Showing posts with label learning science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning science. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Schools : Gerardus Mercator the cartographer of world atlas : resources






Gerardus Mercator
in  Alter von 62 Jahren; Kupferstich von Frans Hogenberg

Gerardus Mercator born on 5 March 1512 and died on 2 December 1594 was a 16th-century Dutch cartographergeographer and cosmographer. He was renowned for creating the 1569 world map based on a new projection which represented sailing courses of constant bearing (rhumb lines) as straight lines, an innovation that is still employed in nautical charts.





Google Doodle Gerardo Mercator 503rd Birthday


  • Google Doodle:

2015 marks the 503rd birthday of Gerardus Mercator, the Flemish inventor of the flat map. 

Today, Mach 5th, Google is celebrating with a Doodlethe 503rd birthday of 16th century cartographer Gerardus Mercator, who coined the term 'atlas' in reference to a collection of maps. 

  • Some information:

Mercator is considered the father of the modern map. Mercator, who was born in the County of Flanders, now in modern Belgium, changed the face of 16th century maps. 

Mercator was one of the pioneers of cartography and is widely considered the most notable figure of Netherlandish school of cartography in its golden age.

Flemish cartographer whose most important innovation was a map, embodying what was later known as the Mercator projection, on which parallels and meridians are rendered as straight lines spaced so as to produce at any point an accurate ratio of latitude to longitude. He also introduced the term atlas for a collection of maps.

A renegade, who battled the church establishment, Mercator was accused of heresy for his innovative cartography designs.  

His maps revolutionized navigation. For the first time sailors could plot a straight-line course over vast distances. It was from this discovery that laid the foundation for a plotting system that would one day evolve into GPS.






Gerardus Mercator
Portrait Nicolas III de Larmessin

  • Biography:

Born on 5 March 1512, Mercator was educated in the Netherlands, where he was taught theology, a type of philosophical argument called dialetics, and Latin.

By 1532, he graduated with a master’s degree in Humanities and Philosophy from the Catholic University of Leuven, now in modern-day Belgium.




Gemma Frisius
credits: Library of Congress/ Science Photo Library

He would go on to master Mathematics, Geography and Astronomy with the help of leading mathematician Gemma Frisius

Aged just 24, Mercator was an excellent engraver, calligrapher and made exquisite scientific instruments. 

In 1534 Mercator married Barbara Schellekens, with whom he had six children.

His fortunes changed in 1544 when he was imprisoned for heresy, after a combination of his Protestant faith and his frequent trips to gather information for his maps aroused suspicions.

But with the help of university authorities, he was released after seven months and continued his work.




Mercator map of the world,1569

Mercator became a well-known figure in around 1552, when he moved the Duchy of Cleve, in modern-day Germany, and established a cartographic workshop where he hired his own engravers.

However, he was not publicly recognized for his work until 1564 when he was appointed as the court “cosmographer” to Duke Wilhelm of Cleve.

It was during these years he perfected his projection technique, later named the “Mercator projection,” which he went on to use on his map of the world in 1569.





Africa : ex magna orbis terre descriptione Gerardi Mercatoris desumpta
studio & industria G.M. Iuniori

Mercator then began to put together a series of publications to describe the creation of the world and its subsequent history, which he called the atlas.

Mercator died in 1594 in the Duchy of Cleve. He is buried in Duisburg's main church of Saint Salvatore. 

His epitaph : "the foremost mathematician of his time who crafted artistic and accurate globes showing the heaven from the inside and the Earth from the outside ... greatly respected for his wide erudition, particularly in theology, and famous on account of his piety and respectability in life".

Exhibits of his works can be seen in the Mercator treasury located in the city. More exhibits about Mercator's life and work are featured at the Mercator Museum in Sint-Niklaas, Belgium.





  • Further information:

A skilled engraver and talented calligrapher, Mercator’s maps were not only functional technological marvels but stunning works of art. Not surprisingly his artistic influence has as great a reach as his technological innovations. 

The contemporary art world is filled with artists who are using maps in their work.  Artists like late Italian conceptual artist Alighieri and Boetti whose Mapp series was a group of large embroidered maps of the world woven by master Afghan weavers. 

French artist Elisabeth Lecourt has made the maps wearable by constructing dresses made of paper maps of London, New York and Paris. 

Matthew Cusick makes delicately beautiful collages out of old maps and geography textbooks.  

These are only a handful of the growing number of artists who see the map as something to explore.

Mercator is buried in Duisburg's main church of Saint Salvatore. Exhibits of his works can be seen in the Mercator treasury located in the city.







Atlas Minor
Gerardus Mercator


Education:

A Doodle is a symbolic digital resource. This one reminds us the 503rd anniversary of the important cartographer. Why not include into our lessons?

As teachers, we can prepare some events or propose interesting resources or activities to students.

Schools are rich environments of teaching and learning. Schools and teachers have an important role aiming to renew and reinvigorate global knowledge as they have the mission to educate children and adolescents as future citizens.

These resources are digital educational challenges to promote famous scientists, humanists, scholars and 
artists who will inspire students to find new path towards precious solutions to society and planet. Humanities, Sciences, Artsare the basic curricula.


Activities:

I selected several activities to involve students but you are free to have your own ideas:

  • Begin with a good motivation sharing the Doodle, promoting brainstorming moments, and then ask your students to do a good research about Gerardus Mercator;
  • Organize an open day (today or/and next week) at school with your students to highlight the importance of science for world development;
  • Open discussions in the classroom emphasing different ways that science & technologies touch our daily lives, from cartography (16th Century) to GPS (21st century);
  • Ask other curricular teachers to highlight the importance of celebrating Science, Humanities and Arts at school in a cross-curricular project;
  • Invite students to create/write news, biography, comics, in the classroom about the importance of science for sustainable societies and include them into the school newspaper;
  • Build classroom-to-classroom connections between schools via the Internet:  schools websites, schools accounts on Facebook or Twitter, Instagram  to share  projects that will captivate the students;
  • Organize a visit to a Science Museum. Museums are awesome practical lessons.


