Atomic Heritage Foundation: Understanding Einstein
Atomic Heritage Foundation: Understanding Einstein
Students explore how scientists and policy-makers communicate.
Materials:
- Writing materials
- Einstein’s letter to FDR
- Enrico Fermi
- Discovery of nuclear fission
Assignment:
Students will be able to:
- Identify scientific terminology
- Describe Einstein’s evidence
- Identify Einstein’s predictions
- Describe Einstein’s recommendations
- Locate sources of uranium ore
Procedure:
- A background to the historical time, people and places should be established by reading or lecturing on articles that are listed in materials/sources. Each student should have a copy of Einstein’s letter to FDR. Students can read as a class, in small groups or individually.
- Have students identify and compare and contrast the technical and nontechnical writing of Einstein. Then, have students take the part of Franklin D. Roosevelt and respond to the letter. In doing this they should address:
- Their general questions about the letter
- The significance of the letter coming from a celebrity scientist versus a scientist without such social status
- After the exercise, students answer the following prompt:
- How do scientists communicate to politicians and the general public in a way that conveys urgency, sincerity, and a call for immediate action on the part of government and society in an easy to understand manner?
Difficulty:
Grade Level:
Atomic Heritage Foundation
Science Topics
Inventions & Scientists, Nuclear Science
Social Studies Topics
U.S. Presidents, World War II
Albert Einstein
Middle School, Educator
7th Grade, 8th Grade
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Atomic Heritage Foundation
The Atomic Heritage Foundation and the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History forged a new partnership to preserve the history of the Manhattan Project and the Atomic Age.
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Atomic Heritage Foundation: Understanding Einstein
Students explore how scientists and policy-makers communicate.
Materials:
- Writing materials
- Einstein’s letter to FDR
- Enrico Fermi
- Discovery of nuclear fission
Assignment:
Students will be able to:
- Identify scientific terminology
- Describe Einstein’s evidence
- Identify Einstein’s predictions
- Describe Einstein’s recommendations
- Locate sources of uranium ore
Procedure:
- A background to the historical time, people and places should be established by reading or lecturing on articles that are listed in materials/sources. Each student should have a copy of Einstein’s letter to FDR. Students can read as a class, in small groups or individually.
- Have students identify and compare and contrast the technical and nontechnical writing of Einstein. Then, have students take the part of Franklin D. Roosevelt and respond to the letter. In doing this they should address:
- Their general questions about the letter
- The significance of the letter coming from a celebrity scientist versus a scientist without such social status
- After the exercise, students answer the following prompt:
- How do scientists communicate to politicians and the general public in a way that conveys urgency, sincerity, and a call for immediate action on the part of government and society in an easy to understand manner?
Difficulty:
Grade Level:
Atomic Heritage Foundation
Science Topics
Inventions & Scientists, Nuclear Science
Social Studies Topics
U.S. Presidents, World War II
Albert Einstein
Middle School, Educator
7th Grade, 8th Grade
RELATED LISTINGS
Showing 1 - 1 of 1
Atomic Heritage Foundation
The Atomic Heritage Foundation and the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History forged a new partnership to preserve the history of the Manhattan Project and the Atomic Age.
What are you looking for?
Organization
Atomic Heritage Foundation
Website URL
Type of Resource
Lesson Plan
