by Jennifer Burgin » Sat Jan 19, 2008 4:46 pm
Thanks for your suggestions, Dr. Skeptic and RJN. The format of the movie analemma RJN noted is what I have in mind -- I do want the real photos, not the schematic diagrams of the site Dr. Skeptic mentioned. But I want the photographer to have taken the photographs not at the same clock-time each time, but right after sunrise or before sunset each time.
My students are 6th graders, and I find the analemma is over the top in terms of what they can comprehend. I do my darndest to make sure they understand why the sun appears higher and lower in the sky at different times of year, but the width of the analemma is a distraction from the altitude changes. And since -- as I understand it -- what ancient civilizations tuned in to, to keep track of the passage of time, was the location of the sun rise and/or sun set, that's what I want my students to see in photographs. I've tried to get them to make the observations themselves, but the ones who would benefit most are least likely to do homework assignments like this, and the sun doesn't rise or set during school time.
Thanks for your suggestions, Dr. Skeptic and RJN. The format of the movie analemma RJN noted is what I have in mind -- I do want the real photos, not the schematic diagrams of the site Dr. Skeptic mentioned. But I want the photographer to have taken the photographs not at the same clock-time each time, but right after sunrise or before sunset each time.
My students are 6th graders, and I find the analemma is over the top in terms of what they can comprehend. I do my darndest to make sure they understand why the sun appears higher and lower in the sky at different times of year, but the width of the analemma is a distraction from the altitude changes. And since -- as I understand it -- what ancient civilizations tuned in to, to keep track of the passage of time, was the location of the sun rise and/or sun set, that's what I want my students to see in photographs. I've tried to get them to make the observations themselves, but the ones who would benefit most are least likely to do homework assignments like this, and the sun doesn't rise or set during school time.