Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Tuesday, 30 November, 2010



This is HL 6. Do both on the same sheet of loose leaf paper.

Students will be able to:
use information from virtual activities and classroom discussions to
-investigate and explain Alfred Wegener's hypothesis.
-show Pangaea's movement over geological time.

The do now was an FCAT transparency.

Students submitted and reviewed home learning 5. Home learning 6 can be found at the top of this blog.

Students used Discovery Education sites to learn about Continental Drift theory. To access the site, visit Dr. Gayden's Science Zone for today's date (Tuesday, 30 November, 2010). Click the link to enter the Discovery Site. Your user name is :
miami_youridnumber
The password is:
idnumber_miamai.

Click the third tab, assessment resources to find the activity Prove They Move. Complete the handout using the online exploration.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Monday, 29 November, 2010



This is HL #5. Do on the same sheet of loose leaf notebook paper. Follow all directions.

Students will be able to:
use information from virtual activities and classroom discussions to
-investigate and explain Alfred Wegener's hypothesis.
-show Pangaea's movement over geological time.

Students received HL #5, which can be found at the top of this blog.

Students visited online sites to learn about plate tectonics. They visited Dr. Gayden's Science Zone for a link to a BBC activity. Students also visited the site Plate Tectonics Activity, found at the site http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/tectonics

THe do now was an FCAT transparency question on energy.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Monday, 22 November through Wednesday, 24 November, 2010

Students will be able to:
use information from virtual activities and classroom discussions to
-describe how rocks change from one type to another.
-share the findings from science fair projects.

The do now for all days will be FCAT transparencies.

On Monday, students watched a BrainPop movie on the Rock Cycle. Students then were paired to read and draw the rock cycle, from the Pearson site http://www.phschool.com/webcodes10/index.cfm?wcprefix=cfp&wcsuffix=1056&fuseaction=home.gotoWebCode&x=16&y=15

Students should write the definition of the rock cycle and include the drawing which shows each change. Student should also write sentences to explain how each rock type forms.

Students should reconsider the homework information page about Roger, the metamorphic rock, adding the needed information. The assignment should be ready to submit on the 29th of this month.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Friday, 19 November, 2010


This is your home learning assignment. You MUST bring this sheet to class on Monday! Be sure to follow all written directions. Choose the type of assignment you will do and follow the directions.

Students will be able to:
use information from hands-on activities and classroom discussions to
-compare and contrast the layers of the earth.
-use models to represent the earth's layers.
-present science fair projects.

Students completed an FCAT transparency question on the Nature of Matter as their do now.

Students then took a review quiz on the parts of the earth, using the CPS clicker system.

Students spent the remainder of the class period defending science fair presentations.

The home learning assignment can be found at the top of this blog.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Monday, 15 November Through Wednesday, 17 November, 2010


HL 4 is due on Wednesday.


HL 3 is due on Monday.



These are the lab sheets for class.

Students will be able to:
use information from hands-on activities and classroom discussions to
-compare and contrast the layers of the earth.
-use models to represent the earth's layers.

The do now for each day is an FCAT transparency question.

Students are working on completing the weathering laboratory.

Home learnings are shared at the top, along with the lab write-up.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Wednesday, 10 November and Friday, 12 November, 2010


This is HL 2. Follow directions.

Students will be able to:
use information from supplementary texts and classroom discussions to
-classify layers of the earth as solid or liquid.
-compare and contrast the composition of the structural layers of Earth's interior.
-construct a data table to compare and contrast the thickness of each layer and determine the overall depth of the Earth.

Both days used FCAT transparencies as bell ringers.

HL #2 can be found at the top of this post.

Students spent the remainder of the periods reading and taking notes (table, Venn diagram on the parts of the earth. They also made word wall posters of the vocabulary.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Monday, 8 November and Tuesday, 9 November, 2010



Please do both sheets, in the proper order, on ONE sheet of loose leaf paper, properly headed. Follow all written directions.

Students will be able to:
use information from internet access and classroom discussions to
-determine how light and patterns create images that can be deceptive or misleading to our brains.
-determine how material affects the speed of waves.

Due to quarterly assessment testing by the District, classes met on alternating schedules.

The do now for either day was an FCAT transparency, although they questions were different, they all dealt with The Nature of Science.

Students completed Cornell notes on light from the website from Friday, including the three Costa leveled questions with color, and the summary.

Some of the proposed questions were:

Level 1:
What is light?
How fast does light travel?
How can light be controlled?

Level 2:
Contrast reflection and refraction.
Compare reflection and refraction.
Distinguish between the methods that light can be controlled.

Level 3:
Predict what would happen to the angle of light as it passes from a less dense to a more dense medium.
Experiment to discover how the angle of reflections changes as the angle of incidence increases.

Home learning 1 can be found at the top of the blog. Follow directions carefully, and do all listed questions. Use blue/black ink or pencil, and head your loose leaf paper correctly.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Wednesday, 3 November through Friday, 5 November, 2010

Students will be able to:
use information from internet access and classroom discussions to
-determine how light and patterns create images that can be deceptive or misleading to our brains.

The do now on Wednesday was to review mini assessment two.
The do now on Thursday was to review mini assessment one in preparation for the interim assessment next week.
The do now on Friday was to make a KWL chart on optical illusions.

Those classes that needed to view the BrainPops on color, light, and refraction/diffraction did so.

Those classes that needed to demonstrate transverse waves with the mini slinkys did so.

Students took notes on light and how light can be changed by going to Dr. Gayden's Science Zone and clicking the 7th grade link for Wednesday, 3 November, 2010. Basically, the notes should include that:

Light:
-is a form of energy.
-is part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see.
-travels in a straight line or path called light rays.
-travels at a speed of 300,000 kilometers per second (186,000 miles per second).
Light can be controlled by:
-blocking it with something to create a shadow.
-reflecting it by changing its path with a mirror.
-bending it by changing its direction by making it pass into another transparent material of different density, like glass or water, called refraction.

Students read about optical illusions and created their own.

Since Science Fair projects are due on Friday, there was no nightly home learning assigned.

-