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Dear Folks,
  I am a new member.  I am looking for a place to get ideas and trouble
shoot for teaching Earth Science for Teachers at Missouri State University
in West Plains Missouri.  I have been teaching grades 7-12 over the last
25.5 years in the rural Ozarks (a great place to do geology - Karst heaven
with great igneous knobs).  I am teaching this college class as an adjunct
instructor.  This is the 3 year that I have taught the class in the last
five.  I have been struggling with student misconception for years!   I have
a MS in education.  I have read many books on the brain and learning (Pat
Wolf, Mel Levine, and many more).  I did find Heather Percovic and Robert
Ruhf study published in the Journal of Geoscience Education (May 2008) very
interesting and useful.  My inquires with Heather have brought me to this
list serve (this is my first).  I have signed up to access and use the
Geoscience Concept Inventory.  I am looking forward to making up a test
after my account is completed.

I have a ton of questions.  Lets start with one.

Barometers!   First of all, no one uses one anymore!  The data is just given
on web forecasts.    The school can afford to buy one.  I have used the
balloon stretched over the can in the past to measure air pressure.  This
method is not exciting, it is difficult to "see" any significant difference
over a period of time.  Any ideas?  The safety school personnel took my
mercury away years ago (yes - I had some for a HS lab, I would only "show"
students - this tells you how long I have been around).  How to I get the
concept of air pressure / forecasting across to pre service teachers and 8th
graders without messing them up and without a real barometer.  I do have on
old one that was broken I have taken apart that I show.

-- 
Mary Ann Mutrux
Middle School Science Teacher