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Design Your Own Experiment: Solar System Scale Walk | Inquiry Learning Projects
Design Your Own Experiment: Solar System Scale Walk | Inquiry Learning Projects
Design Your Own Experiment: Solar System Scale Walk | Inquiry Learning Projects
Design Your Own Experiment: Solar System Scale Walk | Inquiry Learning Projects
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Description

Give students real ownership of the scientific process with this Inquiry Learning Experiment Design Project Prompt. Instead of following a step-by-step lab, students design their own experiment using classroom materials you already have. With structured thinking prompts (but plenty of creative freedom), students plan an investigation that demonstrates the skills they’ve been learning, then write and reflect on what happened, even if their results are messy or their experiment “fails.”

This resource is perfect for inquiry-based science, STEM days, end-of-unit assessments, lab make-up work, or a low-prep project when you want students thinking like real scientists. Students start with two simple brainstorming questions to generate an idea, then move into a guided planning and writing process that supports scientific reasoning, clear communication, and evidence-based reflection. Reflection questions help students explain what they tried, what they noticed, what they would change next time, and what they learned from the process, so every student can show understanding, regardless of outcome.

What’s Included

  • Student experiment design prompt with thinking scaffolds
  • 2 brainstorming questions to launch student ideas
  • Writing section for procedure, observations, and results
  • Reflection questions focused on revision + learning from outcomes

  • 4 Worksheets to guide students through the Inquiry process.

Best For

  • Inquiry-based learning, NGSS-style investigations, STEM projects
  • Formative or summative assessment
  • Fast finishers, sub plans, centers, enrichment, lab days
  • Groups or independent work

Why Teachers Love It
Students get choice, structure, and a clear way to show mastery, without you having to prep a whole new lab. 🎯

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Design Your Own Experiment: Solar System Scale Walk | Inquiry Learning Projects

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Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
6th - 10th
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
6
Answer Key
Rubric only
Teaching Duration
90 minutes

Description

Give students real ownership of the scientific process with this Inquiry Learning Experiment Design Project Prompt. Instead of following a step-by-step lab, students design their own experiment using classroom materials you already have. With structured thinking prompts (but plenty of creative freedom), students plan an investigation that demonstrates the skills they’ve been learning, then write and reflect on what happened, even if their results are messy or their experiment “fails.”

This resource is perfect for inquiry-based science, STEM days, end-of-unit assessments, lab make-up work, or a low-prep project when you want students thinking like real scientists. Students start with two simple brainstorming questions to generate an idea, then move into a guided planning and writing process that supports scientific reasoning, clear communication, and evidence-based reflection. Reflection questions help students explain what they tried, what they noticed, what they would change next time, and what they learned from the process, so every student can show understanding, regardless of outcome.

What’s Included

  • Student experiment design prompt with thinking scaffolds
  • 2 brainstorming questions to launch student ideas
  • Writing section for procedure, observations, and results
  • Reflection questions focused on revision + learning from outcomes

  • 4 Worksheets to guide students through the Inquiry process.

Best For

  • Inquiry-based learning, NGSS-style investigations, STEM projects
  • Formative or summative assessment
  • Fast finishers, sub plans, centers, enrichment, lab days
  • Groups or independent work

Why Teachers Love It
Students get choice, structure, and a clear way to show mastery, without you having to prep a whole new lab. 🎯

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

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Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
NGSSMS-ESS1-4
Construct a scientific explanation based on evidence from rock strata for how the geologic time scale is used to organize Earth’s 4.6-billion-year-old history. Emphasis is on how analyses of rock formations and the fossils they contain are used to establish relative ages of major events in Earth’s history. Examples of Earth’s major events could range from being very recent (such as the last Ice Age or the earliest fossils of homo sapiens) to very old (such as the formation of Earth or the earliest evidence of life). Examples can include the formation of mountain chains and ocean basins, the evolution or extinction of particular living organisms, or significant volcanic eruptions. Assessment does not include recalling the names of specific periods or epochs and events within them.
NGSSMS-ESS1-2
Develop and use a model to describe the role of gravity in the motions within galaxies and the solar system. Emphasis for the model is on gravity as the force that holds together the solar system and Milky Way galaxy and controls orbital motions within them. Examples of models can be physical (such as the analogy of distance along a football field or computer visualizations of elliptical orbits) or conceptual (such as mathematical proportions relative to the size of familiar objects such as students’ school or state). Assessment does not include Kepler’s Laws of orbital motion or the apparent retrograde motion of the planets as viewed from Earth.
NGSSMS-ESS1-3
Analyze and interpret data to determine scale properties of objects in the solar system. Emphasis is on the analysis of data from Earth-based instruments, space-based telescopes, and spacecraft to determine similarities and differences among solar system objects. Examples of scale properties include the sizes of an object’s layers (such as crust and atmosphere), surface features (such as volcanoes), and orbital radius. Examples of data include statistical information, drawings and photographs, and models. Assessment does not include recalling facts about properties of the planets and other solar system bodies.
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