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Published byPatience Nichols Modified over 8 years ago
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Technology – Is the processes and knowledge people use to extend human abilities and to satisfy human wants and needs
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Needs › Food › Water › shelter Wants › Everything else Want - Goods or services not essential to survival Need – Goods or services that are essential to survival
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Communication Energy and Power Manufacturing Construction Transportation Bio-Related Technology
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Is the devices and processes used to communicate.
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Energy – the ability to do work or make an effort. Power – The measure of work done. We have the ability to harness energy and power and use it to our advantage.
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Manufacturing – is the use of technology to make the things people want or need.
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Construction – is the design and building of structures.
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To Transport means to carry from one place to another. A transportation system is an organized way of moving goods and people using vehicles.
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Bio-Related Technology – includes all technologies with a strong relationship to living organisms, such as agriculture and health care.
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When you study technology you learn about how the world works. It can help you understand the importance of our society › How should genetic engineering be used? › Stem Cells? › Fracking, Oil drilling? › Cloning???
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Helps you relate to other school subjects. › Mathematics – can become more relevant when you use it to calculate the velocity of a rocket › Social Studies – when you realize how advancements in technology bring about social and cultural change. › Science – scientific principles have more meaning when you can see them in action, like building a bridge.
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Technology has been around al long as the human race. People had to find ways “invent technology” to solve their problems and meet their needs. Technology continually evolves, the inventions themselves change, and so does the society from which they spring.
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As cultures evolved in different parts of the world, they developed technologies to help them. › Egyptians – discovered architectural forms that led to their great pyramids. › As we developed into an agricultural society we developed waterwheels. Waterwheels in turn lead us to a societal change where people decided that they did not need water wheels of their own. Instead, they could pay someone with a waterwheel to grind their grain.
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Inventions and Innovations › Inventions – New products or technologies. › Innovations – Altered Products or Technologies Changes to a technology › Improves the quality of the product › Improves the efficiency of the process Ideas may be shared across several technologies. › The design of the waterwheel evolved into the turbine.
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Goal Directed Research – Research performed to solve a specific problem. › Ex. Developing a drug for a specific disease. Unexpected Results – Research performed for one problem may result in the solution to another. › Ex. Research performed on radar to detect submarines lead to the invention of the microwave oven.
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Every technology can be thought of as a system. System – A system is a group of parts that work together to achieve a goal. Parts of a technology system. › Input › Output › Process › Feedback InputProcessOutputFeed back
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Input – Resources that are put into the system Seven input resources: › People › Information › Materials › Tools and Machines › Energy › Capital › Time
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In order to produce a device or process, people are needed to perform the operations. › Includes – Product designers, factory workers, sales people, etc…
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Any data or knowledge needed to make the system work. › Including – Scientific knowledge, assembly instructions, computer data, etc…
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All the things that make up a product. › Plastic, wood, metal May be classified as either raw or industrial material. › Raw material - A material used in the primary production or manufacturing of a good. Raw materials are often natural resources such as oil, iron and wood. › Industrial Material – Produced from raw materials that have been reshaped or processed into standard shapes and sizes for production use.
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Anything used to make the materials assume the desired form.
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Any energy consumed to perform the work. › Electrical Energy › Heat energy › Human energy
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Includes the money, land, and equipment needed to set up and keep the system running.
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Includes the time required to build factories, make products, and ship products.
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All of the activities that need to take place for the system to give the expected result.
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Includes everything that results when the input and process parts of the system go into effect. Intended Output – The product being produced. Un-intended Output – Anything else such as waste.
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Feed back is the information about the output that is sent back to the system to help determine whether the system is doing what it is supposed to do. There are systems without feedback. These are called Open Loop Systems.
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Impacts – Significant Effects Can be positive or negative. What are some positive and negative impacts of a cell phone?
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