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1 Gravity and Motion At-a-Glance: In 6th grade, students become scientists and engineers as they investigate the answers to different questions and use their scientific knowledge to solve problems. In this unit, students focus on the relationship between gravity and motion, tracing how gravitational potential energy transforms to mechanical kinetic energy in different energy systems. They investigate the relationship between the drop height of a bouncy ball and its rebound height, and then compare the amount of energy transferred by moving marbles of different masses. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Common Misconceptions: Unit 1 – Page 1 Misconception: Gravity only exists on Earth. Fact: Gravity is the force of attraction between all matter, which means that every object in the universe attracts every other object with its gravity. Misconception: Energy can be created and destroyed. Fact: Energy is never created or destroyed. Instead, it transfers from one form to another. When one part of a system loses energy, another part of the system gains energy, so the total amount of energy is always conserved. ©2016 KnowAtomTM A Breakdown of the Lesson Progression: 1 Energy Transformation Students are introduced to the scientific process by exploring the relationship between force, energy, and motion. They investigate how the force of gravity causes energy to transfer in an energy system where one object (a bouncy ball) has gravitational potential energy because of its height above the ground. That energy is transformed into mechanical energy as soon as the ball begins moving toward the ground. 2 M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Mass and Energy Transfer Once students understand how energy is transferred through systems, they apply that knowledge to explore the relationship between an object’s mass and the amount of kinetic energy it has. Specifically, students investigate how marbles of different masses transfer different amounts of kinetic energy during a collision by measuring the distance a plastic cup travels after being hit by each of the marbles. Unit 1 – Page 2 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Gravity and Motion Table of Contents Curriculum Unit Overview Applying Next Generation Science Standards Science and Engineering Practices Unit 1 Pacing Guide Example Science Words to Know Teacher Background Vocabulary Assessment Concept Assessment 4 5 7 10 12 14 73 75 Lesson 1: Energy Transformation Blank Data Table and Graph Lesson 2: Mass and Energy Transfer Blank Data Table and Graph 26 53 54 72 Lessons Appendices Assessment Answer Keys Lab Manual Answer Keys Common Core Connections Sample Concept Map Support for Differentiated Instruction Materials Chart M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 3 83 89 92 97 98 99 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Gravity and Motion Overview: The world’s tallest waterslide is located in Kansas City, Kansas. Its name, Verrückt, means “insane” in German. At 551 meters (168 feet) tall, it is taller than both Niagara Falls and the Statue of Liberty. Once in motion down the slide, riders can reach speeds of more than 97 kilometers (60 miles) per hour. © Schlitterbahn Kansas City Water Park The Verrückt is the world’s tallest waterslide. The scientific principles of forces, energy transfers, and motion underpin many rides and games common today, including waterslides and roller coasters and extending into games such as baseball and billiards. Unit Goals: In this unit, students investigate the relationship between gravity, motion, and energy. Students begin by tracing the transfer of energy when a bouncy ball is dropped from different heights, exploring the relationship between drop height (gravitational potential energy) and bounce height (kinetic energy). Students build on that knowledge as they investigate how the amount of energy transferred by a moving marble changes depending on the marble’s mass. 1. Recognize the different forms of energy and how energy can transform from one form to another. 2. Identify the relationship between force and energy transfers in an energy system. 3. Describe how the kinetic energy of an object is directly connected to its mass. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 4 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Applying Next Generation Science Standards This unit covers the following Next Generation Science Standards. Each standard includes where it is found in the unit, as well as how it applies the relevant crosscutting concepts (listed in green) and disciplinary core ideas (listed in orange). *Note: Science and engineering practices are listed separately. Focus Standard: MS-PS3 Energy MS-PS3-5. Construct, use, and present arguments to support the claim that when the kinetic energy of an object changes, energy is transferred to or from the object. Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer: Students identify evidence of energy being transferred (not created or destroyed) within a system when the kinetic energy of an object changes. In Lesson 1, students measure the change in a bouncy ball’s bounce height when its gravitational potential energy changes. In Lesson 2, students investigate the change in motion of a cup when it collides with marbles of different masses. Lessons 1 and 2 Energy and Matter: Students analyze how there are different forms of energy, and the transfer of energy can be traced through an energy system as energy transforms from one form to another. Lessons 1 and 2 M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 5 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Supporting Standards: MS-PS2 Motion and Stability: Forces and Interactions MS-PS2-4. Construct and present arguments using evidence to support the claim that gravitational interactions are attractive and depend on the masses of interacting objects. Types of Interactions: Students analyze gravitational interactions by focusing on the relationship between mass and the strength of gravity’s attractive pull. Lesson 1 Systems and System Models: Students analyze Earth from a systems perspective as they investigate how the attractive force of gravity produces a system of interacting parts (such as Earth and objects on Earth’s surface). Lesson 1 MS-PS3 Energy MS-PS3-1. Construct and interpret graphical displays of data to describe the relationships of kinetic energy to the mass of an object and to the speed of an object. Definitions of Energy: Students test and graph the relationship between kinetic energy and mass as they measure the amount of energy transferred when balls of different masses collide with a cup. Lesson 2 Scale, Proportion, and Quantity: Students analyze the proportional relationship between mass, speed, and kinetic energy. Lesson 2 MS-PS3-2. Develop a model to describe that when the arrangement of objects interacting at a distance changes, different amounts of potential energy are stored in the system. Relationship Between Energy and Forces: Students model how different amounts of energy can be stored in a system by changing the drop height of a bouncy ball above the ground. Students measure this by measuring the resulting bounce height when the gravitational potential energy changes. Lesson 1 Systems and System Models: Students analyze energy systems, evaluating how different parts of a system interact with and influence other parts of the system. Lesson 1 M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 6 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Science and Engineering Practices Students use the following science and engineering practices in the unit’s lessons. Lesson 1: Energy Transfers 1. Asking questions (for science) and defining problems (for engineering) Students develop a question that will help guide them through an investigation into the relationship between a ball’s height above the ground (gravitation potential energy) and its resulting rebound motion (mechanical kinetic energy). 2. Developing and using models Students create a model (scientific diagram) of their bouncy ball system. Students use the model to visualize how the materials will be used, and to communicate their experiment to others. 3. Planning and carrying out investigations Student teams collaboratively plan and conduct an investigation that compares the bounce height of a bouncy ball when dropped from three different heights above the ground. 4. Analyzing and interpreting data Students collect and analyze data on the height the ball bounces when dropped from different heights, looking for patterns that might indicate a relationship between a ball’s height above the ground and its resulting rebound motion. 5. Using mathematics and computational thinking Students conduct five trials for each height, recording the height the bounce reaches, and then calculate the average number from the five trials. Students then graph their data to help them identify patterns. 6. Constructing explanations (for science) and designing solutions (for engineering) Students use the data they gathered in the experiment to construct an explanation that either supports or rejects their hypothesis about how changing the drop height of a ball causes its bounce height to change. 7. Engaging in argument from evidence Students come together as a class to compare team results, using their data from the experiment to analyze the relationship between the drop height of a ball and its bounce height based on any patterns observed in the data. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 7 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 8. Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information Students use information from their lab manuals and class discussion, along with their knowledge of gravity, motion, and energy systems, to analyze how gravity’s attractive pull provides the force necessary to cause energy to transfer within a system such as a roller coaster or a bouncy ball. Lesson 2: Mass and Energy Transfer 1. Asking questions (for science) and defining problems (for engineering) Students develop a question that will help guide them through an investigation into the effect of a marble’s mass on the amount of kinetic energy it can transfer to a plastic cup at the base of an inclined plane when it rolls into it. 2. Developing and using models Students create a model (scientific diagram) of their inclined plane system. Students use the model to visualize how the materials will be used, and to communicate their experiment to others. 3. Planning and carrying out investigations Student teams collaboratively plan and conduct an investigation that tests how the mass of the marble affects the distance the target cup moves when the marble rolls down an inclined plane and into the cup. 4. Analyzing and interpreting data Students collect and analyze data on the distance the target cup traveled after marbles of different sizes collide with it, looking for patterns that might indicate a relationship between the marble’s mass and the amount of kinetic energy transferred. 5. Using mathematics and computational thinking Students conduct five trials for each of the three marbles, recording the distance the target cup moved, and then calculate the average distance from the five trials. Students then graph their data. 6. Constructing explanations (for science) and designing solutions (for engineering) Students use the data they gathered in the experiment to construct an explanation that either supports or rejects their hypothesis about how changing the mass of the marble affects the distance a cup moves when the marble rolls into it. