SAR Fundamentals/Compass practical and pacing
From PCSAR
(→Time Plan) |
(→Time Plan) |
||
Line 132: | Line 132: | ||
* ''have each student sight on an object on the far distance; have them verbally confirm each of the sighting requirements'' | * ''have each student sight on an object on the far distance; have them verbally confirm each of the sighting requirements'' | ||
** ''Because you can't put your head where the student's head is, you won't be able to check all of their sighting requirements, but can check whether they are holding compass level, have one eye closed. You can approximate the others by looking over their shoulder.'' | ** ''Because you can't put your head where the student's head is, you won't be able to check all of their sighting requirements, but can check whether they are holding compass level, have one eye closed. You can approximate the others by looking over their shoulder.'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{lesson slide||}} | ||
+ | '''Aligning needle''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | * the north pointing end of the needle is painted red | ||
+ | * the "bed" of the needle is on the plastic underneath and points slightly to the east of North on the bezel | ||
+ | ** because we set EAST declination | ||
+ | * we want to put the "red to the bed" | ||
+ | * two ways | ||
+ | ** rotate the compass until they line up | ||
+ | ** rotate the bezel until they line up | ||
+ | * ''demonstrate both methods'' | ||
+ | ** ''looking down on compass, not using mirror'' | ||
+ | * ''have each student align their needles using both methods'' | ||
+ | * when the the needle is aligned, the directions on the bezel are the directions relative to True North | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{lesson slide||}} | ||
+ | '''needle parallax''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | * it's easy to align the needle when looking straight down | ||
+ | * if you look sideways it's harder | ||
+ | ** called parallax | ||
+ | * we need to be able to do this so that we can "sight" at the same time as aligning the needle | ||
+ | * ''demonstrate'' | ||
+ | ** ''set direction of travel on bezel to East (90 degrees)'' | ||
+ | ** ''fold mirror flat (so it can be ignored)'' | ||
+ | ** ''hold the mirror at eye level so you are looking obliquely at the compass surface'' | ||
+ | ** ''demonstrate rotating your body until the needles align'' | ||
+ | * ''have students do the same'' | ||
+ | * ''have student check their alignment by then looking straight down on needle'' | ||
+ | * trick is NOT to try to get the tip of the needle in the middle of the bed | ||
+ | * trick is to try to get the edge of the needle parallel with the edge of the bed | ||
+ | * ''have students retry until they can get proper alignment looking'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | * ''have students try again with direction of travel set to North (0 degrees)'' | ||
+ | * This is much easier because we're looking along the needle length | ||
+ | * direction near north and south are easy to align, near east or west are harder | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{lesson slide||}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | * when we're using bearings we need to use the mirror | ||
+ | * the mirror makes it more difficult to align the mirror | ||
+ | * because we're looking sideways at the needle, not straight down | ||
+ | |||
{{lesson slide||}} | {{lesson slide||}} |
Revision as of 06:24, 7 February 2013
Lesson plan:
Contents |
Subject
What is this lesson plan about?
This is a short 1-hour practical training on taking and following bearing with a compass
and pacing distance, to be done outside in an open area.
A small student to instructor ratio (max 5:1) is recommended. As such, this lesson is often one station of several with a larger class broken up into smaller teams of max 5 students and this session is taught repeatedly by the same instructor as the teams move between stations. See "Search skills and compass practical" as a commonly used example of this lesson as one of several stations.
Authors
List who wrote this lesson plan.
Brett Wuth, Chris Jorgensen
Scope
What is included in this lesson, what's not and why.
- SAR Fundamentals Manual: Ch.13 "Navigation"
- Basic SAR Skills Manual: Ch.7 "Navigation"
- Navigation - section 3 - compass use and exercise
Prerequisites
What should students already know/have accomplished before the lesson is presented.
Prior to this lesson, students should have already been introduced to the following concepts:
- identify cardinal directions
- identify directions in degrees
See "Navigation - map - direction" for the lesson plan that provides these prerequisites.
- the parts of a compass
- how a compass works
- how a compass fails
- declination
See "Navigation instruments theory" for the lesson plan that provides these prerequisites.
Objectives
At the conclusion of this lesson the participants:
- will be able to ...
- shooting a bearing with a compass
- pacing
- exercises:
- bearings
- pacing / bearing
- backbearing
- offsets
Time Plan
Total Time: 60 minutes
Time | Material
|
|
00:00 3 min |
Introduction Introduce topic title Introduce Instructor Present Objectives |
|
00:03
|
Review - declination
|
|
|
Setting declination
|
|
|
Review - compass failures
|
|
|
Holding compass
|
|
|
Sighting
|
|
|
Aligning needle
|
|
|
needle parallax
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reading a bearing
3/ Pacing
4/ Exercises: bearings
5/ Advance As they come up in discussion, describe:
|
Aids
What materials are needed or useful in presenting this lesson.
- Pacing and bearing exercise
- Tape measure
- Compasses
- compass rose
- SAR Fundamentals - Chapter 13 - Navigation
Question bank
List of questions suitable for an review/exam of this section.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are some of the questions that students typically ask. Include the answers.
Feedback
When has this lesson been presented. What was the feedback.
License
What can others do with this lesson?
Copyright © 2010, Chris Jorgensen.
Copyright © 2010-2013, Brett Wuth.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 Canada License.
To view a copy of this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/ca/
or send a letter to Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
Reference Material
If you need to cite sources, do so here.
[1]
Notes
Any additional notes, etc.