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Digital Unit Plan – Goals, Objectives and Assessments

Unit Title: Organisms and Nonliving Things are Made of Matter Name: Daniel Lee, Meghan Pantaleon, Audrey
Ostreicher, & Michael Nassen

Content Area: Science Grade Level: 7th

Next Generation Science Standards/Performance Expectations

MS-PS1-1 Matter and its Interactions

Develop models to describe the atomic composition of simple molecules and extended structures

MS-PS1-4 Matter and its Interactions

Develop a model that predicts and describes changes in particle motion, temperature, and state of a

pure substance when thermal energy is added or removed.

MS-LS2-3 Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics

Develop a model to describe the cycling of matter and flow of energy among living and nonliving parts

of an ecosystem.

MS-PS1-3 Matter and its Interactions

Gather and make sense of information to describe that synthetic materials come from natural resources and impact society.
Anchoring Phenomenon and Activity

Phenomenon: A fire has broken out at Sequoia National Park destroying all trees and wildlife in a particular area. Many years later, however, this
same area is now bustling with wildlife and with trees fully regrown despite being completely destroyed by fire.

Activity: Students will create an initial model of Sequoia National Park and describe the role of fire in maintaining its ecosystem.

A fire has broken out in a particular location at Sequoia National Park, destroying all of the plants and trees and leaving behind land that is burnt to
a crisp. After some time, however, this same area is now bustling with new plant life and growth even after the destruction caused by the fire.
Students will first be asked to observe a before and after picture of a fire that took place at a specific location in Sequoia National Park. You are a
Wildland firefighter for the National Park Service (NPS) that must propose a model to the local government that describes what has taken place and
explain the role that fire plays in the destruction and revival of the ecosystem in that specific location. This model will be revisited and revised
throughout the unit and the final model will be a summative assessment to evaluate student mastery over the content.

Driving Question of the Unit

What role does fire play in maintaining a healthy ecosystem?

Unit Goals---Describe what you want students to be able to do. For example, I wanted my students to be able to know when to use the epistemic practices when I gave them
verbal or visual cues. Students will need to be able to recognize science even if it is not in the verbal form. See the article “Outside the Pipeline: Reimagining Science Education
for Nonscientists.” A summary of the article is in the appendix of this unit plan template.

Students will be able to draw upon pre-existing knowledge to make observations and inferences regarding a certain phenomenon

Students will think like scientists by asking questions and researching to find evidence for their hypotheses

Students will engage and interpret scientific text to gather information

Students will learn how to create detailed models to show accurate representations of the systems involved

Students will be able to evaluate the work of their peers and provide encouraging feedback in an effective manner

Lesson 1 – [Atoms and Matter]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
Just How Small is an Atom? After viewing the “Just How Small is Model of a water molecule in each
an Atom?” video and completing state of matter, showing the atomic
the online atom interactive tool, components of the hydrogen and Students will figure out that
Atom interactive: students will work in pairs to build a oxygen molecules and that these atoms are the building blocks
https://ca.pbslearningmedia.org/re water molecule model in each state atoms can combine together to form of matter and make up
source/lsps07.sci.phys.matter.thea of matter, including the atomic parts a molecule. everything in our lives. They
tom/the-atom/ of the molecule, to show that atoms will also grasp the basic
are the smallest unit of matter and components and properties of
may combine and interact in various an atom. This connects to the
What do you, an apple, and the ways. anchoring phenomenon
moon have in common? because students need to
understand the molecular and
atomic composition of
substances, and start to form
wonderings if heat (energy) is
also a form of matter.

Lesson 2 – [Matter and its Interactions]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
Using a series of eight quick lab After completing the lab station
stations, students will analyze each activity, students will analyze a
station and construct explanations cookie recipe and note the physical Students will figure out the
to determine if a physical or and chemical changes that occur in difference between physical
chemical change occurred and each step. Students will use CER and chemical changes and the
identify if/how the shape and (claim, evidence, and reasoning) to various physical and chemical
structure of the substance changed. support their answers of whether properties. Students will
there is a chemical or physical understand that a chemical
change occurring. change is present when a new
(Picture is example of lab stations) substance is formed. This
connects to the anchoring
phenomenon because fire
What are the physical and provides irreversible changes
chemical changes that take place to an ecosystem and counts as
when you bake cookies? a chemical change.