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 8 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 7. Engaging in argument from evidence Students come together as a class to compare team results, using their data from the experiment to analyze the relationship between an object’s mass and the amount of energy it transfers based on any patterns observed in the data. 8. Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information Students use information from their lab manuals and class discussion, along with their knowledge of forces, gravity, and energy systems, to analyze how moving objects transfer energy when they come into contact with other objects. * Unit connections to Common Core Math practices: MP.2, MP.4, and MP.5. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 9 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1 Pacing Guide Example All KnowAtom units are designed to take approximately one month. Lessons may span one or two weeks. This pacing guide provides one example for how to break down the lessons in this unit over a month. Breakdown in this guide is based on 45- to 55-minute class periods. Communities that have longer or shorter class periods or schedules where science class occurs more frequently can modify this guide accordingly. Any days in this guide that appear unused take into account months with holidays, vacations, times when a lab and/or investigation takes longer to complete. Note that at the beginning of the school year, when the engineering and scientific processes are new to students, labs may take longer to complete. Day 1 Lesson 1 Start: As a class, read Sections 1 and 2 of the KnowAtom student lab manual.* Final Goal: Transition to the Socratic dialogue. Lesson 1 Start: Students carry out experiment, analyze data, and evaluate results. Final Goal: Teams complete lab conclusions. Day 2 Unit 1: Gravity and Motion Lesson 1 Start: Socratic dialogue. Final Goal: Transition to Lab 1 question. Lesson 1 Start: As a class, review lab conclusions, wrap up the lab, and debrief. Final Goal: Review assigned assessment questions. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Day 3 Week 1 Lesson 1 Start: Recap lab question. Final Goal: Students develop majority of lab with check-ins (up to scientific diagram). Week 2 Non-Science Day Day 4 Day 5 Lesson 1 Start: Teams complete lab development and may begin experiment. Non-Science Day Final Goal: Students complete lab development. Lesson 2 Start: As a class, read Section 3 of the KnowAtom student lab manual.* Lesson 2 Start: Socratic dialogue. Final Goal: Transition to the Socratic dialogue. Final Goal: Transition to Lab 2 question. Unit 1 – Page 10 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Non-Science Day Non-Science Day Lesson 2 Start: Recap lab question. Final Goal: Students develop majority of lab with check-ins (up to scientific diagram). Lesson2 Start: Teams analyze data, and evaluate results. Final Goal: Students complete lab conclusions. Week 3 Lesson 2 Start: Teams complete lab development and may begin experiment. Lesson 2 Start: Teams carry out experiment and collect data. Final Goal: Students complete lab development. Final Goal: Teams complete data collection. Week 4 Lesson 2 Start: As a class, review lab conclusions, wrap up the lab, and debrief. Final Goal: Review assigned assessment questions (optional). Non-Science Day Non-Science Day Non-Science Day * As the school year progresses, students are expected to come to class having already read the lab manual so they can actively participate in the Socratic dialogue. When students read the lab manual outside of class time, this time can be used for deeper Socratic dialogue. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 11 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Science Words to Know: This unit’s vocabulary is divided into two lessons. Use the blank concept map visual to connect vocabulary once the unit is complete. An example concept map is displayed in Appendix 3. 1. cause and effect – a relationship between events or things, where one is the result of the other 2. data – the measurements and observations gathered from an experiment 3. energy – the ability to do work 4. experiment – a specific procedure that tests if a hypothesis is true, false, or inconclusive 5. force – a push or pull that acts on an object, changing its speed, direction, or shape 6. gravitational energy – the energy stored in an object as a result of its vertical position or height 7. gravity – the force of attraction between all matter; more massive objects have a stronger gravitational force 8. hypothesis – a clear and concise statement that can be proved true or false 9. kinetic energy – energy of motion 10. mass – a measure of the amount of matter that makes up an object or substance; measured in grams (g) 11. mechanical energy – the energy of a substance or system due to its motion 12. pattern – something that happens in a regular and repeated way M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 12 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 13. potential energy – energy that is stored 14. proportion – the relationship between things, as to size, quantity, or number 15. science – all knowledge gained from experiments 16. scientist – a person who follows a scientific process to discover new knowledge 17. system – a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole 18. weight – a gravitational force exerted on an object by a planet or moon; measured in newtons (N) 19. work – any change in position, speed, or state of matter due to force M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 13 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Teacher Background The Science of Gravity Roller coasters have been around for a long time—in fact, roller coasters are a modern version of Russian ice slides that were popular in the 1600s. Those ice slides were similar to a waterslide. They were long, steep wooden slides covered in ice that people sledded down. Roller coasters are a good example of the STEM cycle in action. STEM stands for science, technology, engineering, and math. Broadly, science is the search for explanations about the natural world, and scientists use evidence to form conclusions that support those explanations. All knowledge learned from experiments is part of science. Roller coasters use scientific concepts of forces and motion. Engineers then apply scientific knowledge to create new technologies that solve problems. Math is a tool that both scientists and engineers use to capture results and communicate those results to others. For example, roller coasters and waterslides are technologies that engineers have designed to entertain people. Engineers have to understand basic scientific concepts about forces and motion in order to design them. the STEM cycle M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 14 ©2016 KnowAtomTM The Scientific Process Question Research Following a Scientific Process Hypothesis Summarize Experiment Materials and Procedure Scientific Diagram Data Conclusion Anyone who follows a scientific process to discover new knowledge is a scientist. Scientists use a scientific process to guide them in developing a replicable experiment as they seek out answers to questions about the world around them. There are eight steps that scientists often follow to answer questions using data from experiments. These steps provide scientists with a logical framework to go about answering their questions. 1. All scientific investigations start with a question—a statement that requires an answer. The question ends in a question mark and does not include words like “I” or “because.” For example, Galileo Galilei was an Italian scholar in the 16th century who would become known as the father of scientific investigation and astronomy. He was fascinated by falling objects, and wondered whether different objects fall at different speeds. One question he asked was: “Do heavier objects fall faster than lighter objects?” 2. After formulating a question, scientists do background research on their topic. Research is the search for knowledge across books, experts, websites, and other reliable sources. While researching, scientists learn what other experiments have been done on their topic of interest and what else needs to be known. 3. Based on their research, scientists create a hypothesis about the question they are asking. A hypothesis, or claim, is a clear and concise statement that can be proved true or false. Hypotheses are written as declarative sentences that do not include personal pronoun words like “my” or “I think.” For example: “Heavier objects fall faster than lighter objects.” M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 15 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 4. Next, a scientist summarizes the experiment that will test his or her hypothesis by briefly describing the controlled testing and data needed to prove the hypothesis true or false. An experiment is a specific procedure that tests if a hypothesis is true, false, or inconclusive. This summary determines what materials need to be collected and how the experiment’s procedure needs to be designed. It should also include variables and constants. A variable is something you change. It can be a factor, trait, or condition that can exist in differing amounts or types. There are independent and dependent variables. An independent variable is the variable changed by the scientist. For example, in Galileo’s inclined plane experiment, the size of the balls was the independent variable. To ensure a fair trial, a good experiment has only one independent variable. The scientist changes the independent variable to observe what happens. The dependent variable is what happens as a result of the independent variable. In Galileo’s experiment, the dependent variable was the acceleration of the balls as they moved down the ramp. Acceleration is an increase in speed over time. Galileo wanted to see if changing the mass of the balls (independent variable) caused their acceleration (dependent variable) to change. A constant is a quantity that remains the same in an experiment. Constants allow scientists to isolate one variable at a time to ensure the experiment results are valid. 5. Once a scientist has decided on an experiment, he or she vertically lists the materials with quantities and the step-bystep procedure. Information related to safety is also included. Carefully documenting this information is important because scientific results are not valid unless someone can replicate the exact experiment. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 16 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 6. To help other readers understand the experiment set-up, a scientist makes a scientific diagram of the experiment-in-progress. The diagram is the size of a person’s hand, is drawn in pen, includes a title, and labels all of the materials used. 7. Scientists use experiments to look for patterns in data that suggest a cause-and-effect relationship, where one event or thing is the result of the other. A pattern is something that happens in a regular and repeated way. In order to discover a cause-and-effect relationship, scientists design experiments in a way that show how changes to one thing cause something else to change in a predictable way. The results of the experiment are data—the measurements and observations gathered from an experiment. Data are typically organized in a table (e.g., a table of height, time, or volume measurements). Graphs can help scientists make sense of data and allow data to be communicated visually among colleagues. Both data tables and graphs must be titled and labeled. 