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Charlotte McDonald

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Title: Charlotte McDonald


1
Scientists Notebook
2
Students Model the way that a Scientist Works
  • Each scientists notebook is unique to that
    person, that experiment, that situation
  • The notebook is a collection of thoughts, ideas,
    sketches, data, equations a running record of
    the scientists thoughts
  • It is not necessarily organized or neat
  • There is no right way or format

3
What is the purpose Scientists Notebooks?
  1. Means for students to think scientifically
    content, skills and thinking.
  2. Learn expository writing structures.
  3. Communicate scientific thinking and
    understanding.
  4. Formative assessment.

4
Who is the Audience for the Science Notebook?
  • Teacher
  • Parents
  • Students
  • Principal
  • Other Scientists

5
LETS GET STARTED
  • Cover or Title Page
  • Give your science notebook a title.
  • This should give the reader an idea of what this
    notebook will be about.

6
  • Organization
  • Of Science Notebooks
  • Table of Contents
  • Numbered Pages
  • Documentation of Work
  • Glossary and/or Index
  • Appendix for inserts or rubrics to be used for
    assessment

7
(No Transcript)
8
TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • Use the first 1-5 pages for the Table of
    Contents
  • DATE ACTIVITY/TITLE
    PAGE
  • How to set up a science
  • notebook.

9
Number your pages

1
10
Number through 10

2
3
11
Index References Vocabulary
  • Example

12
Word Bank
  • Use Word Cards (rather than a chart)
  • Place a word card in the science word bank
    after students have had a concrete experience
    with something and have a need to know the
    appropriate term.
  • Inquiry based science students scientific
    vocabulary AFTER they have had concrete
    experiences.

13
Use of Words in Bank
  • Organize words conceptually rather than
    alphabetically or randomly
  • Words can be reorganized as concepts grow.
  • Anticipate words and prepare cards ahead of time
    plus have blank word cards ready.
  • Generic terminology Primary I predict, I
    observe, I notice, because, evidence, and fair
    test. Intermediate predict/prediction,
    observe/observation, investigate/investigation,
    infer/inference, controlled investigation,
    variable
  • Color code words by unit
  • Include icons with words

14
More on Vocabulary
  • For younger students tape an example of the
    word on the card
  • Accessible for young students make multiple
    small word cards for students to manipulate and
    use for writing
  • Hang low and make large
  • Life Science labeling illustrations with words
    is more effective than work banks. Use different
    colors for form and function.

15
Example Scientific Illustration
16
Quick Write
  • Write down everything you can about how to change
    matter.
  • Include examples that explain how matter is
    changed.

17
Generic Notebook Requirements
  • Date in numerals, the first page of the entry.
  • Focus or investigative question for each lesson.
    How can matter be changed? Give examples.
  • Write something about each science lesson.
  • Write legibly (not necessarily best
    handwriting) the notebook is a running rough
    draft.

18
BEFORE..
Concept maps
KWL KLEW
Anticipation guide
Quick writes
Visualizations
I Know/ I Wonder chart
Formative Assessment Probes
FQR
During
19
Objects Temperature
  • Read Objects and Temperature and write your
    answer on page 109.

20
Black Plates
  • Add Black Plates title to notebook page.
  • Add to Table of Contents
  • Write observations in notebook
  • http//www.learner.org/vod/vod_window-cc.html?pid
    2219 Writing in Science video

21
Observation Frame
  • Think of the four senses (not taste)
  • Size, shape, color, lines, patterns, texture,
    weight, smell/odor, sound, behavior
  • I observed ________________
  • I noticed __________________

22
Developing the focus question
  • Students ask themselves
  • What do I want to find out?
  • What is the reason for my question?
  • What problem am I addressing?
  • TEACHER asks
  • What is our problem?
  • What do we want to know or find out?

23
THE FOCUS QUESTION
  • What will be the main focus of the inquiry?
  • What, How and Doesare good beginnings
  • Students may need to be prompted or given an
    example or a list to chose from.
  • or
  • Showing the materials to students and asking
    questions like" What can we find out
    about..by using these materials?
  • or
  • Ask questions like What might we want to find
    out about..?
  • or
  • An engaging scenario

24
Example Black Plates Question Observation
  • Using an ice cube (solid), how much longer will
    it take an ice cube to melt on the cold block -A,
    as compared to one put on the warm block - B?
  • Observations record what you observe in your
    notebook. Enter in Table of Contents. Include
    the date on each page.
  • How will you record the comparative observations?

