A google site that has a lesson plan for UT.SEEd.6.2.1, UT.SEEd.6.2.2, UT.SEEd.6.2.3, and UT.SEEd.6.2.4.
- Subject:
- Science
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Provider:
- Jordan School District
- Date Added:
- 10/24/2021
A google site that has a lesson plan for UT.SEEd.6.2.1, UT.SEEd.6.2.2, UT.SEEd.6.2.3, and UT.SEEd.6.2.4.
The cover picture was made by myself through canvaThis is a unit plan for Genius Hour Project.
Students will discover that solid particles when heated will expand.
This is an interactive, sixth-grade Nearpod lesson tied to SEEd standard 6.2.3. It guides students through information and activities about thermal energy of objects.
This resource is a student-ready, three-dimensional SEEd science lesson you can add to your Nearpod library. Many of the phenomena, text, and images come from UEN OER textbooks, Seedstorylines.org, ck12.org, and pixabay.com. Most videos are from youtube.com or pbslearningmedia.org. Many of the simulations were found at phet.colorado.edu, ck12.org, and pbslearningmedia.org. This lesson is unique to Nebo School District but was built with the help of many amazing ideas from teachers throughout Utah.
Students can more easily see the expansion of liquids than solids. This activity allows them to compare the expansion of three liquids in a demonstration activity.
Nearpod version of UT.SEEd.6.2.3-UT.SEEd.6.2.4 Episode 1 from seedstorylines.org. Students conduct a controlled experiment to explain the difference between thermal energy and temperature.
Nearpod version of UT.SEEd.6.2.3-UT.SEEd.6.2.4 Episode 2 from seedstorylines.org. Students develop arguments on the difference between heat and temperature. Arguments are based on the controlled experiment conducted in Nearpod UT.SEEd.6.2.3-UT.SEEd.6.2.4 Episode 1.
Phenomenon-based, 5E lessons that align to the SEEd standards. Lesson folders include lesson plans, a slideshow, and supporting materials for teaching the lesson to your students.
6th Grade SEEd textbook for the 2022-2023 school year. This textbook was developed to align to the Utah Science with Engineering Education (SEEd) Standards. (Added: June 8, 2022)