Electric Circuits and Engineering: A Lion Lights Book Review

Main Article Content

Simone Nance

Abstract

This review dives into Lion Lights, a book about Richard Turere’s journey as a young Maasai tribe member who developed a solar-powered lighting system to protect his family’s livestock from lions without harming them. This article explores how Lion Lights aligns with NGSS Standard 4-PS3: Energy, and also offers classroom activities and extensions, including hands-on circuit investigations, problem-solving discussions, and engineering challenges where students design their own deterrent systems. Additionally, it encourages cultural and global connections by examining traditional knowledge and conservation efforts. By integrating this text into the curriculum, educators can foster engineering skills, creativity, and real-world problem-solving in their students.

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Article Details

Section
Book Reviews
Author Biography

Simone Nance, University of Southern Indiana

Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at the University of Southern Indiana.

Current/recent undergraduate courses: Teaching Methods in Integrated Content Areas, Analysis of Curriculum & Instruction, Children's Literature, and Instructional Technology. Current graduate courses: Interdisciplinary Processes in Math & Science, Digital Literacy, Technology & Organizational Leadership. Valid Indiana teaching license with a STEM certification & Math Specialist certification. 

References

Turere, R., & Possentini, S. M. L. (2022). Lion lights: my invention that made peace with lions . Tilbury House Publishers.