25
What do we need to answer our question?
  • What do we want to measure?
  • Temperature of blocks (start finish)
  • Mass of the blocks
  • Melting time
  • Conductivity
  • other

26
Creating Using Tables
  • Students create own rather than using black-line
    masters develops valuable scientific skill of
    organizing
  • Do not use a laborious measuring process
  • Model folding the paper vertically so creases
    form columns. Can draw lines by using creases or
    straight edge.
  • Use questioning to develop what data is to be
    collected in the table.
  • Use Box and T-Chart for Comparisons (may need a
    shared mini writing lesson.

27
Scaffolding for Writing
  • Use Box and T-Chart for Comparisons (may need a
    shared mini writing lesson)
  • Black Plates
  • Same or Similar
  • Different
  • A B
  • heavy light

Black,
28
Thermal Conduction
  • Transfer of thermal energy through matter from a
    region of higher temperature to a region of lower
    temperature.
  • Word cited in notebook index.
  • Word highlighted on page.

29
Thermal Conductivity of Materials
Material Thermal Conductivity (W/m-K)
Cement .29
Air 0.025
Water (liquid) 0.6
Glass 1.1
Aluminum 200
Gold 318
Copper 380
Plastic 0.16
30
Prediction
  • A statement about something that will occur in
    the future that is related to the focus question.
  • A statement that is based upon prior knowledge or
    experience.
  • I think_____________ will happen because
  • Use drawings and illustrations

31
Hypothesis
  • Statement based on an analysis of data or events
    that have occurred in the past.
  • Example An examination of past weather patterns
    with an analysis of temperature changes over a
    period of time and the factors that may have
    contributed to such change. From this a
    scientists can make a hypothesis about global
    warming.
  • Ifthenbecause.

32
Planning
Planning Step General Plan Steps to follow
1. What should be changed? 1. The kind of black (A B) 1. Find the temperature of each block.
2. What should be kept the same? Mass of ice cube, timer, thermometer, room temperature, and temperature of the blocks Mass ice cubes, place one cube on each block, start timer, record data, take temperature of blocks when ice is melted.
3. How will differences be observed or measured? 4. The time that is takes for energy transfer. 3. Chart the data for each block.
33
Time for a break!
34
Test your question and collect data
Block A Block B
Starting temp.
Final temp.
Time for ice to melt 238
Conductivity
35
THE CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE
  • What do you claim to be true?
  • How can you prove what you are stating? (Back it
    up)
  • I know this to be true because I observed
  • I claim that when , then .. (happens)

claims evidence
Use your data to make a claim Support your claim with evidence
Put claims and evidence in chart form
36
Claims and Evidence
Claims Evidence
I clam that. The aluminum block transfers energy faster and melts the ice faster than the plastic block. I know that. I claim this because..it took ____minutes for the ice to melt on the aluminum block and ____ to melt on the plastic block. I know this because.
37
THE MAKING MEANING CONFERENCE
V I T A L
  • Make your thinking public
  • Class discussion
  • Turn and Talk
  • Discussions can be small group or whole class
  • Students should revisit and revise their claims
    and evidence

38
Line of Leaning
  • This strategy allows students to add to their
    written ideas with additional ideas generated in
    class.
  • After writing their own ideas in their notebooks,
    students draw a line underneath their work.
  • During class discussion, students add new ideas
    below their line of learning.
  • The Line of Learning gives students the
    opportunity to continue to construct a concept
    through the discussion and ideas of other
    students.

39
Support a Theory
  • How does this investigation explain the
    molecular-kinetic theory of matter?
  • Write your ideas in your notebook.
  • Apply the Line of Learning
  • Discussion Turn Talk or Buddy Share
  • Write more or new information from the discussion
    below your Line of Learning

40
Writing Conclusions
  • Links the claims and evidence plus can apply
    science concepts.
  • Addresses the prediction, answers the focus
    question or the solution to the problem
    identified.
  • Describes what was learned from the
    investigation. I learned, We found
  • Extend learning with after reading strategies
  • Make connections to real world applications

41
Its not the experience that makes the
learning. Its the reflection on that
experience.
42
Reflection Next Steps, New Questions
  • Develop investigable questions through scaffolds
    such as What? Which? How?
  • Use Reflection Strategies (hand-out) and
    Reflective Writing Starters (hand-out) to elicit
    student reflections on the investigation.
  • Example I wonder what would happen if..

