What is Heat Transfer?

This website has 3 short student activities introducing conduction, convection, and radiation. It includes extension ideas and other activities relating to the GLE.  It also includes a student handout with questions students can answer after performing each activity. Students conduct an experiment for the transfer of heat energy through conduction, convection, and radiation.  

Standards & Objectives

Essential and guiding questions: 
  • What is "heat transfer"? How does it affect our weather?
  • How does radiation heat transfer happen?
  • How does conduction heat transfer happen?
  • How does convection heat transfer happen?

Lesson Variations

Blooms taxonomy level: 
Understanding
Extension suggestions: 
  • What are some other examples of when we see radiation, conduction, and convection heat transfer happening?
  • Can we think of how we might use different forms of heat transfer?
  • Research or share ideas about solar energy to heat homes, water in swimming pools.
  • Learn about convection ovens and how they work.
  • When do we see evidence of heat transfer in our everyday lives? Examples:
    • Feeling heat and suffering heat strokes on a hot day. Share caution exercised by construction workers, people on the beach, etc. on hot days.
    • Walking barefoot on dark pavement on a hot day and risk of burning soles of feet.
    • Melting of ice on a lake or pond and risks for ice skaters or ice fishermen.
    • Sudden change of temperature and storms coming in.
    • Heat in a closed car or room and danger for people and animals.
  • Look over other activities from CAPS: Does the Sun Influence the Temperature of the Earth?, Reading a Thermometer, Keeping a Daily Weather Log, Convection in Our Atmosphere, and What is Temperature?

Helpful Hints

Materials:

  • Warm surface
  • Candle & matches
  • Scissors
  • Paper
  • Tape
  • String
  • Handout #1
  • Handout #2

References

Contributors: