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CS Principles 2019-2020 8.6: Creating Summary Tables
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CC BY-NC-SA
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In this lesson students learn how create their own summary tables from raw data. A summary table typically represents one or more aggregations (groupings of items) and computations that are performed on the raw dataset. In most spreadsheet programs, a summary table is called a pivot table. In the lesson, students learn how to make pivot tables in Google Sheets using a provided dataset. Then students turn to the data they’ve collected as a class and, with their partner, use pivot tables to investigate it further.

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Computer Science
Education
Educational Technology
Math
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Provider:
Code.org
Provider Set:
CS Principles 2019-2020
Date Added:
10/11/2019
CS Principles 2019-2020 8.7: Tell a Data Story
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CC BY-NC-SA
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For this Practice PT students will analyze the data that they have been collecting as a class in order to demonstrate their ability to discover, visualize, and present a trend or pattern they find in the data. Leading up to this lesson, students will have been working in pairs to clean and summarize their data. Students should complete this project individually but can get feedback on their ideas from their data-cleaning partner.

**Note**: This is NOT the official AP® Performance Task that will be submitted as part of the Advanced Placement exam; it is a practice activity intended to prepare students for some portions of their individual performance at a later time.

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Computer Science
Education
Educational Technology
Math
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Provider:
Code.org
Provider Set:
CS Principles 2019-2020
Date Added:
10/11/2019
CSR: A Reading Comprehension Strategy
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CC BY-NC-ND
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This Module outlines Collaborative Strategic Reading (CSR), a strategy for helping students to improve their reading comprehension skills. In CSR, students work together in small groups to apply comprehension strategies as they read text from a content area, such as social studies or science (est. completion time: 1 hour).

Subject:
Education
English Language Arts
Language Education (EAL, ESL)
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Primary Source
Provider:
Vanderbilt University
Provider Set:
IRIS Center
Date Added:
09/27/2018
CTRL-F: Media Literacy -  Find the Facts (6-12)
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Media literacy is so important in today's society. This is CANADIAN program from CIVIX.
It provides opportunities for:
*Resources (including full lessons and pre/post assessments)
*Example Bank
*Workshops

You will need to sign up for a free account to access this excellent program.

"False and misleading information is rampant online, and people lack the skills and motivation to determine what to trust. To build the next generation of informed citizens, we need to adopt new ways to teach digital media literacy and source evaluation."

Subject:
Computer & Digital Technologies
Education
Educational Technology
English Language Arts
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Unit of Study
Author:
CIVIX
CTRL-F
Date Added:
08/31/2023
Caille the Caterpillar
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CC BY-SA
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Developed for second grade. The purpose of this activity is to bring the food pyramid to life. Hang the caterpillar up in a place that is visible to all students and pass out the hand out. Break the class into six groups and assign each group a food category. Ask them to go through the magazines and find foods that fall in their assigned category and cut out the pictures. After about 10 minutes call the class back together. Each child is to pick one of the pictures that they choose to share with the class. Go around the circle and give each child a chance to explain why they cut out the picture they choose and then have them place it into the caterpillar's mouth.Biology In Elementary Schools is a Saint Michael's College student project. The teaching ideas on this page have been found, refined, and developed by students in a college-level course on the teaching of biology at the elementary level. Unless otherwise noted, the lesson plans have been tried at least once by students from our partner schools. This wiki has been established to share ideas about teaching biology in elementary schools. The motivation behind the creation of this page is twofold: 1. to provide an outlet for the teaching ideas of a group of college educators participating in a workshop-style course; 2. to provide a space where anyone else interested in this topic can place their ideas.

Subject:
Biology
Science
Material Type:
Lesson
Provider:
WikiEducator
Date Added:
05/21/2018
Calendrier du programme
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0.0 stars

"Invitez des expert.es de la science, de la technologie et de l’innovation dans votre classe lors d’événements interactifs qui allumeront la curiosité des élèves et renforceront les liens qui se tissent entre les STIM, les parcours postsecondaires et les cheminements de carrière!"

