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Formative Assessment: Wind Turbines
What are Wind Turbines?
Wind energy is an important and growing source of renewable energy. The process of generating energy by harnessing the power of the wind is a simple idea of energy conversion. There are many different methods to produce energy from wind. The most common method is through the use of wind turbines. Wind turbines convert kinetic energy from the wind to mechanical energy through the rotational movement of the blades. An electric generator then converts the mechanical energy from the spinning blades into electric energy that can be used to power many sources.
Video credit: “Energy 101: Wind Power” by Lee Patrick Sullivan is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
Key Takeaways
Type your key takeaways here.
- Wind energy is a form of kinetic energy
- Rotation of the blades (turbine) and gear box is a form of mechanical energy
- The generator has a spinning rotor causing a rotating magnetic flux inside stator of coils to create current as a form of electrical energy (induction)
Wind turbines have a significant history dating back to 250 BC or even earlier with vertical structures being used in the Middle East, India, and China to pump water or crush grain [13]. Leading up to today’s application, we can see them in use all over the world as a source of renewable energy.
History of Windmills:
- 3,500 BC: Egyptians invented the first sailboats.
- 2,000 BC: Windmills were used to pump water in China
- 500 to 900 AD: Persians innovated windmills that were used to crush grains and pump water
- 1300’s AD: The Dutch built windmills with a horizontal axis, a technological advancement, that allowed them to drain fields along with improvements in grain grinding.
- Early 1800s: Westward migration brought windmills to the plains for pumping water, a technology still used in rural areas today.
- 1887: Professor James Blyth, from Glasgow, Scotland, built the first windmill to generate electrical energy.
- By the 1920’s: Windmills across the United States were producing significant quantities of electricity for commercial sale.
- The 1950’s: A negative turning point for wind generated energy in the United States as a turn was made toward cheap coal to power homes.
- 1990s: Concerns for the environment, particularly Climate Change, lead a renewed expansion of green energy sources, including tax incentives
- 2000’s: Iowa is a leading state in the realm of wind energy. Currently Iowa leads the nation in per capita generation of Energy and is second, only to Texas, in overall energy produced.
How do Wind Turbines generate electricity?
Wouldn’t it be great if it was an easy answer? Well, it kind of is, if we take it apart in pieces.
First, a wind turbine is created to be aerodynamic, with blades designed to spin in the wind. These blades are shaped to capture the air and spin, like the propeller of a plane, where lift and drag create movement. Think of Bernoulli’s Principle on how air moves over the wing of a plane. Same idea here except instead of lifting a plane it spins a blade. ***Bernoulli’s principle is the idea that molecules have farther to go over the top of a wing, therefore they travel faster. This greater speed provides less pressure than the forces on the bottom of the wing, therefore the plane is pushed off the ground.
Second, but where did the wind come from? We’ve all sat along a lake at different times of the day. Ever notice the water is calmer during the morning and evening, in general? This is because of the uneven heating of the Earth’s surface due to color differences.
NGSS
Performance Standards:
3-PS2-3. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Asking Questions and Defining ProblemsAsking questions and defining problems in grades 3–5 builds on grades K–2 experiences and progresses to specifying qualitative relationships.
“>Ask questions to determine <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" Cause and Effect
“>cause and effect relationships <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" PS2.B: Types of Interactions
“>of electric or magnetic interactions between two objects not in contact with each other. [Clarification Statement: Examples of an electric force could include the force on hair from an electrically charged balloon and the electrical forces between a charged rod and pieces of paper; examples of a magnetic force could include the force between two permanent magnets, the force between an electromagnet and steel paperclips, and the force exerted by one magnet versus the force exerted by two magnets. Examples of cause and effect relationships could include how the distance between objects affects strength of the force and how the orientation of magnets affects the direction of the magnetic force.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment is limited to forces produced by objects that can be manipulated by students, and electrical interactions are limited to static electricity.] |
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4-PS3-2. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Planning and Carrying Out InvestigationsPlanning and carrying out investigations to answer questions or test solutions to problems in 3–5 builds on K–2 experiences and progresses to include investigations that control variables and provide evidence to support explanations or design solutions.
