What Is Cryptography? Part 1
by Tabatha Hancock
This is a lesson geared toward junior high and high school classes to introduce students to the idea of cryptography and encryption. This lesson could be simplified for younger students by removing the research portion and adding more hands-on activities with Caesar and pig pen ciphers. The lesson does not get into digital cryptography. Students discuss how they might send a secret message without a digital device. After watching a short video on Caesar ciphers, students brainstorm how other ciphers may work. Group time is used to research and present how a specific cipher is used and can be modified. The lesson ends in a discussion of different types of encryption. Part 2 of this lesson discusses early digital cryptography and involves building an enigma machine replica.
Lesson Plan Link/URL
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ookE8gXKA7NHVjlLaZPdcA_HjrkEyxZO/edit?u…Subject Area
Technology 1. Empowered Learner 3. Knowledge Constructor 4. Innovative Designer 5. Computational Thinker 6. Creative Communicator Engineering S2: Apply the Engineering Design Process S3: Apply Mathematics to Engineering S6: Apply Communications to Engineering Mathematics Operations and Algebraic Thinking (OA) English Language Arts (ELA) Reading (Informational Text) Speaking & Listening
Featured
Off
Related Content
Grades:
9th Grade, 10th Grade, 11th Grade, 12th Grade
This lesson is designed for Day 3. Students use outside resources to modify and test helmet effectiveness with Pocketlab sensors. In this hands-on lesson, students will create a prototype and run
Grades:
7th Grade, 8th Grade, 9th Grade, 10th Grade, 11th Grade, 12th Grade
Students need to learn basic internet safety, which starts with developing strong login and site passwords before doing any research on the internet. Creating and managing strong, secure passwords is
Grades:
3rd Grade
This lesson is about exploring Arizona's state bird, the cactus wren, that lives in the desert, has special body parts and behaviors that help it survive in its harsh environment. Students will learn