43
Support a variety of literacy skills in the
science classroom
  • Comprehension strategies
  • Written and Oral Communication skill
  • Vocabulary development (glossary)
  • Expository reading and writing skills
  • Sharing thinking (Making Meaning Conference)
  • Supporting ideas with evidence (Claims and
    Evidence)

44
A vehicle to drive scientific inquiry
  • Moves the focus away
  • from the
  • traditional experiment/ lab report
  • format

45
Teach and Re-teach Situation
  • Drives instruction by monitoring student
    performance

Weaknesses
Strengths
  • Misconceptions
  • Understandings

46
Students use notebooks during class
  • As a guide and/or reference
  • As a place to record
  • data,
  • observations,
  • illustrations,
  • reflections
  • questions,
  • ideas while working
  • As a place to collect and record claims and
    evidence to support their inquiry
  • To make thinking visible
  • To document their organizational growth over time
  • Notebooks
  • make
  • students
  • accountable
  • for
  • their
  • learning

47
Using the Scientists Notebook
Activating prior knowledge Asking question
Before.
  • Thinking strategies

During.
  • Entries from the notebook template

After..
  • Content reading and writing related to inquiry
  • Making connections

48
BEFORE..
Concept maps
KWL KLEW
Anticipation guide
Quick writes
Visualizations
I Know/ I Wonder chart
Formative Assessment Probes
FQR
During
49
DURINGImplementing the scientists notebook
template
  • Focus questions
  • Predictions
  • Planning (not detailed or copied)
  • Data/observations
  • Claims and evidence
  • Making Meaning Conference
  • Conclusions

After
5
50
AFTER ..
  • Summarizing
  • Reflections
  • Making connections
  • Note taking from a reading
  • Key word/key idea drawings
  • Compare/contrast charts
  • VIP/MVP
  • Information circles
  • Revisit KWL and I wonder charts

Next
8
51
Students Guide to Scientists Notebook
  • TITLE OF LESSON
  • FOCUS QUESTION (Big Idea)
  • What do you have to investigate or figure out in
    this lesson that is related to the big idea?
  • What will be the main question that will guide
    your learning?
  • What, How, Does are good beginnings
  • PREDICTION/ HYPOTHESIS
  • What do you think will happen (USING PRIOR
    KNOWLEDGE)
  • If I do then will happen because
  • I think because
  • PLANNING
  • (Dont rewrite procedures- use if you need to
    design a procedure)
  • DATA
  • Record the data in a way that will make sense to
    you later
  • Paragraph, Bullets, Table/Chart, Drawings,
    Graphs, etc.
  • Title and label diagrams and pictures
  • Measurements should be specific, accurate, and
    units labeled
  • NEVER erase your work Simply cross out any
    errors
  • CLAIMS AND EVIDENCE
  • MAKING MEANING CONFERENCE
  • Make your thinking public in a class discussion
  • Turn and Talk
  • CONCLUSION/REFLECTION
  • Restate the focus question as a topic sentence
  • In this investigation
  • In this inquiry.
  • I (we) learned that..
  • Use details from your claims and evidence (data)
    chart to answer the focus question.
  • Every claim must be supported by evidence.
  • I (we) liked/did not like because
  • My (our) prediction that..was..because.
  • This reminds me (us) of.. because.
  • I (we) discovered that..
  • Now I (we) think that.because
  • Refer back to your hypothesis
  • My hypothesis was correct/incorrect because
  • Record your thoughts after the experiment

    (Understandings, Likes, Related Thinking,
    Connections)
  • Include a summative sentence that can be a
    restatement in different words of the topic
    sentence.

Claims Evidence

52
We need a break
53
Goals for Assessment
  • Help Students Learn
  • Improve instruction

54
For Assessment feedback to be effective
  • For Assessment feedback to be effective Provide
    non judgmental remarks
  • without grades or rubric scores
  • Use only for formative assessment

55
Audience Other Scientists
  • Example Another scientist would value this
    entry because you clearly have described what you
    have observed about __________________________
    and
  • the results of your tests.
  • For example, you included the following
    scientific details ________________

56
Research by Black and Wiliam 1998
  • If pupils are given only marks or grades, they do
    not benefit from feedback.
  • Feedback improves learning when it gives each
    pupil specific guidance on strengths and
    weaknesses
  • Formative assessment benefits all students but
    increase in levels of achievement is particularly
    marked for lower achieving students.

