Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Wednesday, 31 August, 2010

This is HL 3. Follow all written directions.

Students will be able to:
use the information from the laboratory activities to
-explain the necessary parts of a laboratory write-up.
-use the laboratory write-up to record an experiment.

Students completed the lab write up for the Mexican Jumping bean and the effects of heat experiment.

Home learning 3 can be found at the top of this blog. Follow all written instructions.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Tuesday, 20 August, 2011

This is HL 2. Answer on your own paper to submit, but write on this sheet to check your work and place in your notebook.

Students will be able to:
use the information from the text and a hands on experiment to
-explain the necessary parts of a laboratory write-up.
-use the laboratory write-up to record an experiment.

Students learned how to write up a laboratory report. You will place a copy of the lab format in your interactive notebook, so that you can refer to it as you complete your lab write-ups.

The experiment detailed discovering how heat affected the movement of a Mexican Jumping Bean.

Home learning 3 can be found at the top of this blog.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Thursday, 25 August, 2011

This is HL 1. Be sure to follow all written directions.

Students will be able to:
use the information from the text to
-differentiate between the steps of a scientific process.

Students do not yet have textbooks, so for right now, we are reading and studying the text via the overhead LCD projector.

Students have been learning about the skills necessary for scientists to make discoveries. The notes include:

What skills do scientists use?

Science is a way of learning abut the natural world.

Scientists use skills such as observing, inferring, predicting, classifying, evaluating, and making models to study the world.

Observing means using one or more of your senses to gather information. It also means using tools, such as a microscope to help your senses. Observations can be either quantitative which deals with numbers or amounts, or qualitative, which deals with descriptions that cannot be expressed in numbers.

Inferring is when you explain or interpet the thing you observe. It is not guessing. Inferences are based on reasoning from what you already know or based on assumptions you make about your observations.

Predicting means making a statement or a claim about what will happen in the future based on past experience or evidence.

Classifying is the grouping together of items that are alike in some way.

Evaluating involves comparing observations and data to reach a conclusion about them.

Making models nvolves creating representations of complex objects or processes. Some models can be touches, such as a map. OThers are in the form of mathematical equations or computer programs. Models help people study things that can’t be observed directly.

Home learning 1, due tomorrow, can be found at the top of this blog. Be sure to follow directions!

Thursday, 25 August, 2011

Monday, August 22, 2011

Monday, 22 August, 2011

Welcome to Dr. Gayden's Eighth Grade Science Class!

Come to this site to find out what we do daily (or almost daily). Come here to find your home learning assignments or to see if you need to visit the podomatic site for a make-up lab.

Have a great and successful year!