Levels: All levels (different activities for different ages and grades).


Curricula : Math, Sciences, Geography, History, Literature, Technology.





The Portuguese (Lusitanian) and Spanish hemispheres of the globe 
Franciscus Monachus, 1527



Some thoughts:


So as you see, can we say that formal learning is a non captivating method? Of course, not! Be creative! And let your students be creative.

Well, there are a lot of funny and engaging activities about Sciences and Humanities that we can create and share with our students, on informal learning (online learning) and in-person lessons. Technology has a good role in all this.

Believe me! You will have a motivated class that will learn and share some knowledge.

To us, as educators, "the attitude" of changing methods, and the creative mind to facilitate different learning activities at our young students!


G-Souto

05.03.2015

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Have fun learning Science : Researchers' Night 2014



http://www.noitedosinvestigadores.org/

E eis-nos de novo a festejar A Noite Europeia dos Investigadores. A NEI - European Researcher's Night - é uma iniciativa promovida pela Comissão Europeia no âmbito  das Acções Marie Curie

Acontece todos os anos, desde 2005, na última sexta-feira de Setembro.

Objectivos:

Celebrar a Ciência e aproximar a ciência dos cidadãos. É assim, um evento europeu que permite a cientistas e público em geral conviverem num ambiente descontraído. 

A troca de ideias e experiências que a NEI proporciona pretende contribuir para a construção de uma imagem saudável dos investigadores junto do público e demonstrar que, afinal, a ciência não é tão complicada nem tão distante quanto se julga. 

A extensa programação nacional tem como objectivo mostrar ao público que os cientistas são pessoas comuns mas com trabalhos extraordinários.

O tema para os próximos dois anos é Ciência Cidadã, conceito que abrirá as portas para o mundo da investigação, dando aos cidadãos a oportunidade de participar em projectos nas mais diversas áreas científicas.

Pretende-se assim fomentar o "envolvimento dos cidadãos na Ciência promovendo uma sociedade mais activa e colaborativa com a comunidade científica.


photo: Per Henning
Educação:

É sem dúvida uma noite diferente  que nenhum professor quer perder, fazendo-se acompanhar  dos seus alunos numa experiência pedagógica prática sobre a Ciência. Seria imperdoável perder a oportunidade de participar de uma aula viva. Os professores curriculares Ciências e Física poderão acompanhar as suas turmas, e por que não solicitar o apoio de alguns pais voluntários. Consultar mais aqui

Em Portugal, estão inscritas actividades em Lisboa, Coimbra e Aveiro.

Utilização telemóveis e redes sociais:

Insisto na utilização dos telemóveis, e dos tablets que permitem a interacção entre participantes, e redes sociais para partilhar experiências entre escolas: Facebook ou Twitter hashtag #Nei1415



European Researchers' Night 2014


Yes, last Friday on September, we wii celebrate a special night every year since 2005. Of course, the European Researchers' Night 2014

The European Researchers' Night is a mega event which takes place every year simultaneously in about 300 cities all over Europe and beyond.

In fact, they are events dedicated to popular science and fun learning. They are an opportunity to meet researchers, talk to them, and to find out what they really do for society, in interactive and engaging ways. 

This can be through hands-on experiments, science shows, learning activities for children, guided visits of research labs, science quizzes and more. 

Whether with your school, your class, your friends, family or on your own, you will find yourself exploring science in engaging ways.


European Researchers' Night

The European Researchers' Night  takes place every year all over Europe and beyond the last Friday of September. 

It offers the opportunity to discover research facilities that are usually not open to public such as:

  • laboratories; 
  • research centres;
  • museum collections;

Families and schools can use the most recent technologies and instruments with the guidance of scientists, participate in experiments, competitions and quizzes, watch demonstrations and simulations, exchange ideas and party with the researchers.




credits: ESA

This timelapse video was made from images taken by ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst orbiting Earth on the International Space Station. 


Discover what researchers really do and why it matters for your daily life. 

  • How is our universe built?

  • What is your DNA like?

  • Can we stop climate change?

  • Can we prevent natural disasters?

  • Can renewable energy resources replace oil?

These questions and much more will be answered throughbehind-the-scenes guided tours of research labs that are normally closed to the public, interactive science showshands-on experiments or workshops.




European Researchers' Night 2014

Education:

A different and exciting Sciences lesson no doubt! A live lesson! Teachers and students can join other groups of students and educators that will be everywhere  participating in some  awesome live pedagogical experience.

Let your students meet the real scientists, talk to them, make some curious questions, understand the real meaning of Science.

Do you want to take part of an event in your city? With your students, your family, friends on your own, you will find yourself exploring science in engaging ways. 

Check the map of events to find out if this activity is organised near you.




Mobile devices & social media:

Of course tablets, iphones and smartphones are allowed. These devices are impoirtant to take notes, and share the most exciting activities of the night with classmates, friends, family. 
Students will discuss their activities and experimentations in the classroom next Monday.

Facebook profiles from a lot of European schools or Twitter profiles linked to European Researchers' Night 2014 will be exciting to contact other schools and share different points of vue about all the activities.

Don't miss the European Researchers' Night nexy Friday, 26 September 2014! 

Have fun learning science !

G-Souto

23.09.2014
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