Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Additional Notes for God with No Hands

Experiments for ‘God With No Hands’



 

EXPERIMENT 1: Three States of Matter 

Materials: small tray, 3 small identical clear glasses (ice, water, air), small thermos with ice cubes

Procedure: Hold up the glasses or place them forward one at a time, beginning with the ice. Identify each state: solid, liquid, gas.

Purpose: Show the three states of matter.

 

EXPERIMENT 2: Forces of Attraction 

Materials: large tray, large clear bowl half filled with water, smaller bowl with hole-punches

Procedure: slowly drop the punches one at a time, working first around the outside then into the middle; end when they start to come together.

Purpose: Show the attraction of objects; the coming together of particles.
EXPERIMENT 3: Model of a Liquid 

Materials: small tray, one small clear glass ¼ filled with be-bes or iron shot

Procedure: hold the glass up and tilt it slowly from side to side

Purpose: Show how particles of liquid will roll over each other.

 

EXPERIMENT 4: State of Matter and Heat

Materials: heat-proof pad, a heat source (i.e. hot plate, sterno-stove, Bunsen burner), pie plate with 3 smaller identical heat-proof (metal) cups each containing a solid (non-descript piece of iron, lead solder, wax or paraffin – as identical in appearance as possible), glass stirring rod on a small tray, hot pads just in case

Procedure: Place pie plate with contents on the heat-source and apply the heat evenly. Use the stirring rod and hot pads as needed to demonstrate changes or lack thereof and for emergencies. First turn the heat to the highest setting. When the wax has completely melted, turn the heat halfway down.

Purpose: Show how different substances respond to heat.

 

EXPERIMENT 5: Liquids Settle According to Their Weight

Materials: test tube rack, 3 test tubes, water (1/3 full), cooking/vegetable oil (1/2 inch), molasses (inch or so deep)
Procedure:
Lift up the tube of water. Pour the molasses into the water, as much in the middle as possible so doesn’t stick to the side – watch for its action; repeat with the oil and watch its action.

Purpose: Demonstrate the separation and settling of liquids and other substances by density.

 

EXPERIMENT 6: Volcano

Materials: decent-sized volcano of neutral dark color (i.e. chicken wire and paper-mache; reasonably light, likely hollow underneath for ease of movement), the mouth made of a heat-proof material (i.e. insert a metal cup during the construction, about an inch deep (fill in with sand before adding chemical if needed), glossy paint makes cleaning up easier; ammonium dichromate (filling the mouth about half-full, covered with a PINCH of sulfur, with another thin layer of ammonium dichromate); long match (fireplace match)
Procedure:
Light the match and ignite the chemicals.

Purpose: Demonstrate how heated particles burst out of the earth.

NOTE: The ash is slightly poisonous (absorbed through the skin): wear rubber gloves when cleaning up and dispose with hazardous waste. The children will use vinegar and baking soda in their own work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notes on The Creation Story



            God with No Hands is a slightly modified version of Mario Montessori’s publication in Communications in 1958, originally told by Maria Montessori. The story is not meant to give just one idea of how creation came about; it’s meant to contain some tidbits of factual information in a story format. One important aspect to think about is the language of the story. The language should not be the same as used in day-to-day speech. The descriptive language should be more dramatic, a bit more extraordinary. The tone of the story should arouse more than just the children’s interest but also his admiration and wonder if the idea of the universe has been presented properly to the children. The story can be told in one’s own words and the guide must be comfortable with the version of the story told; the children are sensitive to hypocrisy. The guide must love the story that is told; make the story the guide’s own; much practice allows for comfort in the telling.

            The story can be either told or read as the guide needs, but the tone needs to maintain enthusiasm and other aspects noted above. In the environment with children, the guide can return to the story and recount specific sections, or fill in forgotten pieces.

            Important points to keep in mind in learning, re-wording, and telling:

  • The idea of the immensity of the universe, in which the earth is set, incorporated in the story through appeals to the imagination.


            Up to this point, the child has been the center of the world, but now the elementary child is turning outwards and is ready to use his imagination. “The light from the nearest star takes 4 light-years to reach us.” “In the galaxy in which we are situated, it takes 100 million years for the light from outside the galaxy to get to us.”

  • Analogies should have particular meaning to the children: i.e. European children will not readily understand the size of Alabama and this detail may be adjusted according to the children’s experiences.

  • Everything we know started as tiny little particles; this matter has been constant throughout time: present at the beginning of time and rearranged but still present today and into the future. Leave out scientific terms such as protons, electrons, etc. for now.

  • Each little particle is given a set of laws to obey; every particle has to follow these laws: attraction to other particles, states of matter and their basic properties. The earth came together in its manner because of these laws. “In the beginning everything was very, very hot, but as things began to cool, particles came together according to their likes and dislikes and formed different substances. Some of those substances took on the solid state, others the liquid states, and still others became gases.” These laws must be in the story.[1]

  • Even without the word God, the idea of everything having its own nature must be included. The nature of each substance is inherent in its being.


 

When and How to Tell the Story

            The story sets the framework for all of their work in the elementary, so the children should ideally hear it on the very first day of school. All the children need to know how to do is to sit and listen; they do not need to read and write or know their math facts. New elementary guides with limited experience may want a day or two to get to know the children a little bit before telling the story, allowing for learning their individual personalities (who needs to sit next to the guide, rather than in the back causing problems).

