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Earth Science Success: 50 Lesson Plans for Grades 6–9


By: Catherine Oates-Bockenstedt and Michael Oates

$22.36 - Member Price  
$27.95 - Nonmember Price



$29.07 - Member Price  
$36.34 - Nonmember Price

$18.17 - Member Price  
$20.96 - Nonmember Price

Details

Type of Product:NSTA Press Book (also see downloadable PDF version of this book)
Average Rating:
 based on 1 review
Publication Date:11/1/2008
Pages:325
Stock Number:PB226X
ISBN:978-1-93353-135-9
Grade Level:Middle School, High School
Read Inside:Read a sample chapter: Meteorology

You can download an electronic version (PDF) of the student handouts (part 3) here: Student handouts

NSTA Recommends
Our reviewers—top-flight teachers and other outstanding science educators—have determined that this resource is among the best available supplements for science teaching.
[Read the full review]


Description

Designed as a ready-to-use survival guide for middle school Earth science teachers, this title is an invaluable resource that provides an entire year’s worth of inquiry-based and discovery-oriented Earth science lessons, including 33 investigations or labs and 17 detailed projects.

This unique collection of astronomy, geology, meteorology, and physical oceanography lessons promotes deeper understanding of science concepts through a hands-on approach that identifies and dispels student misconceptions and expands student understanding and knowledge.

In addition, this field-tested and standards-based volume is ideal for university-level methodology courses in science education.


Ideas For Use

Additional Info

Science Discipline: (mouse over for full classification)
Earth's revolution
Earth's rotation
Moon
Seasons
Sun
Intended User Role:Curriculum Supervisor, High-School Educator, Middle-Level Educator, Teacher
Educational Issues:Assessment of students, Classroom management, Curriculum, Educational research, Inquiry learning, Instructional materials, Interdisciplinary, Integrating technology, Science safety, Teacher content knowledge, Teacher preparation, Teaching strategies

Contents

Introduction

Preface

References

To the Earth Science Teacher

Correlation with the National Science Standards and Benchmarks for Science Literacy

Chapter 1: The Organization of each Investigation

The First Ten Days

Lab S-1: Becoming a Scientist

Lesson Planning

Chapter 2: Astronomy

Lab A-1: Sizing Up the Planets

Lab A-2: Estimating with Metrics

Lab A-3: Keeping Your Distance

Lab A-4: Comparing Planetary Compounds

Lab A-5: Reflecting on the Solar System

Lab A-6: Landing on the Moon

Lab A-7: Orbiting Snowballs

Lab A-8: Hunting for Space Flight History

Chapter 3: Geology

Lab G-1: Weighing in on Minerals

Lab G-2: Knowing Mohs

Lab G-3: Classifying Rocks and Geologic Role

Lab G-4: Unearthing History

Lab G-5: Drilling through the Ages

Lab G-6: Hunting Through the Sand

Lab G-7: Shaking Things Up

Lab G-8: Mounting Magma

Chapter 4: Meteorology

Lab M-1: Wondering about Water

Lab M-2: Dealing with Pressure

Lab M-3: Phasing in Changes

Lab M-4: Sweating about Science

Lab M-5: Lining up in Front

Lab M-6: Dewing Science

Lab M-7: Deciphering a Weather Map

Lab M-8: Watching the Weather

Chapter 5: Physical Oceanography

Lab O-1: Piling up the Water

Lab O-2: Layering around on the Beach

Lab O-3: Changing Lunar Tides

Lab O-4: Sinking Film Canisters

Lab O-5: Barging Down the River

Lab O-6: Toying with Buoyancy

Lab O-7: Toying with Density

Lab O-8: Diving into the Depths

Appendix A: Materials Lists for Labs

Appendix B: Additional Activities and Strategies

Predicting the Future

Pretest for Earth Science

Earth Science Bingo

Panel of Five

The Legend of Orion the Hunter

Tic-Tac-Know

Edible Stalactites and Stalagmites

Vocabulary of Geology Notes

Periodic Puns

Weather Instrument Project

Density Concept Flow Map

Sink a Sub Project

Science Experiment Project

Science Trivia

The Poetry of Earth Science

Oh, the Science-Related Places You Could Go

Posttest for Earth Science

Appendix C: Student Assessment and Procedural Documents

Science Safety Rules

Lab Notebook Cover Page

Lab Report Guidelines and Lab Grading Rubric

Self-Evaluation Tool

Index


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National Standards Correlation

This resource has 24 correlations with the National Standards.  
[VIEW CORRELATIONS]

This resource has 24 correlations with the National Standards.  
[HIDE CORRELATIONS]