8. The final step is to use the data to develop a conclusion—a summary of what a scientist has learned about the hypothesis, using data from the experiment as evidence. The conclusion is written out in full sentences and uses the data to argue whether the original hypothesis was true, false, or inconclusive. If results are inconclusive, meaning they do not confirm or deny the hypothesis, the scientist needs to design a different test. Most scientific experiments lead to theories that require more testing. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 17 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Gravity and Mass Isaac Newton was one of the first scientists to set forth the idea that gravity is a predictable force that acts on all matter. He also came up with three laws of motion, which we’ll explore a little later on. A force is a push or pull that acts on an object, changing its speed, direction, or shape. Gravity is one of the fundamental forces that govern the interaction of matter. It is believed to be caused by the warping of space and time in response to matter. Picture a bowling ball, representing a planet, sitting on a blanket that represents space. The warping of the blanket represents the object’s gravitational field. If you put an object with less mass on the blanket near the bowling ball, the object will fall into the depression of the bowling ball. Gravity works in the same way. All matter has gravity, but the force of attraction depends on the mass of the two objects. Mass is the measure of the amount of matter that makes up an object or substance. It is measured in grams (g). The more massive an object is, the more its gravity will pull on other objects. Here on Earth, you always experience the pull of Earth’s gravity because Earth is so much more massive than anything else on the planet. Because of this, acceleration due to gravity is nearly identical everywhere on Earth (9.8 m/s2). The force of gravity acting on an object is also its weight— a gravitational force exerted on an object by a planet or moon. It is measured in newtons (N). Here on Earth, the distinction between mass and weight is typically ignored by non-scientists because of gravity’s constant acceleration of 9.8 m/s2. An object’s mass remains the same, but its weight changes depending on gravity. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 However, on other planets and the moon, which have noticeably different gravities, an object’s weight would change dramatically. For example, the moon is less massive than Earth. Because of this, its gravity is weaker than Earth’s, causing an object’s weight to drop by 83 percent on the moon compared to on Earth. The object’s mass, on the other hand, would remain the same regardless of where it was. Unit 1 – Page 18 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Gravitational Fields Because gravity is an attractive force, objects don’t need to come into contact with one another to exert a force on each other. Instead, objects have gravitational fields, which are the area around the object where another object will feel the gravitational force of the first object. For example, Earth’s gravitational field extends beyond the atmosphere, pulling on all objects within it. This gravitational field causes patterns in movement. For example, every time you release a pen in the air, the pen will fall back to Earth’s surface because the pen is within Earth’s gravitational field. As objects move within another object’s gravitational field, the Anything within Earth’s energy within the field gravitational field will feel changes. Energy is the Earth’s gravitational force. ability to do work. Work is any change in position, speed, or state of matter due to force. In other words, work is the transfer of energy by a force. To understand this relationship between motion, energy, work, and force, it is first important to know about the two different categories of energy: potential and kinetic. Potential energy is energy that is stored. Kinetic energy is the energy of motion. There are different forms of both potential and kinetic energy. Energy of one kind can transform (change) into energy of another form in an energy system. A system is a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 19 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Perfect Systems vs. Real-World Scenarios For example, imagine that you are holding a pen above the ground. You, the pen, and the ground make up an energy system. The pen has a kind of potential energy called gravitational energy, which is the energy stored in an object as a result of its vertical position or height. The higher you hold the pen, the more gravitational energy it has. This is a cause-andeffect relationship. The height of the pen causes the amount of energy stored in the pen to change (the effect). When you drop the pen, that gravitational potential energy transforms into a form of kinetic energy called mechanical energy. Mechanical energy is the energy of a substance or system due to its motion. The pen keeps falling until it’s acted on by an outside force, such as the ground. This describes Newton’s First Law of Motion, which says that an object at rest will remain at rest and an object in motion will remain in motion unless acted upon by an outside force (the law of inertia). In a perfect system, the total amount of energy remains the same as it transforms from one form to another. In other words, however much gravitational energy the pen has, that same amount of energy will transform into mechanical energy as the pen falls to the ground. However, in the real world, some of that energy is transferred out of the system. When energy is transferred, it moves into or out of an object or system. For example, friction transfers energy out of a system. Friction is a force that slows motion whenever two objects rub against each other by turning mechanical energy into heat. Friction is why your hands feel hot after you rub them together. Drag, also called air resistance, is another force that transfers energy out of a system. Drag is similar to friction, but it occurs between a solid substance and a fluid such as air. As the pen falls to the ground, it experiences drag as it moves through the air. The force of drag causes some of the pen’s energy to transfer out of the system, resulting in less mechanical energy. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 20 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Energy in Roller Coasters These same concepts can be applied to a roller coaster. Similar to the pen, the roller coaster is an energy system. The roller coaster system is made up of Earth, the track, and the roller coaster cars. Whenever the roller coaster cars change their motion, energy is transformed from one form to another. As the cars climb up the hill, kinetic energy is stored as gravitational potential energy. The higher above ground the first hill on a roller coaster cars are, the more gravitational potential energy the cars will have. As the roller coaster cars move up the hill, they store gravitational potential energy. The higher above ground the roller coaster cars are, the more energy they have stored. The moment the roller coaster cars begin to move downhill, their gravitational potential energy transforms into mechanical kinetic energy. In a perfect system, the same amount of gravitational energy would transform into mechanical energy because no energy would be transferred out of the system. Gravitational potential energy transforms to kinetic mechanical energy as gravity pulls the coaster down the track. Gravitational potential energy transforms to mechanical energy as the cars begin moving down the hill. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 21 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Roller Coaster Energy Systems However, not all of the gravitational energy transforms into mechanical energy because the roller coaster is not a perfect system. Drag and friction cause energy to transfer out of the roller coaster system. The heat produced by both provides evidence that energy has transferred out of the roller coaster system because it makes the air around it warmer. This transfer of energy out of the system is why the first hill on a roller coaster is always the tallest. At the top of the first hill, the roller coaster cars have the most gravitational energy. As that gravitational energy transforms to mechanical energy as the cars begin to move down the hill, some of the energy transfers out of the system because of friction and drag. As a result, there is less energy within the roller coaster system to move the cars up the next hill. Eventually, all of the energy will transfer out of the system. This will cause the roller coaster cars to slow down and then come to a stop. Roller Coaster Energy System Roller coasters are energy systems. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 22 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Bouncy Ball Energy System This idea of energy transformation and energy conservation can be understood by thinking about two objects that come into contact with one another. For example, when you drop a bouncy ball from up in the air to the ground, it forms a system with the ground. Its stored gravitational energy is transformed into mechanical energy as it falls to the ground. When the ball hits the ground, the ground pushes back on the ball. This is because of the Newton’s Third Law of Motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Action-reaction pairs occur whenever two objects come into contact. The force of the impact of the ball hitting the ground causes the ball’s shape to change because it is made of flexible rubber. As a result, the bouncy ball’s kinetic energy transforms to a form of potential energy called elastic energy, which is energy stored in objects when stretched. As the bouncy ball’s shape is restored, the elastic potential energy transforms back to kinetic energy and the ball bounces back into the air. In a perfect system, the ball would bounce back to its original drop height above the ground. However, in the real world, the ball won’t bounce as high on the second bounce because some of the energy has transferred out of the system. As it moves through the air, drag causes some of the gravitational energy to transfer out of the bouncy ball system. When the ball hits the floor, friction transfers some more energy out of the system. Finally, at the moment the ball hits the ground, some of the energy is transferred out of the ball as it transforms to sound energy, which is energy produced by sound vibrations moving through a substance in waves. A bouncy ball and the ground make up an energy system. