A comprehensive 8th-grade STAAR review lesson focusing on Newton's Laws, force, motion, and energy calculations. Students will engage with lab scenarios, visual models, and practice questions aligned to Texas TEKS 8.6A, 8.6B, and 8.6C.
Students dive deeper into coding by exploring variables and loops through tournament statistics, team scores, and game-time data analysis.
Students learn the basics of computational thinking, focusing on algorithms and sequencing by designing basketball plays and tournament brackets.
A creative project-based lesson where students research and design an educational poster about a specific global biome, focusing on adaptations, food webs, and conservation. Now expanded to include an informative research paper component.
This lesson uses the familiar concept of Pokémon evolution to teach special education students about biological adaptations and natural selection. Students will explore how traits help organisms survive in different environments and design their own adapted creatures.
An engaging special education lesson exploring the evidence of evolution through the lens of pocket monsters. Students examine fossils, body structures, and DNA to understand how monsters change over time.
A 4-day hands-on engineering challenge where students design and build a device that demonstrates Newton's three laws of motion using low-cost recycled materials. Students progress through research, blueprinting, prototyping, testing, and a final reflection on the physics at play.
An introductory lesson on Python operators designed for 8th-grade students with ADHD and math challenges. The lesson focuses on conceptual understanding through visual analogies and 'Code Command' mission-based tasks, minimizing complex mental arithmetic.
A comprehensive introduction to the structure and function of DNA, featuring reading passages, diagramming activities, and assessment questions.
Explore the magic of soil texture with Applejack! This lesson teaches students how to identify sand, silt, and clay, and how to master the soil texture triangle to classify different types of earth.
A culminating lesson where students compare wind and solar energy using graphic organizers and analyze real-world energy output data to understand reliability and efficiency.
A lesson exploring solar energy technology, including photovoltaic and thermal systems, energy transformation from light to heat/electricity, and solar energy vocabulary.
An introductory lesson on wind energy focusing on the mechanics of turbines, energy transformations from kinetic to electrical, and the trade-offs of wind power.
A lesson exploring non-Mendelian inheritance patterns, specifically focusing on how alleles interact in incomplete dominance and codominance through visual modeling and Punnett squares.
A hands-on exploration of force using air rockets, where kindergarteners learn about pushes and how the strength of a push changes an object's motion.
A foundational science lesson for Kindergarteners covering plant anatomy and the essential requirements for plant growth through simple reading passages and visual aids.
Exploration of convection currents in fluids and a final comparison of all three heat transfer methods. Includes a teacher-led demonstration of convection in water and a summary activity.
Introduction to thermal energy and the mechanisms of conduction and radiation. Includes a teacher-led demonstration of heat traveling through solids and radiant energy from a light source.
Students identify the three types of heat transfer and explain how thermal energy moves from warmer matter to cooler matter using real-world examples.
Students apply their knowledge of heat transfer through a hands-on lab experiment involving three stations representing conduction, convection, and radiation. They will collect data and compare the efficiency and direction of heat transfer in each model.
A deep dive into the major human body systems, focusing on how they interact to keep us alive and moving. Students will explore the skeletal, muscular, respiratory, circulatory, and digestive systems through collaborative activities.
A comprehensive set of materials focusing on the global freshwater crisis, designed to help students identify cause-and-effect relationships within complex environmental systems. Students will analyze the drivers of water scarcity, its global impact, and potential technological and policy solutions.
A lesson focused on animal characteristics and habitats, helping students build descriptive vocabulary.
A comprehensive 45-minute introductory lesson on renewable and non-renewable energy sources, designed for a substitute teacher. This lesson prepares middle school students for hands-on engineering projects like wind blades and solar ovens.
An introduction to biological classification, covering the three domains of life, the six kingdoms, and the hierarchical levels of taxonomy from domain to species.
A hands-on exploration of surface tension using paperclips and water. Students challenge the law of gravity by making metal float and then investigate what breaks the 'skin' of water.
An interactive exploration of Newton's Laws of Motion through hands-on experimentation with balloon-powered rockets. Students will investigate how force impacts distance and velocity.
A lesson focusing on the external anatomy of ray-finned fish using a technical blueprint aesthetic. Students will identify key structures like fins, the lateral line, and the operculum.