Wow ! A game to learn science and lunar phases ?!
Since the Google Doodle popcorn game, we haven't gotten a fun game in a little while ... until now.
Some important information:
Did you know that the half moon is scientifically known as the Quarter moon? People casually refer to the Quarter moon as half moon because it appears like half the moon is present but, in fact, only a quarter of the moon is illuminated.
Following the first Quarter moon, the moon enters its Waxing Gibbous phase, becoming brighter and brighter until the next full moon. And following the last Quarter moon, the moon enters its Waning Gibbous phase, darkening into a New moon.
What is the Waking Gibbous phase ?
The Waxing Gibbous phase is when the lit-up part of the Moon grows from 50.1% to 99.9%. It starts just after the
Waxing means that it is getting bigger, while gibbous refers to the oval-to-round shape.
Education:
Students love games. And games are important to learn differently some subjects. For example, the lunar cycle.
Teachers will invite the students to enter on Google doodle page of 24 October 2024.
This recurring card game invites students to play against the moon to test their knowledge of the lunar cycle.
Rise of the Half Moon is a strategy card game that celebrates the half moon point in October's lunar cycle.
This interactive Doodle celebrates October's final Half Moon.
Activity:
Students will click the Doodle to join the celestial card game where players must connect the phases of the lunar cycle to earn points and against the October Half Moon.
- Games in the classroom:
This Doodle game is called Rise of the Half Moon, and it's one of those interactive card games. The doodle unveiling a card game that will return every month with new features to unlock.
The game coincides with October's half-moon phase, while future iterations will presumably return for half-moon phases in other months.
The game has players squaring off against the Half Moon in a card-matching game, with multiple ways to build up points.
One way of creating a match and earning a point is to pick a card that's identical to the one already played, e.g. placing a waxing crescent to match a waxing crescent. This is a 'phase pair'.
Another way is to pick a card that matches the opposite phase to the one already played, e.g. a waxing crescent to match a waning gibbous. This is a 'full Moon pair'.
And the third way is to insert a card that fills in a missing piece of the lunar phase sequence, e.g a waxing crescent between a new Moon and a first quarter Moon. This is a 'lunar cycle'.
- The premise is simple:
Students play against an artificial opponent and get cards to play with different phases of the moon.
They get points if they match cards next to each other, or if their cards "create" a full moon. They also get points for creating a lunar cycle.
The Doodle can be played on the Google homepage during October 24, but once it's gone, we'll be looking out for the next iteration sometime in November.
You can play by simply going to the Google homepage and clicking on the play button on the Google logo.
G-Souto
24.10.2024
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Schools : Science - Rise of the Half Moon celebration... with a game ? by G-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Resources : BBC Sky at Night/ Google Doodles
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