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4-PS3-4. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Constructing Explanations and Designing SolutionsConstructing explanations and designing solutions in 3–5 builds on K–2 experiences and progresses to the use of evidence in constructing explanations that specify variables that describe and predict phenomena and in designing multiple solutions to design problems.
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4-ESS3-1. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating InformationObtaining, evaluating, and communicating information in 3–5 builds on K–2 experiences and progresses to evaluate the merit and accuracy of ideas and methods.
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MS-PS2-3. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Asking Questions and Defining ProblemsAsking questions and defining problems in grades 6–8 builds from grades K–5 experiences and progresses to specifying relationships between variables, and clarifying arguments and models.
“>Ask questions about data to determine <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" PS2.B: Types of Interactions
“>the factors <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" Cause and Effect
“>that affect <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" PS2.B: Types of Interactions
“>the strength of electric and magnetic forces. [Clarification Statement: Examples of devices that use electric and magnetic forces could include electromagnets, electric motors, or generators. Examples of data could include the effect of the number of turns of wire on the strength of an electromagnet, or the effect of increasing the number or strength of magnets on the speed of an electric motor.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment about questions that require quantitative answers is limited to proportional reasoning and algebraic thinking.] |
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MS-PS2-5. | <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title="
Planning and Carrying Out InvestigationsPlanning and carrying out investigations to answer questions or test solutions to problems in 6–8 builds on K–5 experiences and progresses to include investigations that use multiple variables and provide evidence to support explanations or design solutions.
“>Conduct an investigation and evaluate the experimental design to provide evidence that <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" PS2.B: Types of Interactions
“>fields exist between objects <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" Cause and Effect
“>exerting forces on each other <span class="popup" style="cursor: pointer" title="" data-original-title=" PS2.B: Types of Interactions
“>even though the objects are not in contact. [Clarification Statement: Examples of this phenomenon could include the interactions of magnets, electrically-charged strips of tape, and electrically-charged pith balls. Examples of investigations could include first-hand experiences or simulations.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment is limited to electric and magnetic fields, and limited to qualitative evidence for the existence of fields.] |
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DCI
3rd grade
PS2.B: Types of Interactions
- Objects in contact exert forces on each other. (3-PS2-1)
- Electric, and magnetic forces between a pair of objects do not require that the objects be in contact. The sizes of the forces in each situation depend on the properties of the objects and their distances apart and, for forces between two magnets, on their orientation relative to each other. (3-PS2-3),(3-PS2-4)
4th Grade
PS3.A: Definitions of Energy
PS3.B: Conservation of Energy and EnergyTransfer
PS3.D: Energy in Chemical Processes and Everyday Life
ESS3.A: Natural Resources
Middle School
PS2.B: Types of Interactions
- Electric and magnetic (electromagnetic) forces can be attractive or repulsive, and their sizes depend on the magnitudes of the charges, currents, or magnetic strengths involved and on the distances between the interacting objects. (MS-PS2-3)
- Gravitational forces are always attractive. There is a gravitational force between any two masses, but it is very small except when one or both of the objects have large mass—e.g., Earth and the sun. (MS-PS2-4)
- Forces that act at a distance (electric, magnetic, and gravitational) can be explained by fields that extend through space and can be mapped by their effect on a test object (a charged object, a magnet, or a ball, respectively). (MS-PS2-5)
Crosscutting
Cause and Effect
- Cause and effect relationships are routinely identified. (3-PS2-1)
- Cause and effect relationships are routinely identified, tested, and used to explain change. (3-PS2-3)
Energy and Matter
Cause and Effect
Lesson Ideas:
Ted had some really great ideas for prompts for challenges to do with electricity. Kids would do well with them. (get prompts)