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 23 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Billiard Energy System The game of billiards is another way to understand energy transfer and energy conservation. You can think about the game of billiards as a system consisting of the balls and the table. The outside force of a person hitting the cue ball causes energy to transfer from the cue stick to the cue ball and then to the other balls. In a perfect system, the same amount of energy put into the cue ball is going to be conserved and transferred to the other balls because of the conservation of energy. In the real world, some energy transfers out of the system because of friction caused by the white cue ball moving across the table, and drag as it moves through the air. Whenever two objects come into contact with each other, both objects exert a force on each other. For example, when the cue ball hits another ball, the force of the collision transfers some of the mechanical energy into the second ball. This diagram illustrates the transfer of energy when the cue ball does not hit the other ball exactly in the middle. This transfer of energy changes the motion of the billiard balls. This is why the solid and striped balls begin to move after a break—the white cue ball has transferred mechanical energy that causes the other balls to move. If the cue ball is hit with a smaller force, it will have less energy to transfer to the other balls. If it is hit with a greater force, it will have more energy to transfer to the other balls. The motion of the white cue ball after it hits another ball depends on how exactly it hits the other ball. For example, the cue ball will stop moving if it travels in a straight line and hits the other ball exactly in the middle of the other ball. This is because of energy conservation: all of the energy from the white cue ball is transferred to the other ball. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 24 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Relationship Between Mass and Force However, you’ll often notice in a game of billiards that the cue ball keeps moving after hitting another ball. This is because the cue ball did not hit the other ball exactly in its middle. As a result, not all of the cue ball’s energy is transferred to the other ball, so the cue ball keeps moving before friction eventually causes it to stop. Another factor that influences the energy of a moving object is its mass. You might notice that all of the balls on a pool table are the same mass. This is because the kinetic energy of a moving object is influenced by its mass. Kinetic energy is proportional to mass. Proportion refers to the relationship between things, as to size, quantity, or number. The kinetic energy doubles as the mass of the object doubles, while the kinetic energy halves as the mass of the object halves. In other words, a more massive object moving at a certain speed has more mechanical energy than a less massive object moving at the same speed. Speed is the rate at which an object covers distance in a period of time. As a result, a more massive object will apply a greater force in a collision, transferring more mechanical energy. The relationship between force and mass is described by Newton’s Second Law: force equals mass times acceleration. An object with greater mass needs more force to accelerate than an object with less mass. However, the total amount of energy of the system, which is made up of the two interacting objects, will remain the same because energy is A more massive object will apply a greater force in a never created or destroyed. collision, transferring more mechanical energy. This diagram is from above looking down at the balls. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 25 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Lesson 1: Energy Transformation Objective: Students set up their laboratory notebooks and carry out an experiment to explore the relationship between the gravitational potential energy of a bouncy ball and its resulting bounce height (kinetic energy). Materials: B A Consumable A. Goggles – 1 per student B. Laboratory notebooks – 1 per student Non-Consumable C. Bouncy balls – 1 per team– (not shown) D. Scientific Process Visual – (not shown) E. Who is a Scientist Poster – (not shown) F. Gravity Visual – (not shown) G. Energy and Roller Coasters Visual – (not shown) H. Energy Systems Visual – (not shown) I. Energy Transformation Visual– (not shown) J. STEM Cycle Visual– (not shown) Teacher Tool Kit: K. Measuring tape – 1 per team L. Masking tape – shared C K L Teacher Preparation: • Download the visuals from the KnowAtom Interactive website. • Locate a place in the classroom to hang the “Who is a Scientist Poster.” • To save time, prepare photocopies of the Blank Data Table and Graph for each student using the copy masters on page 53. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 26 ©2016 KnowAtomTM • Arrange separate pick-up stations for students to collect materials for use at their desks. For example: o Pick-Up Station 1: measuring tape, masking tape, and bouncy balls o Pick-Up Station 2: laboratory notebooks and goggles Student Reading Preparation: • Students read Sections 1 and 2 of the student lab manual. In 6th grade, students are expected to come to class having already read the lab manual so they can actively participate in the Socratic dialogue before the lab portion of the lesson. At the beginning of the school year (September-October), the lab manual can be read in class. • If class time is used to read the lab manual together, model how to read closely for understanding. For example: o Emphasize connections between examples in the reading and broader concepts. For example, ask why a certain example was used to support the reading’s main point. o Use “why” and “how” questions to connect ideas in the reading to student experiences. Socratic Dialogue: • The Socratic dialogue serves as the bridge between the nonfiction reading and the lab portion of the lesson. • The example Socratic dialogue below describes one possible progression of ideas to engage students in higher order thinking. Blocks are used to divide the dialogue according to key organizing concepts. They are not meant to indicate how much time a dialogue should take; length of time may vary depending on the subject matter and student understanding of the concepts. Note that in a Socratic dialogue, the teacher is not the only one asking questions and challenging ideas. Students M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 27 ©2016 KnowAtomTM should be actively engaged in proposing questions, challenging assumptions, and using evidence to support their arguments. Not sure how to set up a Socratic dialogue? Check out www.knowatom.com/socratic for an in-depth look at how to hold a next generation Socratic dialogue in the classroom. Block 1-1: Introduction to Science 1. Display STEM Cycle Visual. Use Socratic dialogue to preassess student understanding of science, which is all knowledge gained from experiments. Big Idea 1: Begin a dialogue with students about how science is the search for explanations about the natural world, and scientists use evidence to form conclusions that support those explanations. For example: o Ask one student what makes science different from other subjects, such as history. (Science is the search for explanations about the natural world, so scientists ask questions about the causes of different phenomena they observe or learn about in the world around them. Unlike other subjects, scientists conduct experiments to gather data that will answer their questions.) o Connect questioning with experiments, asking another student to explain why evidence is important in science, and how scientists gather evidence. (Experiments play a critical role in the search for knowledge because experiments are procedures designed to test whether a hypothesis is true, false, or inconclusive. Experiments are how scientists answer questions about the world around M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 28 ©2016 KnowAtomTM them, providing data that can support or disprove a hypothesis.) o Ask the first student to use any personal experiences with gathering evidence. For example, some students may have experience with experiments, while others are new to it. Some students may have had a question about something they observed, which they investigated to find an answer. Anytime someone asks a question and uses data gathered in an investigation to answer that question, they are being scientists. Big Idea 2: Compare science with engineering. Both are part of the STEM cycle, which stands for science, technology, engineering, and math. They are connected and interact with one another, but they are also different. For example: o Ask a student to compare science and engineering, providing concrete details for how they are different. (Engineers apply scientific knowledge to create new technologies that solve problems. Math is a tool that both scientists and engineers use to capture results and communicate those results to others.) 2. Display Scientific Process Visual. Continue the dialogue with students about how scientists follow a scientific process that provides a systematic, logical framework for investigating the answers to their questions. Big Idea 3: Assess student understanding of the importance of using a process in science and engineering. A process is any series of steps designed to meet a goal. For example: M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 29 ©2016 KnowAtomTM o Ask one student what would happen if scientists tried to conduct an experiment without first asking a question. (The scientific process provides scientists with a logical framework to work from a question to a data-based conclusion. Without a question, scientists wouldn’t know how to set up the experiment because they wouldn’t be able to form a hypothesis.) o Ask another student why data are important in an experiment. (Data are the measurements and observations gathered from an experiment. Data will be used as evidence in the conclusion to determine whether a hypothesis is true, false, or inconclusive. Quantitative results are evidence that reveal information about the hypothesis. This evidence is necessary to support a claim in a conclusion, which is more reliable than forming a conclusion based on opinion or subjective observation.) Big Idea 4: Continue the dialogue about the role of data in experiments. Coach students toward thinking about how data can reveal patterns that suggest relationships between variables in the experiment, including a cause-and-effect relationship. For example: o Ask one student to describe a cause-and-effect relationship, using his or her own experiences as support in the answer. (A cause-and-effect relationship occurs when one event or thing is the result of the other. There are numerous examples of this in everyday life. For example, if you’re riding a bike and you apply the brakes, the bike will stop. The brakes cause the bike to stop (the effect).) o Ask another student how patterns in the data can indicate a cause-and-effect relationship. (A pattern is something that happens in a regular and repeated way. A pattern in the data can indicate that the independent variable caused the dependent variable.) M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 30 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Laboratory Notebook Set-Up: NOTE: This lesson is the only lesson in which students should be directed step by step because they are setting up their lab notebooks. In all future labs, student teams should use the scientific process to guide them from a question to a data-based conclusion in their lab notebooks. 