Dust Bowl Day One Do Now: Objective

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Outlining MacArthur Lesson Use this model when doing your own World Leader Get a paper on general MacArthur. At the top, brainstorm some qualities of a.
Advertisements

Department of Mathematics and Science Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) How do snowflakes form? Mary Tweedy, Curriculum Support Specialist Keisha Kidd, Curriculum.
Decide which particle represents you best. 1. Positive Proton 2
Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) How does weathering and erosion occur?
9/14-15 DNA (Do Now Activity) -Binders & Characteristics of Life Questions out for me to check in. -Any random paperwork into the bin: Syllabus etc… -Discuss.
Writing a Good Conclusion During a Scientific Investigation
Admit Slip 9/15/14 Pass in your homework!!
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning How to write a scientific explanation.
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
I (Inferences) = Claim/Reasoning
Surface Tension CER.
Claim, Evidence, & Reasoning — Writing Scientific Conclusions
One Form of Argument… “Argument” in NGSS In science, the production of knowledge is dependent on a process of reasoning from evidence that requires a.
Assignment or Topic This is what we are going to research or make claims about. What is the main idea we are trying to make? What is the subject?
Department of Mathematics and Science Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) How does weathering and erosion occur? Mary Tweedy, Curriculum Support Specialist.
How is science done? Learning goal: I will be able to make a claim and support it with evidence.
Claim, Evidence and Reasoning: writing a scientific explanation
Claims Evidence Reasoning CER Anchor Charts
Claims, Evidence, and Reasoning
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, TH GRADE MYP Writing Formative #3.
How to use C.E.R. for experiments & Labs Claim, Evidence, & Reasoning.
Do Now: Full, complete sentence As your travel along a roadside, you and your friend notice a dead deer. Your friend comments that she has never seen such.
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning How to conduct a scientific investigation.
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
Claim Evidence Reasoning
No gum, candy or chewing please! 
How Forensic Scientists Use Entomology to Solve Crimes
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning: How to Write a Scientific Explanation
September 1st Thank you for not chewing gum  Today’s Agenda:
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
Welcome: Please represent the number
Date: 2/1/17 Topic: CER & CHNOPS Page # ___ Must wear uniforms/IDs!
Comp. Notebook Pg. 15: Homeostasis Lab Post-Lab Questions (CSRQ or Write Down) What body systems had to work for your body to maintain homeostasis and.
Turn in Homework! (Letter to Teacher) Complete Admit Slip at Desk
What is a CER? A Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning (or CER) is a scientific explanation. It is a way that we explain our evidence-based claims. It has 3 parts:
August 31 Thank you for not chewing gum  Today’s Agenda: Objective:
Claims Evidence Reasoning CER Anchor Charts
Lab Investigation: Pillbug Behavior
Who committed the Crime?
Comp. Notebook Pg. 15: Homeostasis Lab Post-Lab Questions (CSRQ or Write Down) What body systems had to work for your body to maintain homeostasis and.
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
Writing a CER Science teachers.
Ecosystem Abstract & Weekly Samples
Entry Task: Lab Notebook 1/29/15
Claim, Evidence & Reasoning
Claims, Evidence, and Reasoning
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER)
CLAIM EVIDENCE REASONING
Watch this video clip: Is the girl’s dad an alien?
Writing an ARGUMENT…but let’s make it EASY!!!
Tuesday 2/6/18 Notebook Entry: There is a brand new reality TV show called “Copper Capers” that challenges people to find copper! The goal is to be the.
Claim Evidence Reasoning
Human Knot/Cross the Line Cornell Notes-Claim, Evidence and Reasoning
Friday 4/20/18 Notebook Entry: What are strategies you use to help you when you are writing?
Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER)
Claims, Evidence, and Reasoning
Common Core Standard 9-10.RL.Key Ideas and Details
Sandra J. Gallardo 5th Grade Science Fair Project
CLAIM! What I think What’s my position? What is my point?
Claim A statement or conclusion that answers the original question/problem. What you thought - hypothesis.
8th Grade Science Content Strand 1 1a relates to all other objectives
Keep this in mind when choosing a book!
CER: Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning
Writing the Essay.
Warm Up: The diagram below shows a man beside a camp fire
Claim, Evidence and Reasoning
Are these organisms animals?
Scientific Method and CER
C.E.R.C. Essay Claim ~ Evidence ~ Reasoning ~ Conclusion
Presentation transcript:

Dust Bowl Day One Do Now: Objective Cutting down trees leads to erosion. Explain how this statement affects you. Give an example of when you have seen an example of this situation. Objective First look at ecology and the dust bowl

Get into your 3:00 Clock Groups Discus, in your groups, what you said for the do now question. Question 2: How do things that aren't alive impact living things? Write on the board Should we talk about ecology in biology?

