Students can use a lamp to heat the water instead of a Bunsen burner.
Students can use sunlight to heat the water, resulting in a more realistic example of what happens in the real world.
Students can complete the experiment in one class period because it takes less than 45 minutes for the water level to rise significantly.
This activity can be a class demonstration or a hands-on experiment.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with lab rules and safety measures
Differentiation
The “Important points to remember” might confuse students. The wording is not scientifically clear: “if this heat from global temperature rise is passed on to the water, water expands and increases in volume.” Another way to write this might be: “as added greenhouse gases cause the lower atmosphere to warm up, some of the heat is passed on to the ocean. The oceans warm up, and the water expands and increases in volume. Warmer ocean temperatures cause global sea levels to increase because water expands when it warms.”
This experiment could be used in a lesson about sea level rise or climate change.
Other resources on this topic include this video on water's heat capacity, this article on the future of sea level rise, and this lesson on the differences between land ice and sea ice.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
Related Teaching Resources
All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.