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Feature

A Solar Panel Modeling Project for Chemistry

Pages 36-43 | Received 31 Jan 2023, Accepted 26 Sep 2023, Published online: 13 Feb 2024
 

Abstract

The Solar Panel Modeling Project challenged 10th-grade chemistry students to apply knowledge of Atomic Models to explain electricity generation in a solar panel, deepening their scientific literacy about climate solutions. Here, I describe the project’s implementation and outcomes, including the solar panel model template, the 9-day learning sequence, and the evolution of student thinking captured in the summarizing whole-class model. Throughout the unit, students alternated between investigating new chemistry concepts and iteratively refining models, exercising their NGSS sense-making skills. Content learning focused primarily on Atomic Models and the Octet Rule, but also included brief introductions to Lattice Stability and the Photoelectric Effect. The real-world context of the project showed students the practical utility of the otherwise esoteric skill of mapping electron locations and movements between elements. By the project’s end, students could verbalize how the specific structure of Silicon, Boron, and Phosphorus in a solar panel results in electron movement and electricity. These students now face the upcoming decades of climate solutions debates armed with deeper scientific literacy about the readiness of this technology for widespread implementation.

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00368555.2023.2292337.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Shelley Kunasek

Shelley Kunasek has taught high school and college science for over 12 years, including 8 years at Seattle Academy of Arts and Sciences teaching Chemistry, Environmental Science, and Physics. She comes to the classroom with a rich background from environmental consulting in Los Angeles, Peace Corps service in West Africa, and Ph.D. research on paleoclimate and ice cores from Greenland. Shelley loves inventing new curricula that incorporate Ambitious Science Teaching and Project Based Learning, bringing real-world science experiences to life in her classroom. When not in the classroom, you can find her playing Frisbee or roller hockey with her family.

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