57
When to assess Science Notebooks
  • During each lesson, check that all students are
    writing in their notebooks
  • After a series of 3-4 lessons that have been
    developing students understanding of certain
    concepts or skills (making and writing
    observations).
  • Skim through first few entries to get a general
    idea then carefully read the last entry and
    provide constructive feedback.

58
What to assess?
  • Conceptual understanding of the science content
    or big ideas of the unit.
  • Think scientifically, apply critical thinking
    skills in solving problems and developing
    conceptual understanding.
  • Use scientific skill successfully
  • Communicate scientific thinking and science
    concepts through expository writing.

59
How to Assess
  • Address specific strengths first
  • Never use the word but in constructive feedback
  • Address weaknesses by asking questions. Example
    What do you think another scientist might be
    interested in knowing about your investigation?
  • With struggling students who have low skills and
    self-esteem, address only the strengths.

60
Assessing Student Progress
  • Use entries in science notebook as a formative
    assessment tool
  • What should all students learn in this unit?
    (content skills and/or process skills)
  • How do the student science notebooks reflect
    student learning?
  • What evidence should support their
    understandings? (criteria)
  • What are the implications for further
    instruction?
  • Student self-assessment
  • Next-Step Strategies

61
Science Notebook Website
  • http//www.sciencenotebooks.org FAQ tab can
    select secondary
  • http//lhsfoss.org/fossweb/teachers/notebooks/inde
    x.html
  • Graphing websites http//nces.ed.gov/nceskids/ind
    ex.asp (create a graph) http//www.mrnussbaum.com
    /coolgraphing.htm

62
Notetaking Systems
  • http//sas.calpoly.edu/asc/ssl/notetaking.systems.
    html
  • The Cornell Method
  • The Outline Method
  • The Mapping Method
  • The Charting Method
  • The Sentence Method

63
What are the differences?
  • Journals
  • Reflections of student learning
  • Used after work is done
  • Logs
  • Books where students record data
  • Used during an investigation
  • Notebooks
  • Records planning, thinking, data and reflections
  • A tool to use before, during, and after an
    investigation

64
The Notebook
  • Determine the type of notebook
  • Composition book
  • A spiral notebook
  • A three prong paper folder
  • What type of notebook will you use?
  • Use what works in your classroom

65
Notebook tips
  • Paper clip all the pages reserved for the Table
    of Contents
  • Paste an envelope in the back of the notebook so
    students can collect pictures from the real world
    that apply to each unit of study.
  • At the end of the school year, decorate the
    notebook in collage fashion with the pictures.
  • What do you want on the supply list for start of
    year?

66
More tips
  • Highlight the vocabulary words so they can be
    easily found on the page.
  • Make a science word wall
  • Instruct students to write complete sentences
    when writing conclusions
  • Tools of science develop a chart for the
    notebook which includes Tool, Measuring, and
    Unit of measure.

67
References

Using Science Notebooks in the Elementary
Classroom By Michael P. Klentschy NSTA Press
  • Writing in Science
  • Betsy Rupp Fulwiler
  • Heinemann Press

68
References
  • Teaching Science with Interactive Notebooks by
    Kellie Marcarelli c. 2010, Corwin A Sage Company
  • Linking Science Literacy in the K-8 Classroom
    by Rowena Douglas, Michael Klentschy and Karen
    Worth, c. 2006, NSTA Press
  • Using Science Notebooks in Middle School, by
  • Michael Klentschy, c. 2010, NSTA Press

69
Time
  • The Seattle Science in Writing Project recommends
    (with research support) that you teach science
    and science writing for a minimum of 3
    hours/week two sessions of 40 to 60 minutes for
    inquiry-based science and two sessions of 20 to
    30 minutes for science writing.
  • Hundreds of Seattle teachers have seen increase
    in students achievement in science, expository
    writing, math, reading and social studies.

70
Implementation
  • 12 Tips for Implementing Integrated Science and
    Writing Approach
  • Getting Started 5 to 9 most ways to start.

71
Plans, Thoughts Questions
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