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What do you smell?
Objective
- Use creative
imagery and writing to think about the effects of air pollution.
- Observe how
air pollution can move from one region to another.
Materials
- Orange (or other similar pungent odor-producing
item)
- Optional: electric fan, if air movement in your
classroom is insufficient to circulate the odor.
Procedure
- Have students close their eyes or turn their
backs as you peel the orange and allow the odor to "travel"
throughout the classroom. Ask students to raise their hands as
soon as they smell the onion.
- Plot the sequence of "smellings" on
a room chart, noting the approximate time when the first and last
students smell the orange. Patterns may not be simple "nearest
to most distant," and will show how air circulates through
the classroom. You could change the results by placing the cut
onion near an air vent or in some other part of the room.
- For older students, this experiment could be
conducted prior to lunch or a brief recess. When the class leaves
the room take the orange or other odor source from the room also.
Have some students return to the room at 5 or 10-minute intervals
to see whether they can still smell the odor. When class returns,
discuss what the students observed.
- What does that indicate about how long it takes
for the classroom air to be fully replaced?
- What do students conclude about the effect of
wind on air pollution?
- Have students describe how they think the air
smells in different places, such as a bike trail, a busy highway,
children at school, garbage burning, a backyard lawn mower, barbecue
or the beach?
- Have students write about what they imagined
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