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Sundial
Learning how to tell time is an important skill for children. For children just learning to tell time, the sundial offers a useful opportunity to review it in a new way. Building the sundial will help children integrate the concept of time with the Earth's movements, which may then lead to a fuller understanding of time. Make sure to take the sundial outside on a sunny day for maximum effect. As this task is too difficult for most children under the age of ten, it should be constructed by an adult.
What this activity will develop:
Science and thinking skills
What you'll need:
- Cardboard and scissors
- Protractor
- Pen or marker
- Lolly stick
Setting up:
- Check an atlas or call the library to find the latitude for your area. Subtract that latitude from 90 degrees. (For example, 40 degrees from 90 degrees = 50 degrees.)
- Use the protractor to mark an angle on the cardboard that is the same number of degrees as your answer. Draw a line from the corner of the board through the mark. Then draw lines to form a rectangle.
- Label the angles within the rectangle.
- Cut along the lines to make two triangles.
- Cut a rectangle from the remaining poster board.
- Centre the protractor on a long side of the rectangle, and outline the protractor's outer edge.
- Mark each 15-degree interval around the outer edge of the protractor.
- Draw lines through each mark and label them. Starting at the bottom left, label the lines 6 to 12 (the line in the middle of the dial will be 12). On the right side, after the 12, label the lines 1 to 5.
- Punch a hole where the lines meet on the dial face and poke a lolly stick through the hole at a 90-degree angle.
- Glue the triangles to the back of the sundial with the labelled angles at the top.
What to do:
Place the sundial on level ground in a sunny place, facing north. Check to see where the shadow falls on the dial. Then check it against a clock. If there's a difference, make sure the sundial is facing directly north. How will daylight saving time affect the sundial's accuracy?
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