Lesson 3 – [States of Matter]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
Some substances (i.e water) can Students will analyze data gathered Upon completion of lab experiment
exist as a liquid, solid, or gas. from a lab experiment with dry ice (dry ice) students’ will have a lab
and record observations of how notebook check and show that they Students begin to understand
Normally, ice melts from solid to energy flows in and out of the have recorded observations. particle motion and how it
liquid at room temperature. Dry substance resulting in different Students will then discuss in groups changes the properties of a
ice, however, does not melt from states of matter. their conclusions and make claims of substance as temperature
solid to liquid, but goes directly how they think energy flows in and changes. It relates to the
from solid to gas. out of substances in the real world anchoring phenomena because
environment. They will have a introducing heat (as in a fire)
chance to present their claims to causes particles to move faster
What happens to the particles in another group through an and react creating different
substances as they change state or argumentation session. states of matter.
change temperature?

How is it possible for dry ice to go


from solid directly to gas?
Lab experiments:

Exploring States of Matter

Lesson 4 – [Living and Nonliving Parts of an Ecosystem]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
As a fire burns through the Sequoia Students will investigate and After students explore the Through investigations of their
National Forest what parts of an analyze patterns of characteristics environment outside the classroom own environment students will
ecosystem are affected? between living and nonliving things and record their observations of see that everything, living and
through their own observations living and nonliving things, they will nonliving, are made of atoms.
outside the classroom in the outside record in their lab notebooks As far as the anchoring
What are things in the world made classroom environment. characteristics and examples of what phenomena, they have
out of? they believe to be living and expanded their knowledge of
nonliving. They will then create an what types of substances make
initial model of an ecosystem of a up the sequoias and are
forest and label the living and present in the ecosystem.
Does an ecosystem include living
nonliving parts.
and nonliving things? They can now add different
types of animals, trees, and
land masses that are affected
by a fire in the forest. This
What types of living and nonliving
evidence will show how a fire
things would be affected by a fire?
can impact a whole ecosystem
by destroying habitats.
Lesson 5 – [Matter and Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
How would the removal of 10,000 Using the KNP Complex fire incident A model of producers, consumers,
trees affect the ecosystem in report, students will develop a and decomposers in Sequoia
Sequoia National Park? model of a food web that National Park. The students will This connects to the anchoring
demonstrates the transfer of energy explain what would happen to phenomena because the trees
between producers, consumers, and consumers and decomposers if a need to be removed because
Incident Report decomposers in an ecosystem. large amount of trees(producers) they were weakened by
were removed. drought, disease, age, and/or
fire. The students figure out
the positives and negatives of
fire in an ecosystem.

Lesson 6 – [Synthetic Materials and Its Impact on Society]

Lesson Level Phenomenon and Student Learning Objective Acceptable Evidence – Formative How does this connect to the
Essential Questions (Highlight the three dimensions) and/or Summative Assessment: anchoring phenomenon?
What do the students figure
out?
How are synthetic materials made? After reading the online article and Students will perform outside
learning one way synthetic materials research and share their findings
can positively affect the through a poster presentation in a By researching the impact
synthetic materials have on
How can synthetic materials environment, students will choose a gallery walk where they can receive
species of their choice to plan and feedback from their peers. The society, students will be able to
positively and negatively impact further their understanding of
the environment? carry out investigations on the teacher can summatively assess all
effects of synthetic materials on its of the students’ models to ensure the role of fire in maintaining a
healthy ecosystem. They will
ecosystem in order to create a mastery of the content.
poster presentation that displays also learn about the role
https://www.npr.org/2021/09/20/ humans play in maintaining an
the cause and effect relationship
1038972507/california-sequoia- ecosystem through the
between synthetic materials and the
trees-general-sherman-aluminum- production of synthetic
ecosystem.
blanket materials.

Unit Summative Assessment

After multiple opportunities to revise and improve their initial models, students will submit a final model that accurately depicts the role of fire
in maintaining a healthy ecosystem. Their models will include the various systems involved as well as cause and effect relationships that portray
fire and its importance to the environment. Each lesson in the unit will serve as an opportunity for students to learn new information on how to
improve their models with more accurate representations. After learning about atoms and matter, students will be able to incorporate this
knowledge by showing that all parts of the ecosystem such as the trees, air, and fire are all composed of atoms and matter in their model. Once
they expand on this knowledge and learn more about the interactions between matter resulting in physical and chemical changes, they will be
able to display this knowledge in their model by showing that fire burning trees is a chemical change. Then students will also be able to
represent the states of matter in their model by showing that fire causes particles to move faster and create different states of matter in the
ecosystem. Students will be able to discern that all living and nonliving things have matter and that there is a constant flow of energy within the
ecosystem. They can represent this in their models by incorporating food webs to represent the levels of energy within an ecosystem and how
fire can positively or negatively impact the flow of energy in an ecosystem. Finally, students will represent in their models the impact of
synthetic materials and how humans can use synthetic materials to protect against dangerous fires that could potentially harm the ecosystem.