1. Each student collects 1 laboratory notebook. Students write their name, class, grade, and subject on the cover and on the first page of their notebooks. Students should also number each right-hand page up to 10. Page numbers are written in the top right corner, and writing is only done on right-hand pages. 2. Students title page 2: “The Scientific Process.” Use the Scientific Process Visual to discuss how scientists use a process to help them answer their questions, while students list each step with brief descriptions in their lab notebooks: • question – a statement that requires an answer; ends in a question mark; does not include words such as “I” or “because” • research – the search for existing knowledge using books, experts, websites, and/or personal observations; includes a minimum of three facts relevant to the question • hypothesis – a clear and concise statement that answers the question; can be proved true or false • experiment summary – one or two sentences describing an experiment that tests if the hypothesis is true or false; lists the independent and dependent variables, constants, and controls o The independent variable is the variable changed by the scientist. o The dependent variable is what happens as a result of the independent variable M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 31 ©2016 KnowAtomTM • list materials and procedure – a vertical list of all materials with quantities needed for the experiment; a vertical list of the numbered steps of the procedure; includes safety precautions • scientific diagram – a diagram of the experiment set-up that is at least the size of your hand and titled; labels all materials on the materials list • data – the measurements and observations gathered from the experiment; evidence that proves if the hypothesis is true or false; titled; taped into lab notebooks; uses proper units • conclusion – a summary of what a scientist learned about the hypothesis using data from the experiment as evidence; uses the data collected in the experiment to explain why the hypothesis is true, false, or inconclusive; must contain a minimum of three elements: o Restate the hypothesis. o Make a claim (true, false, or inconclusive). o Use key points of data as evidence to support and explain the claim. 3. Students title page 3: “The Engineering Design Process.” Students will record the steps of the engineering design process on this page later in the year. 4. Students title page 4: “Table of Contents.” When students fill this in, each entry will include the lab number, title, date, and first page number (example shown below). Leave pages 5-9 blank for the Table of Contents. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 32 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 5. For each new lab entry, students write (under the page number) the title of the experiment, date, and partner's name (if applicable). Explain that the lab title, date, and page number of each lab are also entered in the table of contents chronologically. Remind students that lab notebooks should be neat, written in pen, and that all errors must be crossed out, never erased or scribbled. See pages 50-52 for a sample lab notebook entry. Socratic Dialogue: Block 1-2: Introduction to Forces 1. Display Gravity Visual. Continue the conversation from the previous block, beginning a dialogue with students about how gravity is an attractive force that acts on all matter (anything that has mass and takes up space). Big Idea 5: Coach students toward the idea that gravity is an attractive force because it pulls objects together, rather than pushing them away, which is what opposing forces do. For example: o Ask one student what evidence there is that Earth’s gravitational force is pulling on everything on Earth’s surface. (Any object within Earth’s gravitational field (the area around an object where another object will feel the M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 33 ©2016 KnowAtomTM gravitational force of the first object) will be pulled toward Earth’s center. This is why objects that are thrown up in the air fall back to the ground.) o Ask another student how the force of gravity changes the direction of a ball that is thrown up in the air. (Gravity changes the upward motion of the ball by pulling it back toward Earth’s surface. This is an example of cause and effect. The force of gravity causes the ball to fall back to the ground (the effect).) o Contradict student’s evidence to probe more deeply. For example, ask the same student why, given that gravity is an attractive force and all matter has gravity, other objects don’t attract us with their gravity. (Here on Earth, we always experience the pull of Earth’s gravity because Earth is so much more massive than any other object on its surface.) o Ask the first student whether or not they agree with what the second student said, using their own observations and/or examples from the reading to support their analysis. Give the second student a chance to respond, so that both are evaluating each other’s answers as they explore the concept of Earth’s gravitational pull. Block 1-3: Introduction to Energy 1. Display Energy and Roller Coasters Visual. Have a dialogue with students about how energy is the ability to do work. Work is any change in position, speed, or state of matter due to force. Big Idea 6: Once students have described the attractive force of Earth’s gravity, coach students toward the idea that as objects move within another object’s gravitational field, the energy within the field changes. For example: M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 34 ©2016 KnowAtomTM o Ask one student to compare kinetic energy and potential energy. (Kinetic and potential energy are the two categories of energy. Kinetic energy is energy in motion. Potential energy is energy that is stored. Energy of one kind can transform (change) into energy of another kind.) o Ask another student how a roller coaster causes energy to change from potential to kinetic and back again. (The roller coaster is a system made up of Earth, the track, and the roller coaster cars. A system is a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole, and energy of one kind can transform into energy of another form in an energy system. Energy changes from gravitational energy to mechanical energy and back to gravitational energy depending on where the roller coaster cars are on the track.) o Ask the first student how the height of the roller coaster cars is related to their energy. (The higher the roller coaster cars are, the more energy they have because as they move up the hill, they gain more energy.) o Challenge student understanding by asking the same student to explain how riders at the top of a hill on a roller coaster can have energy even though they aren’t moving. (At the top of the hill, roller coaster cars and the riders in them have gravitational energy, which is a kind of potential energy. They aren’t in motion, but they have stored energy, so they have the ability to do work.) o Ask another student where the potential energy at the top of the hill comes from. (That energy is a form of potential M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 35 ©2016 KnowAtomTM energy called gravitational energy, which is the energy stored in an object as a result of its vertical position or height. The higher an object is above ground, the more gravitational energy it has. As the roller coaster cars move up the first hill, they store increasing amounts of gravitational energy.) o Ask the first student what happens to the gravitational energy once the roller coaster cars start to move down the hill. (The moment the roller coaster cars begin to move downhill, their gravitational potential energy transforms into mechanical energy, which is the energy of a substance or system due to its motion.) 2. Display Energy Systems Visual. Continue the dialogue with students about roller coaster energy systems, focusing on why roller coaster systems are not perfect systems. Big Idea 7: Assess student understanding of the difference between perfect energy systems and real-world energy systems, in which energy is transferred out of the system. For example: o Ask one student how energy changes as it transforms from one form to another in a perfect system. (In a perfect system, the total amount of energy remains the same as it transforms from one form to another.) o Ask another student why a roller coaster isn’t a perfect system. (As the roller coaster cars move over the tracks, some of the energy is transferred out of the system, so not all of the energy is conserved.) o Assess student understanding of the difference between energy transformation and energy transfer, asking the first M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 36 ©2016 KnowAtomTM student to explain the difference. (When energy transforms, it changes from one form to another. For example, gravitational energy transforms to mechanical energy. When energy transfers, it moves into or out of an object or system.) o A common misconception is that energy can be transformed into a force. In reality, forces transfer energy, but one form of energy can only change into another form of energy, never into a force. Challenge this misconception by asking another student how force causes energy to transfer out of the roller coaster system. (Friction and drag are two forces that transfer energy out of systems. For example, friction is a force that slows motion whenever two objects rub against each other by turning mechanical energy into heat. That heat is energy that has transferred out of the system. Drag, also called air resistance, is another force that transfers energy out of a system. Drag is similar to friction, but it occurs between a solid substance and a fluid such as air.) Big Idea 8: Use the visual to assess student understanding of how energy transforms and is transferred in the roller coaster energy system. For example: o Ask one student where the potential energy at the top of the second hill comes from. (That potential energy can be traced back through the roller coaster energy system. When the roller coaster cars reached the top of the first hill, they had the most gravitational potential energy. That energy transformed to mechanical energy as the roller coaster cars moved down the hill, and then transformed back to gravitational energy as the roller coaster cars moved up the second hill.) o Ask another student why the first hill in a roller coaster is the tallest. (At the top of the first hill, the roller coaster cars have the most gravitational energy. As that gravitational M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 37 ©2016 KnowAtomTM energy transforms to mechanical energy as the cars begin to move down the hill, some of the energy transfers out of the system because of friction and drag. As a result, there is less energy within the roller coaster system to move the cars up the next hill.) o Ask the first student what would happen if the tallest hill of a roller coaster came at the end of the ride instead of the beginning. (The roller coaster wouldn’t have enough energy to climb up the hill.) o Ask another student why the roller coaster cars eventually slow down and stop. (By the end of the ride, all of the energy has transferred out of the system. This causes the roller coaster to slow down and eventually stop.) o Ask the first student what evidence would support the argument that some energy transferred out of the system. (Heat and sound would provide evidence that some energy transferred out of the roller coaster energy system.) 