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Amanda McCarthy

Solids, Liquids, Maple Syrup! | Education.com - 1 views

    • Amanda McCarthy
       
      ELL and special ed students can be paired with another student to help create a journal of observations with pictures and words dealing with the states of matter. This activity can be used for older grades too. The students could find the densities of the solids and liquids. They could even go so far as to cook a breakfast and discuss liquids to solids as they are cooked.
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    The activity allows students to compare and contrast different solids and liquids. There is also a cooking portion of the activity that can be done with maple syrup.
Jessica Buell

Make a Soda Bottle Greenhouse | Education.com - 1 views

    • Jessica Buell
       
      Kindergarten activity for Life Science...you can also chart the growth of the plants while going over plant parts
    • Jessica Buell
       
      Adaptions: be sure to go over vocabulary. Also, you can chart and draw picture step by step of how the students are to put together their "greenhouses" Extensions: You can extend this to higher grades by discussing the water cycle and demonstrating how the water cycle created moisture in the greenhouses in order to water the seeds. Also, if possible you can plan a fiend trip to a greenhouse, (a lot of times these are FREE and they will do demonstrations and age appropriate activities with the students!)
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    K.3.3 Describe and compare living plants in terms of growth, parts, shape, size, color and texture. K.3.1 Observe and draw physical features of common plants and animals.
Amanda McCarthy

Test Your Tongue: Are Strawberries Sweet or Sour? | Education.com - 1 views

    • Amanda McCarthy
       
      This activity can be used for older grade levels by having students first try the experiment and then having them find answers as to why different substances cause different tastes. This activity could also be connected to math by graphing the results of what student liked what taste the best or the worst.
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    This activity is a fun experiment involving the sense of taste. Students can practice their observation skills by noting the differences in tastes.
Jessica Buell

Make a Butterfly Habitat | Education.com - 1 views

    • Jessica Buell
       
      A lot of ways you could adapt this for ELL learners or Special needs 1st grade
    • Jessica Buell
       
      Adaptions: You can adapt this activity for ELL and special needs by doing an into to the bufferfly lifecycle, you can include books, do drawings charting the life cycle. While you are doing this you can have the students make a vocabulary journal identifying vocabulary used in the butterfly life cycle. Extensions: I think ALL grades would love this activity, you would want to add things to the activity depending on the grade level. For example, for 2nd graders you can have them journal and write stories about their butterflies, 3rd grade you can have them define different types of butterfies and then see which type they have from their habitats, 4th graders can identify different locations you may find different types of butterflies, and for kindergarten you can identify differences between butterflies and moths....etc!
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    1.3.4 Describe how animals' habitats, including plants, meet their needs for food, water, shelter and an environment in which they can live. 1.3.5 Observe and describe ways in which animals and plants depend on one another for survival. 1.3.2 Observe organisms closely over a period of time in different habitats such as terrariums, aquariums, lawns and trees. Draw and write about observations. 1.4.3 Construct a simple shelter for an animal with natural and human-made materials.
Amanda McCarthy

Grow Your Own Crystals! | Education.com - 1 views

    • Amanda McCarthy
       
      This project can have an art component by allowing the students time to draw what the crystals look like. Students can also write or draw a hypothesis about what they will see before the growth begins. Students in older grades can do this experiment and then investigate how the crystals were formed through research and class discussion.
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    Students can watch and observe the growth of crystals in this experiment. This investigation can be done as whole class or in groups.
katie wilds

Make a Bendable Spinal Column Model | Education.com - 1 views

    • Amanda McCarthy
       
      This activity could also be connected to health class when learning about the systems of the body. Students could also create other objects that resemble body parts and their functions. This activity can be connected to langauge arts by having students research and write about the function of the vertebral column.
    • katie wilds
       
      5.4.3
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    This activity allows students to make a bendable spinal column model to see how this functions in the body.
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    Students will think about how the spine works as they construct and build a mock spine. This activity will get them thinking about the deisgn process. They will see how and why the spine bends. This is a great visual tool.
Krista Hirr

Water Experiment - 2 views

    • Krista Hirr
       
      Ask children to brainstorm other ways that would make the ice melt faster or slower. Then show them what happens when salt is put on the ice. Make the connection to the salt trucks on the roads in winter.
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    Three glasses of ice cubes are used to show the difference between rates at which the ice will melt when placed in sunlight, by a vent and in the shade.
Krista Hirr

Make a Fossil From Glue! | Education.com - 1 views

    • Krista Hirr
       
      To connect this activity to writing, have children make up stories that go along with the fossils they create. They can write as if they found the fossil or write about the place and time the fossil is from.
    • Susie Beesley
       
      Fossils are also an Earth Science topic. See standard 3.2.4 for example.
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    After exploring fossils (what they are and what we learn from them) have children use this project to create their own fossil.
Amanda McCarthy

