A comprehensive review lesson covering Earth's water distribution, fossil records in rock layers, plate tectonics, and the water cycle to prepare students for the Unit 4 Quiz.
Students analyze the causes and consequences of deforestation, mapping habitat fragmentation and designing collaborative, science-based conservation solutions.
Students investigate the rainforest as a massive climate-control engine, analyzing how evapotranspiration regulates weather and how trees act as vital global carbon sinks.
Students explore the structural layers of the rainforest (forest floor, understory, canopy, emergent layer) and model biodiversity and physical conditions across these strata.
An investigative project-based lesson for 7th-grade students exploring Massachusetts marine ecosystems. Students choose a local coastal ecosystem, research resident species, analyze competitive and symbiotic interactions, and demonstrate understanding of resource availability.
A dynamic lesson introducing the five core forms of energy: kinetic, potential, thermal, chemical, and electrical. This lesson utilizes highly engaging visual slides and structured templates to help students compare, contrast, and identify energy transformations.
Synthesize understanding of physical structures and their maintenance functions through a comprehensive unit assessment and system-interdependence challenge.
An in-depth comparative exploration of how specialized human and plant structures—such as the circulatory/digestive systems and vascular tissues—work to maintain homeostasis and promote growth.
Students discover how cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems form a hierarchical structural design in multicellular organisms, behaving like individual building blocks that combine into functional structures.
A hands-on, highly visual lesson where students explore artificial selection by roleplaying as breeders and farmers. Students analyze traits in dogs, crops, and livestock using scaffolded organizers, visual task cards, and matching tasks.
A guided inquiry lesson exploring pushes, pulls, contact forces, and balanced vs. unbalanced forces through everyday concrete examples and DOK 2-3 analysis questions.
An adapted science lesson and assessment packet designed specifically for 4th-grade WIDA Level 1 (Entering) English Language Learners focusing on energy conversions. Includes visual vocab support, simplified questions, and structured sentence frame writing aids.
An adapted 4th-grade science assessment unit on energy conversions designed specifically for WIDA Level 1 (Entering) English Language Learners. It includes a highly visual student test and a companion teacher guide with oral scripts and scaffolded support.
A high-energy, collaborative computer science escape challenge designed for the last day of school. Students work in pairs to solve funny, CS-themed logic and debugging puzzles to save the computer lab from a playful system glitch.
A creative science project lesson where students design a travel brochure or guided tour for a real-world ecosystem, integrating ecology concepts like biodiversity, disruptions, and conservation.
A project-based unit where 7th-grade life science students act as Sustainable Travel Consultants, researching an ecosystem, analyzing limiting resources and ecological disruptions, and designing a low-impact eco-tourism project aligned with Massachusetts standards.
A custom accommodated quiz pack on genetics, designed specifically for students with reading, writing, math, and executive functioning challenges. Includes a highly scaffolded student quiz and a comprehensive teacher answer key with pedagogical guidance.
A scaffolded 2-page assessment and corresponding answer key covering prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, including bacteria, plant, animal, and human cells. Features visual matching, labeling with word banks, sentence frames, and guided sentence starters, scaled to 50 points total.
A highly visual, scaffolded assessment and corresponding answer key covering atmospheric layers, resource classification, carbon footprints, biological levels, trophic webs, ice proxies, and photosynthesis.
Students evaluate ecosystem research reports and online science media for credibility, bias, and scientific evidence using a scientific evaluation framework.
Students model trophic levels, analyze the 10% ecological efficiency rule, and solve ecological energy calculations.
Students investigate the difference between biotic and abiotic factors, explore how they interact within local ecosystems, and design an anchor chart to map these connections.
An 8th-grade exploratory lesson on diverse, non-traditional, and underrepresented careers in STEM. Students challenge stereotypes, analyze cutting-edge career profiles, complete a hands-on station rotation, and discover their own STEM archetypes.
An integrated science and social studies lesson exploring how regional ecosystems and native species supported historical Indigenous communities across North America. Students analyze the ecological relationships and cultural adaptations of three distinct regions.
A comprehensive 7th-grade lesson on basic external plant structures (roots, stems, leaves, flowers) and reproductive flower parts (stamen, pistil, pollen, petals). Includes a visual matching worksheet and a teacher answer key.
An immersive, self-directed survival simulation where students work in teams to solve creative engineering and resource-management challenges. Designed to keep the entire classroom deeply engaged and collaborative while the teacher conducts one-on-one sessions.
A lesson exploring how physical and behavioral traits help organisms survive in their environments, featuring a video documentary review and diagnostic summary.
A multi-day, scaffolded special education lesson plan on artificial selection (MS-LS4-5). Includes a simplified visual presentation, graphic organizers with sentence frames, illustrated vocabulary cards, a hands-on sorting task, and a comprehensive teacher guide.
A hands-on paper modeling lab where middle school students explore Mendel's laws of inheritance. Students flip coins to determine alleles, build paper monsters based on genotypes and phenotypes, and complete Punnett squares to predict inheritance outcomes.
A highly engaging digital lesson where students step into the shoes of organisms, exploring ecological levels (organism, population, community) and biotic/abiotic factors through narrative writing choice boards and a structured brainstorming graphic organizer.
A 5th grade research and presentation project based on EL Education Module 4. Students select a natural disaster focus, conduct research using provided expert articles, organize their findings, and choose to present via a Slide Show, Skit, or Newsroom report.
An interactive exploration of asteroids, comets, meteoroids, and dwarf planets, focusing on their physical compositions, eccentric orbital pathways, and origins in the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud.
A hands-on station rotation lab where middle school students analyze planetary gravity, scale distances, and atmospheric conditions through inquiry-based activities.
An immersive entrepreneurship lesson where students become 'venture detectives' to investigate local businesses, analyzing how they started, their revenue streams, and their growth strategies.
A hands-on, highly engaging, low-cost end-of-year science unit designed for 6th-grade students of lower academic levels. It features simplified, visual step-by-step guides for independent, sensory-rich experiments exploring kitchen chemistry, forces, and density.
An immersive lesson exploring the core principles of natural selection: variation, overproduction, adaptation, and differential survival. Students engage with visual slides and companion guided notes to understand how populations change over time.
A science unit exploring five powerful natural disasters. Students read highly structured, scaffolded articles at both third-grade and fifth-grade reading levels, practice key vocabulary, and complete comprehension checks with sentence frames and starters.