IN THE CLASSROOM -- Hitting the target
- Share via
Deirdre Newman
Darts flew through the halls of Newport Harbor High School in Newport
Beach on Friday as part of a chemistry lesson on electrons.
Matt Schutz’s class was trying to figure out where electrons are most
likely to be in an atom by dropping darts onto a target. The randomness
of where the dart falls is similar to the elusiveness of electrons as
they swirl around an atom’s nucleus, Schutz explained.
The lesson is important because once the students figure out how the
electrons line up, they can figure out what chemicals will react with one
another and what will happen, Schutz said.
After dropping the darts and collecting the information on where they
fell, the students had to get data from two other groups, average the
results and then construct a graph to illustrate their findings. Schutz
said obtaining more data to get an average enhances the accuracy of the
results.
Many students said the activity helped them understand a complicated
topic.
“It’s fun because you can figure it out like the scientists did,”
junior Noemi Carrazco said.
And Schutz, a first-year teacher, earned high marks from his students
for his overall teaching skills.
“He’s pretty cool,” junior Yerenis Olvera said. “He’s very associative
with his students. He’s one of the best teachers. You actually understand
chemistry.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.