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Open your eyes: your students will see science in a whole new light with these engaging, eye-catching activities - Activities
Instructor, Sept, 2003 by Patricia Janes
Parts of the Eye Our eyes work in a way that is similar to a camera. Invite students to discover this using the Parts of the Eye Reproducible on page 57. Begin by talking them through the process:
1. Light rays travel from an object to the eye, and become refracted (bent) by the cornea.
2. This refracted light passes through the pupil to the lens, where it is bent even more.
3. The light then passes through the vitreous humor to form an image on the retina.
4. Electrical signals are sent to the optic nerve.
5. The image is carried to the brain and processed.
Once students are familiar with the concepts, challenge them to read the word list and label all the parts of the eye.
Eye on the Image
When the retina receives an image, the image is actually upside down. You can illustrate this point for students with a simple demonstration. Place a small television directly in front of you and roughly at waist height. Turn on the television, turn off the lights, and stand about 10 feet from the screen. Hold up a magnifying glass to a sheet of white paper. Slowly move the magnifying lens toward and away from the paper until you see a clear, upside-down image of the television, as shown. Explain to students that what is happening is very similar to what goes on in an eye. Light leaves the screen and spreads all over the room. When light rays hit the magnifying glass, the glass acts just like the lens of an eye. It refracts the light rays, bending them together into a single point. At the same time, the glass also inverts (flips upside down) the rays. Then all the points of light from the screen are into a single inverted image on the white paper, just as the things we look at appear on our retina. Give each student a chance to do the demonstration, and have them identify which parts of the eye the glass and paper represent.
Did You Know?
* The white part of the eye is the sclera. The colored part is the iris.
* Each eye has about 125 million rod cells in the retina. Rod cells help you see in dim light.
* Each eye has about 7 million cone cells, which help you see color.
* People who are color blind have deficiencies in certain cone cells.
* A cat's eye "glows" in the dark because an extra layer behind the retina reflects back light. This also helps cats see better at night.
"Eye" Spy a Cat Give each of your students a sheet of blank white paper and a copy of the Black Cat Reproducible on page 57. Have them cut out the cat picture. Next, have students stare at the cat for 45 seconds, then stare at the blank sheet of paper. What do they see? Can anyone explain the "mystery cat" that appeared on the paper? Answer: The retina at the back of the eye contains light-sensitive cells. When light from an image reaches these cells, electrical signals are sent to nerve fibers, then to the optic nerve and, finally, to the brain. When you stare at an image for a long time, signals are fired to the brain over and over, even after you have stopped looking. Thus, your brain thinks it is still "seeing" the image.
Focus on Safety Invite your school nurse to give a talk about eye safety, then have students create posters to share what they've learned. The discussion could include such topics as when to go to the eye doctor, what to do if you get something in your eye, what to do if you injure of scratch your eye, how to avoid pink eye, and when and why to wear safety goggles. Have each student choose a topic, then write and illustrate a poster with drawings or magazine cutouts. Younger students can each make simple mini-books on eye safety.
Charting Vision Why do some people need glasses? Just like an out-of-focus camera lens, a person's vision becomes blurry when the eye's lens does not properly bend light into a clear image on the retina. Eye doctors use a letter diagram called a Snellen chart to test for this. Invite students to choose letters to make their own inventive eye charts, using real ones as models (visit www.i-see.org/eyecharts.html for examples). Then have student pairs check each other's vision.
"Seeing" With Your Hands Begin this activity with some thought-provoking questions: What would life be like if you couldn't see? How would you identify an object if you couldn't see it? What other senses could you use? Then have students pair off. One child will be the "listener," one will be the "toucher." Give each pair a set of interesting objects, such as a grapefruit, a rubber duck, a ruler, and a tambourine. Instruct the listener to close his or her eyes. Challenge the toucher to describe the object using descriptive words but excluding those based purely on vision. For example, he or she might describe a grapefruit as "round" and "fruity-smelling," but not as "yellow." Encourage students to be creative in their descriptions. The listener should try to guess the object. Which objects were hardest to describe? Which were the hardest to guess?
Split-Pea Braille Invite students to learn about Braille, a system of writing for the blind that uses raised dots. Begin by distributing copies of the Braille alphabet, available at www.nbp.org Each student will also need handfuls of split peas, construction paper, and glue. After students have created their names in Braille, encourage your class to try reading one another's names with their hands.