This is a temporary page which briefly housed preparations for a two-hour "course" I was doing as part of MIT's ESP Splash on the weekend of November 23.
How big are things?
How big is a virus? A
mountain? A star? This course is intended to help develop a
familiarity with size. We'll watch Eames and Morrisons' film "Powers
of Ten: About the Relative Size of Things in the Universe, and the
Effect of Adding Another Zero", work with a variant intended to be
easier to remember and use (www.vendian.org/howbig/), and do related
order-of-magnitude, back of the envelope estimation and Fermi
Questions/Problems.
The basic approach:
Show the "Powers of Ten" films to introduce "zooming",
exponential notation, and size. Show the short prototype version
first, to introduce film concepts, and allow pre-film discussion.
Use a "gridded" classroom, one with pervasive length
references (along walls, as poles, on desks, a hanging cubic meter,
etc), to transition to, and provide a "stage" for, "How Big Are
Things?".
Use integrated props, stories, and a rapid
question->group-response dialog, to build familiarity with
human-scale metric length, 10^x and order of magnitude calculation,
"How Big Are Thing?"'s 1000x scaled "rooms", Fermi Question reasoning,
and some basic size/scale concepts. Leave participants able to pursue
it all on their own.
Do a quick pre- and post- class "test" to get a vaguely
quantitative feel for whether this all worked.
There is still much more of this in my head than on paper, but it's slowly starting to come together.
presentation pages
intro
lightlimits
lightlimits_ll1
lightlimits_ll2
stuff:
packing_list
packet
todo
some_presentation_ideas
all the slides:
title,
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