Les opportunités comprennent :

Exploration de carrière
Club STEM (de la 4e à la 6e année)
Heure du conte STEM (de la maternelle à la 3e année) de nombreuses occasions
Série de conception et de construction (de la maternelle à la 12e année) de nombreuses occasions
Série de conférences avec des intervenants autochtones en STEM
Formation professionnelle en direct
Webinaires de formation professionnelle à la demande

Subject:
Agriculture Studies
Career & Work Exploration
Education
Educational Technology
Indigenous Perspectives
Math
Practical & Applied Arts
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
parlons sciences
Author:
Parlons sciences
Date Added:
12/19/2023
Can I get a drink.. of water?
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Water is a limited resource that we use over and over again. The idea is to teach the science behind the water cycle, where water comes from and is located on the Earth. After research and developing and understanding of conservation students will create a water tower that will collect and store rainwater. Students will also create a Public Service Announcement (PSA) on water conservation.

Subject:
Physical Science
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Assessment
Lesson
Simulation
Provider:
Lane County STEM Hub
Provider Set:
Content in Context SuperLessons
Date Added:
05/15/2016
Can It Support You? No Bones about It!
Read the Fine Print
Educational Use
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After completing the associated lesson and its first associated activity, students are familiar with the 20 major bones in the human body knowing their locations and relative densities. When those bones break, lose their densities or are destroyed, we look to biomedical engineers to provide replacements. In this activity, student pairs are challenged to choose materials and create prototypes that could replace specific bones. They follow the steps of the engineering design process, researching, brainstorming, prototyping and testing to find bone replacement solutions. Specifically, they focus on identifying substances that when combined into a creative design might provide the same density (and thus strength and support) as their natural counterparts. After iterations to improve their designs, they present their bone alternative solutions to the rest of the class. They refer to the measured and calculated densities for fabricated human bones calculated in the previous activity, and conduct Internet research to learn the densities of given fabrication materials (or measure/calculate those densities if not found online).

Subject:
Health Science
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Jeanne Hubelbank
Kristen Billiar
Michelle Gallagher
Terri Camesano
Date Added:
10/14/2015
Can You Catch the Water?
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Educational Use
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Students construct three-dimensional models of water catchment basins using everyday objects to form hills, mountains, valleys and water sources. They experiment to see where rain travels and collects, and survey water pathways to see how they can be altered by natural and human activities. Students discuss how engineers design structures that impact water collection, as well as systems that clean and distribute water.

Subject:
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Denise W. Carlson
Janet Yowell
Jay Shah
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Date Added:
10/14/2015
Can You Hear It?
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Educational Use
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Students drop marbles into holes cut into shoebox lids and listen carefully to try to determine the materials inside the box that the marbles fall onto, illustrating the importance of surface composition on dolphins' abilities to sense materials, depth and texture using echolocation. This activity builds on what students learned in the associated lesson about bycatching by fisheries and how it affects marine habitats and species, especially dolphins. Students learn how echolocation works, why certain animals use it to determine the size, shape and distance of objects, and how people can take advantage of dolphins' echolocation ability when developing bycatch avoidance methods.

Subject:
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Amy Whitt
Matt Nusnbaum
Vicki Thayer
Date Added:
10/14/2015
Can You Resist This?
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Educational Use
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This lab demonstrates Ohm's law as students set up simple circuits each composed of a battery, lamp and resistor. Students calculate the current flowing through the circuits they create by solving linear equations. After solving for the current, I, for each set resistance value, students plot the three points on a Cartesian plane and note the line that is formed. They also see the direct correlation between the amount of current flowing through the lamp and its brightness.

Subject:
Physics
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Aubrey McKelvey
Date Added:
09/18/2014
Can You Take the Pressure?
Read the Fine Print
Educational Use
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This lesson introduces students to the concept of air pressure. Students will explore how air pressure creates force on an object. They will study the relationship between air pressure and the velocity of moving air.

Subject:
Physics
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Alex Conner
Geoffrey Hill
Janet Yowell
Malinda Schaefer Zarske
Tom Rutkowski
Date Added:
09/18/2014
Canada Learning Code
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Canada Learning Code believes all teachers can teach coding.

Teachers Learning Code is designed to help K-12 teachers with little-to-no coding experience teach coding fundamentals with confidence!

A quick start guide is available for download, as well as a variety of lesson plans!

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Computer Science
Math
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Provider:
Canada Learning Code
Author:
Canada Learning Code
Date Added:
02/28/2019
Canada Learning Code - CO2 Trends with Python
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"Learners use Python and the Pygal graphing library to visualize data about one of the most important issues facing our country: greenhouse gas emissions and their relation to climate change."

