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Creating a new Activity Creating a new Activity

To create a new lab activity or reuse an existing one, you’ll need the assistance of the Unischoolabs support team.

Please use the following links to:

new

 Request a brand new activity

reuse

 Reuse an existing activity


As well as authoring content, you can create accounts for your students. In this way, they can work in their own time and pace, in a safe and private environment. The UniSchooLabs administrator will grant you those rights shortly after receiving your request.

In the meantime you can:

guide

Download the activity guide (.pdf, Adobe Reader needed);


Start practicing in the activities' sandbox. (Sandbox)

Activities Activities

Astronomy

Galaxy Classification and Formation
The following exercise aims to introduce the concept of varying galactic morphologies. Students will look in detail at images of numerous galaxies and you will attempt to classify them according to the Hubble Classification Scheme. Moreover, you  will try to investigate the origin of the shapes of the galaxies that stem from galaxy interactions.

Discuss this activity in the forum


average (1 Vote)

How does Gravity Work?
Students will observe the possible motion of a comet near the Jupiter and the Earth with the animation "Planet Impact" and investigate the effects of gravity on a comet's trajectory by changing the angle of approach, the speed, and the mass of large and small bodies. In the assessment activities, students will use their knowledge to crash a comet into Jupiter or make a comet fly past the planet without colliding with it.


average (1 Vote)

Is the Moon really larger when you see it on the horizon?
The purpose of this exploration is to design an experiment, using the telescope, to investigate the apparent size of the Moon when it is near the horizon, compared to when it is higher in the sky.


average (2 Votes)

Moon's Craters
During this activity students will have a look in detail at images of the Moon to determine whether the density, size and appearance of craters vary across the lunar surface.


average (1 Vote)

Chemistry

Sour salts? The pH of salt solutions
By empirically testing neutralization reactions between different acids and alkalis in a virtual lab, students should find out why some of the resulting salt solutions have a pH other than 7 / neutral.


average (0 Votes)

Physics

Conservation of energy in circuits R and C
In this activity the lab visitor is taken step by step through the first things to do in the remote laboratory dealing with electric circuits.


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Conservation of momentum in particle collisions
Students will determine the total momentum from all particles tracked after a particle collision and will calculate (magnitude & direction) the missing momentum by applying two different methods of adding vectors.


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Introduction to particle physics
In this exercise students will learn about the different types of elementary particles and how they are detected by their orbits inside the Large Hadron Collider (Large Hadron Collider - LHC).


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Measuring the Speed of Light
In this exercise we will operate a remote real laboratory of a University in Germany to collect data that will be used to measure the speed of light. Click here to access the activity


average (1 Vote)

Temperature - Kinetic Theory of Ideal Gases and Thermodynamics
In this exercise we will determine the relationship among pressure, volume and temperature of gases. We’ll deal with ideal, real, polar and nonpolar gases. We will learn the relationship between altitude in the atmosphere, pressure and temperature.


average (0 Votes)

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This document reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.