Monday, January 31

“Hands on Science” but Socially Distant?

COVID has changed the way we do Science, but students still need and want to be engaged even if they can’t do traditional labs. 

I like to use a combination of videos, notes and cut and paste activities.

For our Tides lesson we started with a video (Brain Pop, StudyJams, or Brain Stuff).

Next, students filled in Cornell notes using the information from the video as well as their textbooks and some direct instruction. 

During our “lab time” students completed a Cut & Paste Activity (Google Drag & Drop for online students). I used a template to differentiate for students that needed extra help organizing their facts.   

 

While students were cutting and sorting their pieces, I played music from Mr. Parr.  I had time to go to each student to check their mastery of the learning goal. 

Students enjoyed the activity.  It could be completed individually or as a group.  In our case everyone completed their own copy for their notebook but were able to talk to their group to review the information. 

Other uses for Cut and Paste Activities:

  • Warm-up/bell ringer
  • Homework after a lesson
  • Exit ticket
  • Formative assessment or quiz
  • Review before a summative assessment

With cut and paste activities students are engaged and I can easily see who needs more instruction and who is ready to move on.