Mini-Landslide - Activity - www.TeachEngineering.org - 1 views

  • Students explore how different materials (sand, gravel, lava rock) with different water contents on different slopes result in landslides of different severity. They measure the severity by how far the landslide debris extends into model houses placed in the flood plain.
    • Amanda McCarthy
       
      This activity can be tied to social studies by having students create an essay, PowerPoint, or poster on how landslides have and do affect the world's population. This can be done in groups of students (with all ability levels).
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    This activity allows students to see the effects of a landslide on a small scale in the classroom. This is a neat experiment that looks easy to assemble and explain.
Brandon Appleton

SDSC Education - Magnets - 1 views

    • Brandon Appleton
       
      Put students with partners who can help one another with the activity. For students who may struggle, have video of the experiment for them to observe if they are struggling with instructions. 
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    Fun activity for student to explore magnets, also provides a Spanish translated lab book as well for your ELL students. 
Brandon Appleton

SDSC Education - Gravity - 2 views

    • Brandon Appleton
       
      To differentiate pair students with different ability levels. If ELL students struggle, provide pictures of what activities you hope to have them accomplish
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    Good web-site that can give you an entire unit on Gravity. Allows students to discuss energy and what causes things to go through motion with different weight and mass. 
Krista Hirr

Kids Science Experiments - Gravity - Spinning Ball - 1 views

    • Krista Hirr
       
      Have students work in pairs or small groups to experiment what happens to the ball if you spin it faster or slower, make bigger circles, or what else they can spin in the jar. Have them make predictions, then record their findings.
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    An introductory experiment to gravity and centrifugal force.
Jessica Buell

Learn the Layers: Become a Dirt Expert | Education.com - 1 views

    • Jessica Buell
       
      I have changed this to a 3rd grade activity. 3.2.4 Identify fossils and describe how they provide evidence about the plants and animals that lived long ago and the nature of their environment at that time.
    • Jessica Buell
       
      Adaptions: you can adapt this lesson by having ELL and special need students explore in the dirt and sketch what they find in each layer and what layer they found it in making it into a "Dirt Journal" They will learn a lot just by exploring in the dirt and talking wtih friends about what they find. Extensions: You can extend this activity to older students by creating "dig sites" for each student to dig and identify the different layers. They can futher research types of rocks they find and identify what type of rock it is.
William Templeton

Your Nose Knows! - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      I like this activity because it works well for a wide variety of students.  For students who are easily overwhelmed reduce the number of scents to match.  High level students could be asked to come up with an idea for another experiment like this one but for a different sense.  Consider allergies when you plan this activity!
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    This is a fun activity that teaches young scientists to use an under utilized sense, smell.
William Templeton

Explore Earth Science and Make a "Worm Hotel" - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      Students with high literacy skills can read more information about worms and share it with the class.  Students with low literacy skills can be in charge of making drawings of their observations to keep a visual record of the worms' progress.
    • Susie Beesley
       
      An appropriate children's literature connection might be Diary of a Worm.
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    Students learn all about how worms live in the soil and how they are important to other living things in a very visual way.
William Templeton

Turn Salt Water into Drinking Water - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      This experiment can lead nicely into a social studies unit about the importance of water to human communities.  It could also be used as a starting point for a discussion of how scarcity affects price.
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    Students learn how to separate salt from water in order to create drinking water from salt water.
katie wilds

Build a Balloon Powered Car | Education.com - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      While this activity does not cover a specific standard it does meet the requirement of teaching the design process.  Make sure that students must design, test, and revise their design to make the activity authentic.  A race would be a great final activity.  Assessment could come from an oral presentation on what they did and why or a visual presentation, such as a poster.
    • katie wilds
       
      SC.2.3.7 2000Investigate and observe that the way to change how something is moving is to give it a push or a pull.
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    By focusing on the design aspect of this activity a budding scientist can learn a lot about solving a problem through the scientific design process.
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    Great for deciephering where energy comes from. The design process gives the student a full understanding of how the vehicle works and why it moves.
William Templeton

Make a Weather Wall - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      Student who are ready can learn to read a thermometer or a barometer as well as a part of this activity.  Make sure to encourage careful record keeping and not accurate predictions.  Students should be made aware that one does not "win" science by making correct predictions.
  • Weather symbol template
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    Students can try their hands at observing, recording, and predicting the weather.
William Templeton

Germinating Seeds: Explore Plant Life Cycles - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      Make sure to add taking measurements in metric units to this activity in order to fully meet the standard.  This unit could be connected to a social studies unit on the plants that are important to the local community and humans in general.
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    A good starting point for  a unit on the parts of a plant and the life cycle of a plant.
William Templeton

Building a Rock and Mineral Collection - 1 views

    • William Templeton
       
      The number of different properties that the teacher requires the students to observe can greatly affect the difficulty of this assignment.  That offers a great opportunity for differentiation.  This would probably be best as a long activity during a detailed unit.
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    This page has everything a teacher needs to know to make a class rock and mineral collection or assign the task to students.
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