlight that best drives the process. This presentation briefly summarizes the main characteristics of the human eye and vision, and makes comparisons to the vision of other creatures. It includes electron micrograph images of the structures of the eye, as well as graphs that illustrate the link between our vision and the energy output of the Sun. | ||
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