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Teach Engineering: Students as Scientists Unit PlanTeach Engineering: Students as Scientists Unit Plan
Publisher
TeachEngineering
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Unit Plan

Teach Engineering: Students as Scientists

Curated by ACT

This curricular unit contains two lessons that let students actually do the work of scientists as they design their own experiments to answer questions they generate. In the first lesson and its associated activity, students conduct a simple test to determine how many drops of each of three liquids can be placed on a penny before spilling over. The three liquids are water, rubbing alcohol, and vegetable oil; because of their different surface tensions, more water can be piled on top of a penny than either of the other two liquids. However, this is not the main point of the activity. Instead, students are asked to come up with an explanation for their observations about the different amounts of liquids a penny can hold. In other words, they are asked to make hypotheses that explain their observations, and because middle school students are not likely to have prior knowledge of the property of surface tension, their hypotheses are not likely to include this idea. Then, they are asked to come up with ways to test their hypotheses, although they do not need to actually conduct these tests. The important points for students to realize are that 1) the tests they devise must fit their hypotheses, and 2) the hypotheses they come up with must be testable in order to be useful. In the second lesson, students chew bubble gum until it loses its flavor, and after allowing the chewed gum to dry for several days, they determine the amount of mass lost. From the mass lost, they calculate the percentage of sugar that was in the gum originally. This teacher-led activity causes students to generate new questions about the varieties of chewing gums and their ingredients, and it also points out the need for controls. Students then design and execute new, controlled experiments based on their own questions. When students ask their own questions and devise ways to answer them scientifically, they begin to truly understand and appreciate the scientific method.

3 Views 0 Downloads
Concepts

experimental design, variables, stem

Additional Tags

engineering design process projects, integrated teaching and learning program and laboratory, teachengineering, hypothesis
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Resource Details

Grade
6th - 9th
Subjects
Science
3 more...
Resource Type
Unit Plans
Audiences
For Administrator Use
1 more...
Lexile Measures
0L

View 5,239 other resources for 6th - 9th Grade Engineering

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