Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER) is a great way to help students write scientific explanations. In these warm ups, students apply the process of CER to their knowledge of physical states. There are three different CER problems, which include a data table, Venn diagram, and a paragraph.
In this activity, students will be sort cards into items that reflect light and items that refract light. Before class, cut out each card and rubber band them together. I print the cards on card stock and use them over and over. I often use this activity as a warm up or review at the beginning of class. I keep several answer keys, so students that finish quickly become expert checkers. With the help of student checkers, this activity can easily be finished in five minutes for the whole group. I
In this activity, students will create a tri fold about three physical states of matter (solid, liquid, and gas). Students will include a fact about the shape, volume, particles, two examples, and a model of the particles. When students have completed the tri fold, they will use the rubric to grade themselves.
In this activity, students will match the name of the scientific tool, the use of the scientific tool, and a picture of the scientific tool. This is a great review for commonly used tools in a science lab.
In this activity, students will select two science tools. For each tool, they will test the following physical properties: state, mass, volume, solubility, relative density, magnetism, and conductivity.
Then, students will focus on three physical properties and create an essay. The essay will tell the reader how to test that physical property and how their two items compared.
As a final project, students will create wanted posters to demonstrate their knowledge of the physical states and the boiling, melting, and freezing points. For each wanted poster, students will include a real life example, what physical states are involved, what happens to the heat, the temperature, and what happens to the molecules. Then, students will grade their posters based on the grading rubric provided.
In this activity, students fill out a graphic organizer about the different physical properties of two tools. The physical properties include: state, solubility, relative density, volume, mass, conductivity, and magnetism.
Then, students create an essay comparing the physical properties of the tools. They go into detail about how to test three of the physical properties of their choice.
4th - 8th
Basic Principles, Physical Science, Science
$2.00
Original Price $2.00
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About the store
Experience
This will be my twentieth year in teaching fifth grade science in Texas.
Teaching style
I am transitioning from whole group lessons to more independent/small group learners. This year, I am trying to limit my whole group lessons, and have students learn more at their own pace. They are achieving this through flow maps.
Awards & shining teacher moments
Campus New Teacher of the Year,
Campus Teacher of the Year
My own education history
St. Ambrose University,
University of Northern Iowa (bachelor's degree) with minors in reading and math
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