Introduction to Scientific Writing: C E R Format A CER (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning) is a format for writing about science. It allows you to think about your data in an organized, thorough manner. Claim: a conclusion about a problem Evidence: scientific data that is appropriate and sufficient to support the claim Reasoning: a justification that shows why the data counts as evidence to support the claim and includes appropriate scientific principles.

Make sure to write down the answers Video one On May 9th, 19__ How height? _______ How many inches of rain fell on the high plains? What held down the top soil for thousands of years? How many millions of pounds of soil “rained down” on the city? Did the dust cloud make it all the way to New York? (1500 miles)

This almost destroyed our nation Videos Saudi Arabia Arizona Can you list any differences in the storms? * class talk *

What question are you trying to answer? What have you concluded based on evidence? Same as Reasoning DATA=NUMBERS

CERR Model A CER (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning) is a format for writing about science. It allows you to think about your data in an organized, thorough manner. See below for a sample and the grading rubric. Claim: a conclusion about a problem (use a blue highlighter) Evidence: scientific data that is appropriate and sufficient to support the claim (green highlighter) Reasoning: a justification that shows why the data counts as evidence to support the claim and includes appropriate scientific principles (yellow highlighter) Example https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkpZfpNWjWY

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1sw6uY-Lpm_162rUwaSDFqG1PL7za0_c93szqZ0msodY/edit?pli=1#slide=id.g2391c8d1_0_0

Claims Claims are statements that answer your original question. The claim is usually one sentence in length. It must be accurate, specific, and completely answer the question.

Evidence The evidence is all of the scientific data that supports your claim. Your evidence must be related to your claim. Not all data is considered evidence! Evidence can be specific data from the lab. This can come from your own group or another group in the class.

Evidence The evidence is all of the scientific data that supports your claim. It can also come from other sources such as: computer simulations, websites, textbook, class notes, personal experience, etc. It is important to have numerous pieces of evidence in order to prove your claim!

Reasoning Reasoning is the explanation that connects your claim to the evidence that supports it. It shows why the data you chose counts as evidence. This explanation acts as a “conclusion” of your experiment.

Reasoning Reasoning is the explanation that connects your claim to the evidence that supports it. It shows a detailed understanding of the scientific principles involved and uses correct science vocabulary. The reasoning should usually be at least a few sentences in length.

Real-World Claims People make claims all of the time. Friends, parents, and just about every commerical on TV is making a claim about something. Discuss some claims you have heard recently at your table.

Assignment 1. Use one of the sentence starters below to make a claim. A) The greatest (choose one) football / hockey / baseball / basketball player is ________________________. B) The best movie is ____________________________. C) The greatest musical artist (solo or group) is ___________.

Assignment 2. Write down at least 3 pieces of evidence that support your claim. This data must be accurate! 3. Provide reasoning that explains why you used the evidence you did to determine the "best".

Activity 1. You will sit with all other students who chose the same category. (example: best movie) 2. Share your claim, evidence, and reasoning with the other students. 3. Have a debate.

What question are you trying to answer? What have you concluded based on evidence? Same as Reasoning DATA=NUMBERS

Get into your 3:00 Clock Groups Materials: 3 different colored Highlighters 1 Reading 1 Blank C E R Form Instructions: Have one person in your group re aloud the reading As a group decide what are the important parts of the reading and start looking for the Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning Highlight the claim in PINK Highlight the data that supports the evidence in GREEN Highlight only the parts that justify why the evidence counts in BLUE Ex. why does it matter that we looked at temperature? Don’t highlight the entire paragraph!!