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Math
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
Canada Learning Code
Author:
Paul Prescod
Date Added:
12/02/2019
Canada Learning Code Learning Tool
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When you join our new Learning Tool you gain access to:
• Learning courses designed to show you how to teach code to kids and teens
• Access to FREE resources including micro-lessons, (which can be as quick as 30 min), training videos, rubrics, language/tool assessments and so much more
• A national network of others who are learning to teach coding and computer science; together you can share what you’ve learned, ask questions and join a growing virtual community!

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Computer Science
Science
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
Canada Learning Code
Date Added:
05/06/2021
Canada Learning Code Week - save the planet from too much poop!?
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"During Canada Learning Code Week, students around Canada will collectively code to unlock Emoji World and make it a better place for all emojis.

Last year students all over Canada learned how to code and filled Emoji World with 1000s of emojis including many 💩 poop 💩 emojis. Unfortunately, this has resulted in the release of too much CO₂ And now Emoji World is at risk of severe climate change.

Teachers, with you as the Commanders and us as your co-pilots, our mission is to mitigate the CO₂ emissions caused by thousands of poop emojis from Canada Learning Code Week last year.

Get started by getting featured lesson plans delivered right to your inbox. It’s code time, go time 🚀"

Subject:
Coding
Computer & Digital Technologies
Math
Practical & Applied Arts
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson
Provider:
Canada Learning Code
Author:
Canada Learning Code
Date Added:
11/22/2023
Canada's Forests: All Things Big and Small
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This resource examines the biodiversity and the complexity of the various life forms that make up Canadian forests. The emphasis is on helping students appreciate the relationships and interdependence of all species in this ecosystem. Students learn how they can affect forests and understand ways to preserve and maintain their diversity. Themes include biotechnology, natural and introduced pests, species at risk, habitat loss and fragmentation, protected areas, climate change and traditional indigenous knowledge. Lessons can be summarized as follows:

Lesson One- It's What Inside That Counts ( 1x90min)

Students learn the basics of biodiversity by studying the arrangements of fauna and flora in a field investigation of the schoolyard. Teams will visit three assigned "habitat" sites and record living and non-living components. After discussing results, students are asked to create a poem or story about living in one of the habitat sites.

Lesson Two- Too Hot, Too Cold,...Just Right ( 2x45min)

This lesson focuses on how climate change impacts population numbers. After a discussion on how climate changes are driven by human activity, students are guided through a role play simulating the effects of rising temperatures on Arctic, Mid-latitude and Tropical biomes. After a wrap-up with discussion questions, students are asked to write a short story on an assigned topic.

Lesson Three- What Our Elders Say (1x60min, 1x90min)

After looking at how a Canadian Aboriginal legend relates to biodiversity, the students read and perform a play based on the "Legend of The Sky Sisters". Students then write their own legend incorporating an environmental message.

Lesson Four- Barrier To Biodiversity (2x60min)

After reviewing as a class how human activity can lead to habitat loss and fragmentation, students have to write and present stories in the form of a power point presentation, poster, public service announcement or skit describing how individual plants or animals are subject to, and respond to, stress in their habitat.

Lesson Five- Off Limits (4x45min)

Students investigate officially protected areas and create a class newspaper that contains articles which focus on the role of protected areas in helping maintain diversity. In this exercise they explore the social, economic, and environmental impacts of protected areas.

Lesson Six- To Be Or Not To Be (2x60min)

Students work in groups to produce a "species at risk" game board which focuses on the habitat impacts of: change/modification, over-exploitation of resources, poorly regulated commercial harvest, disruption of migration routes/breeding behaviors, contamination, and the introduction of exotic species.

Lesson Seven- Unwelcome Guests (2 x 60min)

Students develop a "Futures Wheel"(a graphic description of the inter-relationships and impacts of a single decision or event) focusing on exotic and invasive species in Canada.

Lesson Eight- Timberland ( 1x90min)

A role playing activity is used to show how biotechnology can be used as a tool to help maintain forest biodiversity. Using a timber-theft crime story students will complete a report (including a CSI sheet and victim profile) to assist them in understanding techniques used in biotechnology.

This resource can easily be adapted to include no technology.

Subject:
21st Century Competencies
Arts Education
Drama
Education
Elementary Education
English Language Arts
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
GAP 6
Lesson
Unit of Study
Author:
Canadian Forestry Association
Date Added:
06/02/2023