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Yucky Water. RA Jones Middle School. Kurt Whitford 1 , Melissa Stolz 2. 1 Glen Este High School, Cincinnati, OH; 2 RA Jones Middle School, Florence, KY.
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Yucky Water RA Jones Middle School Kurt Whitford1, Melissa Stolz2 1Glen Este High School, Cincinnati, OH; 2RA Jones Middle School, Florence, KY Students will be able to identify methods of scientific investigation, distinguish between sound and flawed scientific research, and design/conduct their own sound research. Lesson Goal . 5E Activities • ENGAGE: • Beaker & Bunsen video clip • Word Splash • Expert groups create definitions & examples for each component • EXPLORE: • Jigsaw groups to share definitions • Groups create a checklist (middle school) or rubric (high school) • EXPLAIN: • Gallery walk of rubrics • Revisions of rubrics • ENGAGE 2: • Yucky water sample & discussion • EXPLORE 2: • Powerpoint presentation of RET summer research • Individual evaluation of research with rubric • Group collaboration on rubric • EXPLAIN 2: • Groups share findings with class • ELABORATE: • Open response writing to assess Redi & Pasteur research • EVALUATE: • Peer review of open response • ENGAGE 3: • Kool-aid filtration demonstration • EXPLORE 3: • In pairs, students design a project to research Kool-aid filtration methods • EXPLAIN 3: • Students share their research with class • ELABORATE 2: • Student create laboratory reports • EVALUATE 2: • Student individual reflective writing Background Knowledge Student: Basic understanding of cause and effect Processes usually are comprised of individual steps Teacher: There is no one “scientific method”. Inquiry experiments usually spark higher student interest than validation/practice experiments A Lesson on the Nature of Science Standards KY SC-6-BC-U-3 Students will understand that scientists vary widely in what they study and how they do their work. While there is no fixed set of steps they follow, the basic process of science involves collecting relevant evidence, logical reasoning and the use of imaginative thinking in constructing explanations for what they observe. OH Scientific Ways of Knowing – Grade 10 Nature of Science 3. Recognize that science is a systematic method of continuing investigation, based on observation, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, and theory building, which leads to more adequate explanations of natural phenomena. • ACS Connections • Applications: • Careers: • Societal Impacts: Assessments Abstract FORMATIVE: Research rubrics, dialogue with and among students, Observation of science methods during investigation SUMMATIVE: Open Responses & Peer Review Sheets, Lab Reports • This unit of study was created to bridge the research experience to classroom application. Students will • be introduced to the key components of science research, with examples from the RET summer project • critique the Redi/Pasteur research experiments and justify whether the investigations are examples of sound scientific work • design their own research project to investigate a given problem, and demonstrate their ability to appropriately utilize methods of science. • This unit is designed for use with students in grades 6-12 Modifications • Students create a checklist rather than an extensive rubric • Kool-aid filtration investigation can be more structured or open-ended • RET research powerpoint can be presented as a printed handout • Redi/Pasteur examples presented online as video or as printed handout • Accommodations for specific IEP – reader, scribe, extended time ACS Connections APPLICATIONS: Scientific Methodology (observing, problem solving, communicating) forms a mental framework applicable to many real-world situations. CAREERS: “Doing” science reinforces an affinity for STEM careers. SOCIETAL IMPACTS: The ability to distinguish between sound and flawed science is a basic skill for critical consumers of scientific information. References Colburn, A. Making inquiry successful. Science Teacher. Dec2008, 75, 9, pg. 12. Jones, J. Planning science lessons using the 5 E’s. http://teachersnetwork.org/ntol/howto/science/fivees.htm Misconceptions • “A hypothesis is nothing more than an educated guess.” • “There is one universal scientific method.” • “The scientific method has a definite starting and ending point.” • “The steps must be followed sequentially.” Acknowledgements The authors are grateful for the assistance of: Dr. Glenn Markle and Dr. Jon Breiner, University of Cincinnati, College of Education, Criminal Justice, and Human Services Dr. AnantKukreti, University of Cincinnati, College of Engineering Andrea Burrows, University of Cincinnati, RET Grant Coordinator