A biological science lesson where students learn the sequence of a viral infection and the body's defensive responses through a SciShow Kids video and creative comic strip storytelling.
A third-grade lesson aligned with OpenSciEd Lesson 8, focusing on identifying patterns in dog breeds (traits, environments, and behaviors) and synthesizing findings into a Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) scientific explanation.
An engineering and physics lesson where students design, build, and test magnetic mazes to explore magnetic forces and the Engineering Design Process. Students investigate magnetic permeability and iterate on their designs to solve navigational challenges.
An upper elementary STEM lesson where students explore magnetic fields, poles, and non-contact forces by designing and building a physical magnet maze. Includes visual slides, a hands-on student design guide, and a comprehensive teacher lesson plan.
A highly engaging, hands-on lesson teaching the importance of precision, clarity, and chronological sequencing through the classic "Exact Instructions Challenge" using Marshmallow Fluff and Jelly. Students write step-by-step instructions, and the teacher follows them verbatim, humorously demonstrating how easily vague directions can go sticky.
An inquiry-based science lesson where third graders engineer custom soil mixtures, test properties like absorbency, and explore global soil origins and characteristics.
A multi-subject activity suite for third graders centered around building and playing in classroom blanket forts. Includes math, science, creative writing, reading, and team communication challenges that require minimal prep and create zero mess.
An engaging third-grade lesson where students act as canine talent scouts, observing physical and behavioral traits to predict and match dogs with specialized jobs.
A highly differentiated 30-minute lesson where students act as 'Placement Officers' for the Pup Placement Agency. They analyze physical and behavioral traits of dog candidates and match them with appropriate service dog jobs, aligning with the OpenSciEd Grade 3 Trait Variation unit.
An engaging exploration of renewable and non-renewable natural resources, fossil fuels, and local conservation efforts through field-guide inspired readings, assessments, interactive sorting, and local mapping exercises.
An engaging, kid-friendly lesson introducing 2nd graders to the wonders of electricity, exploring its discovery, how it works through simple circuits, and how it is generated safely.
A hands-on science lesson for 3rd and 4th grade students focused on classifying animals into vertebrates and invertebrates. Students learn to distinguish between arthropods, mollusks, worms, amphibians, reptiles, fish, mammals, and birds using key physical characteristics.
A hands-on engineering and design project where students sketch, build, and decorate a miniature beach chair using popsicle sticks, fabric, and paint. Includes a comprehensive student-facing project packet with milestone checklist and a teacher grading rubric.
Master sensory language and persuasive advertising techniques by designing an original ice cream flavor, brand logo, and marketing pitch.
Explore states of matter, heat transfer, and freezing-point depression by making homemade ice cream in a bag using ice, salt, and cream.
Apply fraction multiplication and division to scale ice cream recipes up and down, converting fluid ounces, cups, and tablespoons.
Trace the historical origins of frozen desserts from ancient China and Rome to modern day, mapping how ingredients like vanilla, sugar, and cacao traveled globally.
A visual-first exploration of the water cycle designed for 3rd-grade students, featuring clear step-by-step instructions and comprehension checks optimized for students with hearing loss.
Students explore the fundamentals of heredity by distinguishing between inherited traits and learned behaviors. This lesson uses real-world examples from the plant and animal kingdoms to illustrate how traits are passed down through generations.
A comprehensive research and presentation project where students become wildlife experts, investigating a wild animal of their choice and creating a digital slide deck to share their findings.
A lesson focusing on ecosystem vocabulary including producers, consumers, and energy flow through food chains and pyramids. Includes tiered materials for elementary and middle school levels.
An enriching alternative to the Unit 2 opinion writing piece. Students act as conservation agents, creating a Public Service Announcement (PSA) to advocate for the protection of an endangered pollinator.
Focuses on the transformation and physical characteristics of butterflies based on the text 'A Butterfly Is Patient.' Students explore the life cycle stages and start to connect these stages to the butterfly's role as a pollinator.
A foundational lesson on food chains across various ecosystems, specifically designed for special education students. Includes visual-heavy instruction on producers, consumers, and decomposers.