3. Display Energy Transformation Visual. Assess student understanding of energy transfer and energy conservation by applying these concepts to a bouncy ball hitting the ground. Big Idea 9: Coach students toward the idea that the same concepts of energy transformation and energy transfer within an energy system can be applied to a bouncy ball hitting the ground. For example: o Ask one student what parts make up the bouncy ball system in the visual. (The bouncy ball, the ground, and the air make up interacting parts of the bouncy ball system.) M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 38 ©2016 KnowAtomTM o Ask another student where the bouncy ball system’s energy comes from. (The energy comes from the height of the bouncy ball above the ground. It has gravitational potential energy from this height.) o Ask the first student how that gravitational potential energy changes when the ball is released. (The ball’s stored gravitational energy transforms into mechanical energy as it falls to the ground.) o Ask another student why the ground pushes back on the ball when the ball hits the ground. (The ground pushes back because for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction, according to the action-reaction law. Action-reaction pairs occur whenever two objects come into contact.) o Ask the first student how the force of the ball hitting the ground and the ground pushing back causes the ball’s energy to change. (Once the ball hits the ground, the mechanical energy transforms again to a form of potential energy called elastic energy, which is energy stored in objects when stretched. When the ball bounces back up, some of that potential energy transforms back into mechanical energy.) o Ask another student why the bouncy ball doesn’t bounce as high on the second bounce. (In a perfect system, the ball would bounce back to its original drop height above the ground. However, in the real world, the ball won’t bounce as high on the second bounce because some of the energy has transferred out of the system.) o Ask the first student what causes energy to transfer out of the bouncy ball system. (As the ball moves through the air, drag causes some of the gravitational energy to transfer out of the bouncy ball system. When the ball hits the floor, friction transfers some more energy out of the system. Finally, at the moment the ball hits the ground, some of the M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 39 ©2016 KnowAtomTM energy is transferred out of the ball as it transforms to sound energy, which is energy produced by sound vibrations moving through a substance in waves.) o One at a time, give multiple students a chance to respond to this question, evaluating each other’s answers as they explore the concept of energy transfer and transformation within an energy system. Redirect if student misconceptions arise by asking students to analyze specific parts of the misconception. Experiment: Lab 1 – Bounce Height SAFETY: Students should wear goggles during this activity. 1. Divide students into teams of two. Use Socratic dialogue and some materials for the lesson (bouncy balls and measuring tapes) to guide students toward asking a question about the relationship between a ball’s height above the ground (gravitational potential energy) and its resulting rebound motion (kinetic energy). For example: “How does the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a bouncy ball above the ground affect its bounce height (kinetic energy)?” Question As a class, discuss the possible questions for the experiment and decide which question to explore for the lab. For example: “How does the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a bouncy ball above the ground affect its bounce height (kinetic energy)?” Once the experiment question is established for the lab, students should record it in their lab notebooks. Students create a title for the new lab entry that is relevant to the question. In this example, a relevant lab title would be “Bounce Height.” NOTE: Use the Who is a Scientist poster and the Scientific Process Visual to help students work through the scientific process. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 40 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Research For research, students list up to three facts relevant to the experiment question, using information from the student lab manual and/or discussion. For example: • Potential energy is energy that is stored. Gravitational potential energy is the energy stored in an object as a result of its vertical position or height. • Kinetic energy is energy of motion. • The bouncy ball has gravitational potential energy when it is elevated above the ground. This energy transforms into kinetic energy when the bouncy ball is released and falls to the ground. When the bouncy ball hits the ground, the impact causes its shape to change because it is made of flexible rubber; as a result, the bouncy ball’s kinetic energy transforms to elastic potential energy. As the bouncy ball’s shape is restored, the elastic potential energy transforms back to kinetic energy, and the ball bounces back into the air. Hypothesis Students form their own hypothesis and record it in their lab notebooks. For example: • “Increasing the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a bouncy ball increases its bounce height (kinetic energy).” • “Increasing the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a bouncy ball decreases its bounce height (kinetic energy).” • “Increasing the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a bouncy ball has no effect on its bounce height (kinetic energy).” M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 41 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Checkpoint #1: After Question, Research, and Hypothesis As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review their question, research, and hypothesis. Do the lab notebooks of both team members match and meet expectations? Can both students within the team explain their reasoning? If not, ask for areas of clarification or correction before they advance further. Not all teams will arrive at the lab check-points at the same time, so teams independently receive the go-ahead to move on in their lab after they have made the necessary modifications. At this point in the year, student lab notebook entries within the class will most likely have the same question, but variations from team to team in the remaining steps of the process are expected and encouraged. Summarize Experiment Stand by the materials stations and explain how the materials function (measuring tape) and the general amounts each team can use. Facilitate a discussion that will help students arrive at a testable experiment. Students summarize the experiment in their lab notebooks. Summaries should note the independent and dependent variables, constants, and a control (when applicable) in the experiment. For example: “Our experiment will measure the bounce height of a bouncy ball for five separate trails when dropped from three different heights above the ground. The constant in the experiment is the ball type. The independent variable in the experiment is the bouncy ball drop height and the dependent variable is the bounce height. There is no control in this experiment.” M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 42 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Checkpoint #2: After Experiment Summary As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the experiment summary of their lab. Do the lab notebooks of each team member match and meet expectations? Can students explain their reasoning? The summary should not include a detailed procedure or materials quantities. Students describe what data will be collected to serve as evidence to address the lab question. The summary should include the basics of the data to be collected, the number of trials students will conduct, the independent and dependent variables, and the parts of the experiment they will keep constant in each test or trial. List Materials and Procedures Students list materials and all relevant safety precautions in their lab notebooks. Safety: • 1 bouncy ball • goggles • 1 measuring tape • masking tape (shared) Teams develop a standardized list of steps for their procedure. The procedure may vary from team to team depending on approach. Student procedures should include a level of detail comparable to this example procedure: Step 1: Mark three different drop heights (100 cm, 150 cm, and 200 cm) on a wall with masking tape. Step 2: Hold the bouncy ball 100 centimeters above the ground. Drop the ball and measure the height of the first bounce with the measuring tape. Step 3: Repeat Step 2 for four more trials. Step 4: Repeat Steps 2-3 for two more tests, first dropping the bouncy ball from 150 centimeters above the ground, and then 200 centimeters above the ground. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 43 ©2016 KnowAtomTM NOTE: Teams will need to determine the role of each team member when dropping and recording bounce height measurements. The masking tape can be used to mark the drop height distances above the ground. It can also be used to mark centimeter increments as a reference for determining bounce height. Teams may wish to practice measuring the bouncy ball bounce heights for several trials before collecting data. Checkpoint #3: After Materials and Procedure As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the material and procedure steps of their lab. Are the materials and procedure in vertical lists and quantities included with all materials? Can you follow each team’s procedure? Are the materials and quantities under “materials” all required by the procedure? Is it clear, concise, and specific? If not, clarify expectations. Students make corrections or any modifications and return to the checkpoint for the go-ahead. Scientific Diagram Students draw a titled scientific diagram of their experiment system-in-progress. All materials should be labeled. For example: Bounce Height Experiment Diagram M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 44 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Checkpoint #4: After Scientific Diagram As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review their lab scientific diagram. Are the diagrams complete? Diagrams should be titled and materials labeled. If complete, students pick up blank data tables and graphs to tape inside their lab notebooks and then proceed to collect the materials needed to conduct their experiment after meeting at this checkpoint. Data Teams collect the materials from the pick-up stations to carry out their experiment. Students record data in their data tables as the experiment progresses. Students then create a line graph to compare the average bounce height of the bouncy ball (dependent variable on the y-axis) at different drop heights (independent variable on the x-axis). Due to the imprecision of measuring bouncy ball bounce height, students can round the data to the nearest whole number (optional). Photocopy and distribute blank data tables and graphs to save time (optional). Table 1: Testing Bouncy Ball Bounce Height vs. Drop Height Bouncy Ball Bounce Height Drop Height Trial Trial Trial Trial Trial Average (cm) 1 2 3 4 5 Test 1: 58 50 53 58 58 55 ______100_____ cm Test 2: 88 93 83 88 91 89 ______150_____ cm Test 3: 119 117 116 110 115 115 ______200_____ cm NOTE: Example data table represents one possible outcome. