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Earth Science Jeopardy
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Submitted By
Stephanie Brown
Bayard Elementary @Robbins Annex
Trenton, New Jersey |
Subject
Objective
Description/What to do in the classroom
Things to consider/science behind it
Number of TryScience.org features used
Titles of TryScience.org features
Materials Used
Results of student feedback and teacher assessment of activity
Attachments
Subject
Science
Objective
The students will be able to work in cooperative groups and generate at least 12 questions and answers based on their experimentation and exploration of various TryScience.org activities.
The students will be able to work as a team to share information and compete in a PowerPoint Jeopardy game based on their experimentation and exploration of various TryScience.org activities
Science Standards: (List as applicable)
New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards: Science Standard 5.8: Earth Science
All students will gain an understanding of the structure, dynamics, and geophysical systems of the Earth.
A.
Earth's Properties and Materials
B.
Atmosphere and Water
C.
Processes that Shape the Earth
D.
How We Study the Earth
Description/What to do in the classroom
Fourth grade students will engage in a Jigsaw grouping activity and develop questions to be used in their category on a PowerPoint Jeopardy game, and play the game.
Students will conduct research in their groups that are responsible for collecting information about an assigned strand of NJ Core Curriculum Science Standard 5.8: Earth Science. Students are
the ones who generate the questions to be researched after experiencing various activities that are designed to generate questions about their strand.
Following completion of their group task, the teacher will separate students
into new groups -- jigsaw groups -- by assigning one member from
each original strand group to one of three new groups. The activity
will begin with groups
A: Earth's Properties and Materials; B1: Atmosphere; B2: Water;
C: Processes that Shape
the Earth; and, D: How
We Study the Earth. The jigsaw groups will have a member from A, B1, B2, C, and
D. In the jigsaw groups, students share information, especially the
questions and answers they generated about their strand, and study
for their Jeopardy challenge.
Various
students from each group will enter their questions and answers into
the PowerPoint presentation for the Jeopardy game. Once the game is completed,
the three new groups will play as teams to compete at the Jeopardy
game.
Things to consider/science behind it
What
is the composition of the Earth and what forces shape it.
Curriculum topics:
A.Earth's Properties and Materials
1.Observe that most rocks and soils are made of several substances or minerals.
2.Observe that the properties of soil vary from place to place and will affect the soil's ability to support life.
3.Recognize that fossils provide evidence about the plants and animals that lived long ago and the nature of the environment at that
time.
B.Atmosphere and Water
1.Recognize that air is a substance that surrounds us, takes up space, and moves around us as wind.
2.Recognize
that most of Earth's surface is covered by water and be able to
identify the characteristics of those sources of
water.
3.Observe
weather changes and patterns by measurable quantities such as
temperature, wind direction and speed, and amounts of
precipitation.
4.Observe
that when liquid water disappears, it turns into a gas (vapor) in
the air and can reappear as a liquid when cooled, or as a solid if
cooled below its freezing point.
5.Observe
that rain, snow, and other forms of precipitation come from clouds,
but that not all clouds produce precipitation.
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6.Recognize
that clouds and fog are made of tiny droplets of water and possibly
tiny particles of ice.
C.Processes
that Shape the Earth
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1.Recognize
that some changes of the Earth's surface are due to slow processes
such as erosion and weathering, and some changes are due to rapid
changes such as landslides, volcanic eruptions, and
earthquakes.
2.Recognize
that moving water, wind, and ice continually shape the Earth's
surface by eroding rock and soil in some areas and depositing them
in other areas.
D.How
We Study the Earth
1.Use
maps to locate and identify physical features on the
Earth.
Integration of TryScience.org features
The
activities featured on the TryScience.org website were the basis of
this fourth grade science unit. Each group of students was
given an outline of activities to explore from TryScience.org that
related to their group's particular science strand. As a result of their
exploration and experimentation, several questions and answers were
generated and shared with members of other groups. These questions and answers
were then entered into a PowerPoint Jeopardy game, in which students
competed as teams.
Number of TryScience.org features used
6-10
Titles of TryScience.org features
Experiments
- Seeds Soil, Salt,
- Wind Mapping with Bubbles
Field Trips
- Engineer It! At OMS!
- Get Blown Away at MOSI
- Find a Science Center-Interactive Map
Live Cams
- View of Mt. Washington
- Dino Dig @ Fort Worth Museum
Curious? (SiteMap>>Still Curious?)
- Did you shake it up!
- Did you quake up?-Earthquakes
- How Snows it? Avalanches in the News
Materials Used
Tryscience.org
website
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Various
Internet search engines
Materials
for experiments from tryscience.org and
BrainPop.com
Computers
PowerPoint
software
Digital
projector
index
cards, paper, folders, pens, pencils
Results of student feedback and teacher assessment of activity
Students
were assessed using a rubric (attached). Both teachers found that the
activities provided on the tryscience.org website were geared toward
inquiry-based learning. The friendliness of the website made it simple for students
to investigate the topics of their group. This allowed the teachers to
act more as facilitators during the unit than direct
instructors. Students'
comfort levels rose with each day of use, and they went back to
areas of the site on their own when they needed to clarify their
notes or get additional information. Students of the "Shape Up"
group and teachers both agreed that the Still Curious? section
should have kept the links for each activity available there. Students of that group used
various search engines to get the answers to the questions on quizes
listed there, but would have benefited from using links included
with the original posting.
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