  • Earth Science
    • Properties of earth materials
      • Earth materials are solid rocks and soils, water, and the gases of the atmosphere.
      • The varied Earth materials have different physical and chemical properties, which make them useful in different ways, for example, as building materials, as sources of fuel, or for growing the plants we use as food.
      • Soils have properties of color and texture, capacity to retain water, and ability to support the growth of many kinds of plants, including those in our food supply.
    • Changes in earth and sky
      • The surface of the earth changes.
      • Some changes to the surface of the Earth are due to slow processes, such as erosion and weathering
      • Some changes to the surface of the Earth are due to rapid processes, such as landslides, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes
      • Weather changes from day to day and over the seasons.
      • Objects in the sky have patterns of movement.
      • The sun appears to move across the sky in the same way every day, but its path changes slowly over the seasons.
      • The moon moves across the sky on a daily basis much like the sun.
      • The observable shape of the moon changes from day to day in a cycle that lasts about a month.
    • Earth in the solar system
      • The earth is the third planet from the sun in a system that includes the moon, the sun, eight other planets and their moons, and smaller objects, such as asteroids and comets. (5-8)
      • The sun, an average star, is the central and largest body in the solar system. (5-8)
      • Most objects in the solar system are in regular and predictable motion. (5-8)
      • The motions of most objects in the solar system explain such phenomena as the day, the year, phases of the moon, and eclipses.
      • Gravity is the force that keeps planets in orbit around the sun and governs the rest of the motion in the solar system. (5-8)
      • The sun is the major source of energy for phenomena on the earth's surface, such as growth of plants, winds, ocean currents, and the water cycle. (5-8)
  • Teaching Standards
    • Teachers of science plan an inquiry-based science program for their students.
      • Select science content and adapt and design curricula to meet the interests, knowledge, understanding, abilities, and experiences of students.
      • Select teaching and assessment strategies that support the development of student understanding and nurture a community of science learners.
    • Teachers of science guide and facilitate learning. In doing this, teachers
      • Encourage and model the skills of scientific inquiry, as well as the curiosity, openness to new ideas and data, and skepticism that characterize science.
      • Challenge students to accept and share responsibility for their own learning.
    • Teachers provide students with the time, space, and resources needed to learn science.
      • Structure the time available so that students are able to engage in extended investigations.
      • Create a setting for student work that is flexible and supportive of science inquiry.
      • Ensure a safe working environment.


Published Reviews

Author Catherine Oates-Bockenstedt is a middle school earth science teacher, and the focus of the book is as a supplement to the earth science curriculum for grades 6-9. It has 33 detailed labs and 17 detailed projects that are correlated with National Science Education Standards and Benchmarks for Science Literacy. Each lesson builds on the next lesson and a strong foundation of content knowledge is imperative from the beginning. Earth science teachers will find it most useful, but all science teachers can gain something from it.

Readers won’t have to read the book cover-to-cover; however, a thorough understanding of the first chapter is imperative because the chapter sets up procedures that need to be reinforced from the beginning to maintain consistency with lab formats and procedures. Labs and procedures follow the same pattern for each chapter after that.

What did I like best about the book?

-Organization. The book is very organized, but the teacher/reader must buckle down and have a thorough understanding of the first chapter and provide that same understanding and consistency DAILY for the students to have lab notebooks set up correctly. Procedures are established and must be reinforced.
-Page references are everywhere. If you should forget anything or need a reminder, you will never have to look too far. All that is needed is on the page you are reading including the page you may need to refer to in case you forgot. Everything is spelled out for the reader including how to title something and charts that should be used or distributed.
-Great kick-off activities. Very practical and usable beginning-of-the-year activities that can benefit all science teachers.
-Web links are everywhere. I love them. The book has a supplemental Web site that is very user friendly. A Web link and a specific code is provided for each section. You view expansion activities, read about grade-level appropriate activities, download handouts, and lots of other goodies. In fact, I enjoyed the Web site more than the book. http://www.scilinks.org/
-Lab notebooks. Lab notebooks included a student/teacher contract showing acceptance of roles and responsibilities of everyone. This contract is displayed at the beginning of each notebook. LOVE IT!
-Outlines and overviews. Loved the fact that each lab/chapter contains teacher lesson plan outline, student lab notebook entries, and student handout that could easily photocopied from the book or downloaded from the website as a separate handout or printed directly to an interactive whiteboard. Each chapter was set up the same way, and each lab was set up similarly with similar questions and reflections and practice options.
-Appendices. The appendices (sp) A, B, C are nicely organized , very useful, and are referenced throughout the book. Appendix A is the materials list, Appendix B includes additional activities and strategies that were very helpful, and Appendix C contains assessments and any procedural documents.
-Vocabulary. Page 1 of the lab notebook is a Taxonomy of Science Words. Students would continue to complete that taxonomy as the year progresses. GREAT IDEA!

What I didn’t like about the book?

-Dry. It was a pretty dry read, and had I been in the book store and flipped through the pages, I would have returned the book rather quickly. Outside of the cover of the book, there is nothing that grabs you and sucks you in. You would have to be a teacher and know precisely what you are looking for and look carefully as you peruse the book.
-Special needs students. There are expansion activities that state modifications and accommodations for special needs kids or kids that may need additional time, but I never felt as though accommodations for lower level students were fairly represented. For every chapter I read, I kept questioning whether or not my lower level students would be able to complete such labs.

The bottom line:

The price of $27.95 seems to be a reasonable price, but the book isn’t too exciting or it didn’t have anything that held my interest for very long. It didn’t feel like a book that MUST be in my collection, and I didn’t feel as though I had a wealth of new information. If the book happens to be there, I will take a look at it, but it is not a book to go out of your way for. The Web site was much more exciting and had much more to offer than the book itself. There are books that I have read that have had major impacts on me as a teacher that will be kept in the collection forever. This book is not one of those books. This is just one of many books that crossed my path with no major impact—positive or negative. I read it and picked up a few good ideas from reading it, but it didn’t inspire or motivate me.

Amanda H. Barnett earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Sociology with a Minor in Health Education from the College of Charleston and pursued careers in the medical/health sciences field. She was accepted to pharmacy school when she chaperoned a middle school field trip and realized working with teens was her calling. Barnett received Master of Arts in Teaching in Elementary Education grades 1-8. She has been teaching 7th grade in South Carolina ever since. Barnett is a member of Inside the School’s advisory board.
Inside the School


Customer Reviews
Great but needs answer key!
  Reviewed by: Allison Tuckman (Matawan, NJ) on April 12, 2010
  Great book with great activities but no answer key provided...

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