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 45 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Bounce Height (cm) Graph 1: Average Bounce Height vs. Drop Height 120 115 110 105 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Drop Height (cm) Conclusion Each student writes a conclusion that summarizes his or her findings and tells how the data did or did not support the hypothesis. For example: “Our hypothesis that increasing the drop height (gravitational potential energy) of a ball increases its bounce height (kinetic energy) is true. Our data show that as the drop height increased, the bounce height of the ball also increased. The average bounce height of the ball dropped from 200 centimeters above the ground was between 26 and 60 centimeters greater than when the ball was dropped from 100 and 150 centimeters above the ground. We can conclude that the kinetic energy (bounce height) of the ball increases when the drop height increases because more M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 46 ©2016 KnowAtomTM gravitational potential energy transforms to mechanical kinetic energy.” Final Checkpoint: After Data and Conclusion As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the data and conclusion steps of their lab. One team member reads the team’s conclusion aloud to you while you review the other team member’s lab notebook. Do they restate the hypothesis? Have they made a true/false/inconclusive claim? Look for key data points that students used to form their conclusion. Is it clear? Is it persuasive? Do the data support the claim? If the results are contrary to their research, what might be responsible? How could they test for that in the future? Wrap-Up: 1. Have a dialogue with students to share team results from the experiment. For example: • Ask students from one team to present their data. Ask the class whether the data were consistent with all teams in the class. If not, ask students from the first team what may have caused some teams to have different data. [Answers will vary. Ask students to compare their results and analyze possibilities for any differences.] • Ask students from another team whether they experienced any challenges in conducting this experiment, and if so, what they were. [Answers will vary. Challenges are a part of conducting experiments, and discussing them can help students think through their process, comparing their method with other student teams. For example, a common challenge for this experiment is measuring the bounce height. It helps for teams to practice a couple of times to work out the timing.] • Ask students from the first team to describe any patterns they noticed in the data about the relationship between the drop M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 47 ©2016 KnowAtomTM height and the bounce height, and what causes this relationship. [The higher the drop height was, the higher the bounce height. This is because the ball has more gravitational energy when it is dropped from a greater height. That gravitational energy transforms to mechanical energy, which is reflected in bounce height.] • Ask students from another team why the bounce height was always less than the initial drop height. [Some of the energy transferred out of the system as the ball moved through the air because of air resistance. In addition, some of the energy transferred out of the ball and transformed to sound energy when the ball hit the ground.] 2. Continue the dialogue with students about the experiment, focusing on how the experiment provided evidence for how energy is transferred when the kinetic energy of an object changes. For example: • Ask one student how energy changed throughout the experiment. [At the beginning, the ball had gravitational energy due to its height. When the ball was dropped, that energy transformed to mechanical energy as the ball fell to the ground. As the ball hit the ground and then bounced back up, that mechanical energy was transformed back into gravitational energy.] • Ask another student how they knew the kinetic energy of the ball changed. [The kinetic (mechanical) energy of the ball changed because its motion changed. It changed direction and speed.] • Ask the first student how they knew that energy transferred out of the system. [The fact that the bounce height was always less than the drop height is evidence that some energy transferred out of the system because there was less energy to move the ball upward. We know that energy cannot be lost, so it had to go somewhere.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 48 ©2016 KnowAtomTM • Ask another student why the dropped ball was an example of an energy system. [It was an energy system made up of connected, interacting parts—the ball, the air, and the ground. Energy transformed from gravitational potential energy to mechanical kinetic energy to elastic potential energy to mechanical kinetic energy to gravitational potential energy. As the ball moved, some of the energy transferred out of the system, due to drag and friction.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 49 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 1 – Example Laboratory Notebook This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 50 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 1 – Example Laboratory Notebook (continued) This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 51 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 1 – Example Laboratory Notebook (continued) This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 52 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 1 – Blank Data Table and Graph Table 1: Testing Bouncy Ball Bounce Height vs. Drop Height Bouncy Ball Bounce Height Drop Height Trial Trial Trial Trial Trial Average (cm) 1 2 3 4 5 Test 1: ___________________ Test 2: ___________________ Test 3: ____________________ Bounce Height (cm) Graph 1: Average Bounce Height vs. Drop Height 120 115 110 105 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Drop Height (cm) M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 53 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Lesson 2: Mass and Energy Transfer Objective: Students use the scientific process to investigate how the kinetic energy a marble transfers to a plastic cup at the base of an inclined plane is affected by its mass. Materials: Consumable A. Goggles – 1 per student B. Laboratory notebooks – 1 per student C. Pipe insulation – 1 section per team D. Plastic cups – 2 per team A Non-Consumable E. Digital scales – 1 per team F. Small marbles – 1 per team G. Medium marbles – 1 per team H. Large marbles – 1 per team I. Energy Transfer in Billiards Visual – (not shown) J. Mass and Energy Transfer Visual – (not shown) Teacher Tool Kit: K. Measuring tape – 1 per team L. Masking tape – shared K M. Scissors – 1 per team M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 B C E D F Unit 1 – Page 54 G L H M ©2016 KnowAtomTM Teacher Preparation: • Download the visuals from the KnowAtom Interactive website. • To save time, prepare photocopies of the Blank Data Table and Blank Graph for each student using the copy master on page 72. • Arrange pick-up stations for teams to collect materials to use at their desks. For example: o Pick-Up Station 1: laboratory notebooks and goggles o Pick-up Station 2: pipe insulation and plastic cups o Pick-Up Station 3: marbles and digital scales o Pick-Up Station 4: measuring tapes, scissors, and masking tape NOTE: To operate the digital scale, first remove the black cover and place the scale on a smooth, level surface. Press the ON button. Use the mode button to select the units you wish to use for your experiment (grams [g]). Press the Tare button to calibrate the scale before using (it will reset to 0). To automatically exclude the mass of the container holding a liquid or solid, press the Tare button with the empty container on the scale. Any readings on the scale after will only measure the mass of the solid or liquid added to the container. Keep the scale clear of debris and do not exceed 1,000 g. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 55 scale with cover scale without cover (in use) ©2016 KnowAtomTM Student Reading Preparation: • Students read Section 3 of the student lab manual. In 6th grade, students are expected to come to class having already read the lab manual so they can actively participate in the Socratic dialogue before the lab portion of the lesson. At the beginning of the school year (September-October), the lab manual can be read in class. • If class time is used to read the lab manual together, model how to read closely for understanding. For example: o Emphasize connections between examples in the reading and broader concepts. For example, ask why a certain example was used to support the reading’s main point. o Use “why” and “how” questions to connect ideas in the reading to student experiences. Socratic Dialogue: Block 2-1: Relationship Between Energy and Forces 1. Display Energy Transfer in Billiards Visual. Continue the dialogue with students about energy transfer and energy conservation, focusing on how energy is transferred whenever two objects come into contact with one another. Big Idea 10: Coach students toward the idea that whenever two objects come into contact with one another, they exert a force on each other that transfers energy. For example: o Ask one student what causes the balls in a game of billiards to begin to move. (The balls begin to move when energy is M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 56 ©2016 KnowAtomTM transferred from a person hitting the cue ball. The force of this contact causes energy to transfer from the cue stick to the cue ball and then to the other balls.) o Ask another student how the amount of force applied by the cue stick relates to how much energy is transferred. (If the white cue ball is hit with a smaller force, it will have less energy to transfer to the other balls. If it is hit with a greater force, it will have more energy to transfer to the other balls.) o Ask the first student why the other balls start to move when the cue ball hits them. (The force transferred by the white cue ball changes the objects’ motion. This is why the solid and striped balls begin to move. The white cue ball exerts a force on another ball that transfers some of the cue ball’s mechanical energy to the other ball, causing the other ball to move.) o Ask another student how the cue ball moves if it travels in a straight line and hits another ball exactly in the middle. (The cue ball will stop moving because of energy conservation: all of the energy from the white cue ball is transferred to the other ball.) o Ask the first student what might cause the cue ball to keep moving after it hits another ball. (If the cue ball did not hit the other ball exactly in its middle, not all of the cue ball’s energy will be transferred to the other ball, so the cue ball will keep moving before friction eventually causes it to stop.) Big Idea 11: Assess student understanding of the conservation of energy, focusing on why the billiard balls move with less energy than the initial amount of energy transferred to them. For example: o Ask one student how the amount of force applied to the cue stick is related to the amount of energy that moves the balls on the table in a perfect system. (In a perfect system, the M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 57 ©2016 KnowAtomTM same amount of energy put into the cue ball is going to be conserved and transferred to the other balls because of the conservation of energy.) o Ask another student why a game of billiards isn’t an example of a perfect system. (In a real-world game of pool, some energy transfers out of the system because of friction caused by the white cue ball moving across the table, and drag as it moves through the air.) o Ask the first student why sound is produced when a cue ball hits another ball. (Sound is another form of energy. When the cue ball hits another ball, the force of the collision transfers some of the mechanical energy into the second object, and into other forms of energy, such as sound. This is why collisions often make loud noises.) 