Day 1: Introduction to Coal & Identification Activity
Lesson Plan - Identifying and Comparing Types of Coal
Adapted from American Coal Foundation with additions from 2008-2009 TESSE Graduate Fellows from Penn State University (http://sites.psu.edu/drlauraguertin/)
Overview
Students identify and compare four types of coal by examining hand samples and observing burning coal samples. The burning coal experiment can be conducted in the class or a video of the experiment can be shown to the students if the materials for that activity are not available.
Objectives
Students will:
- Examine four unidentified types of coal and document their observations about each.
- Observe the burning behavior (i.e., flame color, length of burning, speed of ignition) of the four samples.
- Draw conclusions about the identity of each coal specimen (based on the information presented initially along with what they observed about each sample)
National Science Education Standards
(https://www.nap.edu/read/4962/chapter/1)
- Science as Inquiry, 5-8
- Abilities necessary to do scientific inquiry
- Physical Science, 5-8
- Properties of matter and changes in properties of matter
- Science in Personal and Social Perspective, 9-12
- Natural resources
Files
File Name | Type and Size |
---|---|
Identifying & Comparing Types of Coal - Lesson Plan | MS Word - 1.0 MB |
Coal Identification - Worksheet | PDF File - 760 KB |
Introduction to Coal Presentation | MS PowerPoint - 1.7 MB |
Coal Properties Plots | MS PowerPoint - 875 KB |
Video demonstrating the time to ignition and burning of four coal samples | MOV File - 157 MB |
Video (for iPod) demonstrating the time to ignition and burning of four coal samples | M4V File - 62 MB |
Video (for iPhone) demonstrating the time to ignition and burning of four coal samples | M4V File - 36 MB |
List of Resources
- American Coal Foundation
- Argonne Premium Coal Database (1990)
- Carbon Monitoring for Action
- Coal in Pennsylvania from the PA Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (2002)
- Coal Through a Microscope (2010)
- Kentucky Geological Survey
- U.S. National Energy Technology Laboratory's 2007 Coal Power Plant DataBase (2007)
- Penn State Coal Sample Bank
- Ward's Natural Science