 

            The story should be announced ahead of time, as with all the Great Lessons and some particular lessons, in order to build anticipation within the children. In the environment, the announcement should be made in such a way that the new children know they are expected to be there (they have no choice in the matter) and the older children are invited but have an option.

 

            The entire story should be told at one time, with all of the charts and the demonstrations. The guide herself must feel a sense of wonder in order to pass this sense of wonder onto the children.[2]

 

            The story should not be told on a day the guide is not feeling well; distractions and illness create a more intensely accident-prone environment. Best to wait until the guide is feeling better.



Follow-ups to The Creation Story



What not to do:

  • If the primary purpose is to stir up interest and rouse their awe and wonder, then the children should not be asked to write the story in their own words.

  • The guide should also not ask the children to copy the charts or to do the experiments.


What to do:

  • If the guide has stirred them up, you want to leave them stirred up, giving them time to think and reflect.

  • Generally when a story such as this one is told, the children are invited to return to their work or choose some work to do, and tell them that another day there will be another story.


 

            The children may ask you or an older child to re-tell the story or a part of the story. The guide can then pick up on the story or that part of the story, filling it in with more details. Focus on the aspects that seem to more greatly interest the child(ren) involved.

 

            Another possibility is to tell the entire story again, but thinking of it as a review of the important points listed above. Different words can be used, as well as different amounts of information in different places.             Sometimes the children do not ask for another telling, so the guide must take the initiative.[3] In either case, discussion can be entered into with the children on various pieces of interest.

 

            Additional demonstrations can be formed – remember that all of the following are just impressions brought in to take the children a little bit further:

  • the concept of “colder than ice”[4]

  • comparison of the sun to the earth.[5]

  • how long it takes light from the sun to reach us;

  • how far away is the sun;

  • are there are other planets in the universe (chart 2a)?

  • All the planets go around the sun (piece of heavy metal on a string, stretching it to various lengths as spinning it overhead)

  • Centripetal force (between sun/planets and planets/moons): the pull on the string

  • Why don’t the planets fall into the sun? (crumbled up paper; the planets have momentum of their own, as well as rotation, preventing them from succumbing the sun’s gravity in such a manner) – personal motion and centrifugal force

  • Continue to add others as interests of the children lead.


 

Potential Resources:

  • My First Book of Space, developed in conjunction with NASA: 0671602624

  • Other Creation stories for 9-12[6],[7]


 

 

 

 


[1] Adults tend to think of laws as prohibitions and limits, however, true laws give order to the world, to the universe, and positively define a creation’s identity, purpose and proper end.

[2] Get up to see the sunrise; go out to watch the stars. Rachel Carlson’s book, A Sense of Wonder, is an excellent tool to heighten one’s sense of nature and the world around.

[3] Most particularly in new environments without older ones to lead the younger ones, the guide must be more initiating with recalling the stories to the children.

[4] 2 glasses, both with crushed ice. Take their temperatures; add salt to one; retake temperatures. Which one is colder?

[5] Let the children mention the wooden hierarchical material.

[6] It is appropriate for 9-12 to hear other creation stories – the 6-9 year olds need just one so that they can focus on the scientific concepts at hand

[7] Among many others:  In the Beginning by Virginia Hamilton (Native American)

4 comments:

  1. Hi!
    Thank you so much for posting this! I really appreciate it. This is wonderful and from a great perspective. I will definitely be studying this and also hope to post a link to your site on my blog soon. Thank you and God Bless!
    -Susana
    http://www.montessoricandy.com

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  2. Thank you so much for sharing. This has been so helpful. I, too, am homeschooling Montessori-style, but have not undergone AMI training. May I ask you how you present God with No Hands in an atrium setting? (I'm also CGS trained for Level 2 but wonder how to present this to the children without the charts and experiments!)
    Thank you again.
    Chern

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  3. I post this here for sake of anyone interested; I am more than happy to speak privately about specifics. Please pray for me this week as I finish my level 3 training and am so very close to being an approved CGS trainer for levels 1 and 2! Yay!

    For CGS, I end the story with an additional piece from Genesis, to continue through the coming of life and of mankind (since those Great Lessons are not utilized in CGS) and I do use the charts (as far as I know at this moment, I am the only catechist who does (of the few I know who actually use the story - it tends to be those with Montessori training who will actually use it; likely because it can feel so overwhelming and, I've heard the description, "inappropriate" length and content for children so young). It CAN be long for children new to the atrium, but experienced atrium children don't think twice about it. The use of the visuals makes all the difference as well. This past year was the first where I used the charts, and I definitely felt the difference. For atrium purposes, the experiments detract from the message conveyed in the atrium: that God is in control, that God has a purpose for all creation and everything in it; that ultimately, man is the only creation that can choose to obey or not.

    I do still need to get the chart images uploaded. They will also soon (by the second week of March) be available for sale in 8x11 format at my other website: gardenoffrancis.com.

    In general, the story is done at the 1st atrium session of the year with (at least mostly) children who have atrium experience. All new children, it just varies. Some say to wait and get them acclimated to the environment first; if you have all year with them, I agree. Wait until the 3rd or 4th session, but before going into the Fettuccia and such. If you just have a few sessions (as I've had with sacramental preparation children who were going to have limited time with the atrium), the very first session sets the atmosphere; the story gives them some meat to chew on, a purpose for being there, sets the tone for meditative listening, and gives them practice with sitting/listening/praying for a long period of time; after that, all the even longest presentations will be a snap :)

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