Upon gathering all of the necessary information, students will be able to produce a final model that is accurate in explaining the anchoring
phenomenon and its importance.

Useful Websites:

Just How Small is an Atom?

https://ca.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/lsps07.sci.phys.matter.theatom/the-atom/

Incident Report

https://www.npr.org/2021/09/20/1038972507/california-sequoia-trees-general-sherman-aluminum-blanket

https://ngss.nsta.org/

https://padlet.com/

https://classroom.google.com/

https://www.scienceworld.ca/resource/exploring-states-matter/

Review: Outside the Pipeline: Reimagining Science Education for Nonscientists Science, April 19, 2013.

Summary of the Article:

How People Interact with Science

Individuals have different motivations for using scientific information. Factors that influence the use of science include social,
cultural, and demographic differences. In addition, the type of science that is useful differs from one problem or issue to another.
Science comes in a variety of forms such as experimentation, observational data or simulations or field research. One goal of science
education is to facilitate student understanding of what forms of science are best suited for the problems that we are trying to solve.
Students will need to understand that science is a flexible philosophical and methodological human endeavor. The sub-goals of this
BIG IDEA are as follows:
● Students will need to understand the context of a problem to understand what type of methods are needed
● Students will understand and interpret the scientific principles that “speak” to the driving questions and anchoring activities
presented in the coursework. The principles will change with subject matter.
● Students will engage in ill-structured problems, defined in personal and practical terms, to practice using different principles
and epistemic practices.

Knowing Science: From Knowing the Textbook to Accessing the Science you need

Science education should prepare more students to access and interpret scientific knowledge at the time and in the context of need.
Students will need to be able to read articles and the text book, draw on prior knowledge to interpret the text, and be able to cross
reference what is read with other materials. This is not simply the application of science for a particular problem, this is
reconstructing the science in valid ways to construct solutions. When it comes to planning science for students some sub-goals of
this major goal are as follows:
● To confront students with an ill-structured problem or challenge framed in an anchoring activity to extend their existing
knowledge and develop concrete solutions.
● To create a learning environment where students develop the skills to recognize when and how science is relevant in their
daily lives.
● To be able to cite textual based evidence to support or refute a claim (CCSS ELA)
● To be able to convert a phenomena into a mathematical model (CCSS Math)

Thinking Scientifically: From Practicing Science to Judging Scientific Claims

Students will need to engage in the epistemic practices of science in flexible and creative ways. The procedures that make up the
epistemic practices of argumentation, experimentation, modeling, and the negotiation of expository text are not static but are
guided by the cycle of scientific thinking. Students will rarely need to go through ALL the steps in a given epistemic procedure in
order to engage in scientific problem solving or research design. However, students will need to make sophisticated judgments
about credibility of scientific claims based on cues like publication venue, institutional affiliation, and potential conflict of interest. In
order to plan lesson that allow students to engage in this big idea teachers will need to set some of the following goals:
● To help students understand how scientists evaluate evidence and how research is packaged for presentation. Engaging
student in argumentation and negotiation of expository text does this. Note: expository text will need to be presented in
more ways then just the textbook.
● To help students engage in peer review when teachers are planning an argument or negotiation of expository text.
● Students will engage in epistemic practices to examine a science-inflected social problem, with the goal of uncovering
epistemic and ethical nuances at the interface of science and daily life.
● To help students engage in and interpret scientific text.

Appreciating Science: From Positive Feelings to Deep and Durable Involvement

Teachers will need to create learning environments where students develop an appreciation of science and recognize how science
influences their daily lives. Students will need to connect with science though interest areas and following their personal curiosities.
Therefore, some of the sub-goals of the work science teachers do will be to:
● Facilitate students pursing their own science related interest, questions, and personal curiosities through project-based;
inquiry-based; and model based learning.
● Facilitate socio-scientific issue discussion in class.
● Help students identify and develop individual interest and expertise in the subject matter.
● Connect students with science resources in the community such as clubs, museums, projects, science fair, and business that
specialize in science outreach.
● Use science-based games to facilitate student interest and curiosity for science problem solving. Empowering students to use
the epistemic practices in their everyday lives and to own the practices for life long problem-solving.

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