Description
1-sheet print-and-go worksheet with spring themed questions for students to answer. Awesome for taking outside on clipboards when you've got that day-before-break energy!
- Scientific Method (asking testable questions, experimental design, writing a hypothesis, interpreting data)
- Pie Chart Practice
- Making Models
- Ecosystems and Plants
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.
Highlights
Digital downloads
Grades
6th - 8th
Subjects
Standards
CCSS7.RP.A.2
CCSSMP1
NGSSMS-LS2-4
Tags
Pages
2
Answer Key
Not Included
Teaching Duration
50 minutes
Description
1-sheet print-and-go worksheet with spring themed questions for students to answer. Awesome for taking outside on clipboards when you've got that day-before-break energy!
- Scientific Method (asking testable questions, experimental design, writing a hypothesis, interpreting data)
- Pie Chart Practice
- Making Models
- Ecosystems and Plants
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.
Reviews
This product has not yet been rated.
Questions & Answers
Loading
Standards
to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
CCSS7.RP.A.2
Recognize and represent proportional relationships between quantities.
CCSSMP1
Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. Mathematically proficient students start by explaining to themselves the meaning of a problem and looking for entry points to its solution. They analyze givens, constraints, relationships, and goals. They make conjectures about the form and meaning of the solution and plan a solution pathway rather than simply jumping into a solution attempt. They consider analogous problems, and try special cases and simpler forms of the original problem in order to gain insight into its solution. They monitor and evaluate their progress and change course if necessary. Older students might, depending on the context of the problem, transform algebraic expressions or change the viewing window on their graphing calculator to get the information they need. Mathematically proficient students can explain correspondences between equations, verbal descriptions, tables, and graphs or draw diagrams of important features and relationships, graph data, and search for regularity or trends. Younger students might rely on using concrete objects or pictures to help conceptualize and solve a problem. Mathematically proficient students check their answers to problems using a different method, and they continually ask themselves, "Does this make sense?" They can understand the approaches of others to solving complex problems and identify correspondences between different approaches.
NGSSMS-LS2-4
Construct an argument supported by empirical evidence that changes to physical or biological components of an ecosystem affect populations. Emphasis is on recognizing patterns in data and making warranted inferences about changes in populations, and on evaluating empirical evidence supporting arguments about changes to ecosystems.
Loading