2. Display Mass and Energy Transfer Visual. Have a dialogue with students about how another factor that influences movement is mass. Big Idea 12: Coach students toward the idea that more massive objects have more kinetic energy when moving at a certain speed than less massive objects moving at the same speed, and therefore transfer more energy during a collision. For example: o Ask one student why a more massive ball transfers more energy in a collision than a less massive ball when both balls are moving at the same speed (the rate at which an M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 58 ©2016 KnowAtomTM object covers distance in a period of time). (A more massive ball in motion has more kinetic energy than a less massive ball moving at the same speed. This is why it transfers more energy in a collision than a less massive ball.) o Ask another student to predict how the movement of the second ball would change after it collides with a more massive ball compared to a less massive ball. (Because a more massive ball in motion has more kinetic energy than a less massive ball moving at the same speed, we can expect the second ball to move a greater distance after it collides with a more massive ball compared to a less massive ball.) o Ask the first student whether or not they agree with what the second student said, using their own observations and/or examples from the reading to support their analysis. Give the second student a chance to respond, so that both are evaluating each other’s answers as they explore the relationship between an object’s mass and the amount of energy it transfers during a collision. Experiment: Lab 2 – Marble Mass SAFETY: Students should wear goggles during this activity. 1. Divide students into teams of two. To help students visualize the inclined plane model for the lab, use the materials to show a basic inclined plane set-up. Prop one end of the pipe insulation up on a plastic cup to create an inclined plane. Position a second plastic cup upside down against the lowest end of the pipe insulation (students will need to cut an opening in the cup for the marble to roll into). Use Socratic dialogue, the inclined plane model, and the marbles to guide students toward asking a question about the effect of a marble’s mass on the amount of kinetic energy a marble can transfer to the plastic cup at the base of the inclined plane when it rolls into it. For example: “If a marble rolls down an inclined plane and into a cup, how does the mass of the marble affect how far the cup moves?” M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 59 ©2016 KnowAtomTM example inclined plane system with “target” cup diagram on far right Question As a class, discuss the possible questions for the experiment and decide which question to explore for the lab. For example: “If a marble rolls down an inclined plane and into a cup, how does the mass of the marble affect how far the cup moves?” Once the experiment question is established for the lab, students record it in their lab notebooks. Students create a title for the new lab entry that is relevant to the question. In this example, a relevant lab title would be “Marble Mass.” NOTE: Use the Who is a Scientist poster and the Scientific Process Visual to help students work through the scientific process. Research For research, students list up to three facts relevant to the experiment question, using information from the student lab manual and/or discussion. For example: • Mass is a measure of the amount of matter that make up an object or substance. It is measured in grams (g). • An inclined plane is a surface inclined at an angle to the ground. • The marble has gravitational potential energy at the top of the inclined plane due to its elevation above the ground. The gravitational potential energy transforms to kinetic M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 60 ©2016 KnowAtomTM (mechanical) energy when the marble rolls down the inclined plane. When the marble hits the cup, some of the marble’s kinetic energy is transferred to the cup, causing the cup to slide across the ground. Some of the kinetic energy of the cup transfers out of the system, transforming into sound energy and heat due to friction between the cup and the ground. This causes the cup to slow down and eventually stop. Hypothesis Students form their own hypothesis and record it in their lab notebooks. For example: • “Increasing the mass of a marble increases the distance a cup moves when the marble rolls into it.” • “Increasing the mass of a marble decreases the distance a cup moves when the marble rolls into it.” • “The mass of the marble has no effect on the distance a cup moves when a marble rolls into it.” Checkpoint #1: After Question, Research, and Hypothesis As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review their question, research, and hypothesis. Do the lab notebooks of both team members match and meet expectations? Can both students within the team explain their reasoning? If not, ask for areas of clarification or correction before they advance further. Not all teams will arrive at the lab check-points at the same time, so teams independently receive the go-ahead to move on in their lab after they have made the necessary modifications. At this point in the year, student lab notebook entries within the class will most likely have the same question, but variations from team to team in the remaining steps of the process are expected and encouraged. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 61 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Summarize Experiment Stand by the materials stations and explain how the materials function (digital scales, pipe insulation, etc.) and the general amounts each team can use. Facilitate a discussion that will help students arrive at a testable experiment. Students summarize the experiment in their lab notebooks. Summaries should detail the independent and dependent variables, constants, and a control (when applicable) in the experiment. For example: “Our experiment will test how increasing the mass of a marble affects the average distance a target cup moves when a marble rolls down an inclined plane and into the cup for five separate trials. The constants in the experiment are the height of the inclined plane and the size of the plastic “target” cup. The independent variable in the experiment is the mass of the marble and the dependent variable is the distance the “target” cup moves. There is no control in this experiment because all objects need an unbalanced force to move.” Checkpoint #2: After Experiment Summary As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the experiment summary of their lab. Do the lab notebooks of each team member match and meet expectations? Can students explain their reasoning? The summary should not include a detailed procedure or materials quantities. Students describe what data will be collected to serve as evidence to address the lab question. The summary should include the basics of the data to be collected, the number of trials students will conduct, the independent and dependent variables, and the parts of the experiment they will keep constant in each test or trial. List Materials and Procedures Students list materials and all relevant safety precautions in their lab notebooks. Safety: • 2 plastic cups • goggles M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 62 ©2016 KnowAtomTM • • • • • • • • 1 large marble 1 medium marble 1 small marble 1 section of pipe insulation 1 pair of scissors 1 digital scale 1 measuring tape masking tape (shared) Teams develop a standardized list of steps for their procedure. The procedures may vary from team to team depending on approach. Student procedures should include a level of detail comparable to the example procedure below: Inclined Plane and Target Cup Set-Up Step 1: Cut out a large, 5-cm x 4-cm section from the rim of one plastic cup for the marble to roll into. This will be the “target” cup. Step 2: Tape the second plastic cup upside down on a flat, level surface. Lean one end of the pipe insulation against the top edge of the plastic cup to create an inclined plane. Secure the pipe insulation to the cup with tape. Step 3: Position the “target” cup upside down against the lowest end of the inclined plane. The hole in the cup should line up with the channel in the pipe insulation. Testing Procedure: Step 1: Mass the large marble. Step 2: Release the large marble from the highest point of the inclined plane so it rolls down the channel and into the cup. Record the distance the target cup moved. Return the target cup to its starting position. Step 3: Repeat Step 2 for four more trials. Step 4: Repeat steps 1-3 for two more tests, first with the medium marble, then the small marble. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 63 ©2016 KnowAtomTM NOTE: Students may need to set up their inclined planes on the floor to allow enough room for the target cup to move. Students may need to trim the edges of the pipe insulation so the large marble has enough clearance to roll down the channel without getting stuck. Checkpoint #3: After Materials and Procedure As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the material and procedure steps of their lab. Are the materials and procedure in vertical lists and quantities included with all materials? Can you follow each team’s procedure? Are the materials and quantities under “materials” all required by the procedure? Is it clear, concise, and specific? If not, clarify expectations. Students make corrections or any modifications and return to the checkpoint for the go-ahead. Scientific Diagram Students draw a titled scientific diagram of their experimental system-in-progress. All materials and the predicted motion of the marbles and cup should be labeled. For example: Marble Mass Experiment Diagram M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 64 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Checkpoint #4: After Scientific Diagram As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review their lab scientific diagram. Are the diagrams complete? Diagrams should be titled and materials labeled. If complete, students pick up blank data tables and graphs to tape inside their lab notebooks and then proceed to collect the materials needed to conduct their experiment after meeting at this checkpoint. Data Teams collect the materials from the pick-up stations to carry out their experiment. Students record data in their data tables as the experiment progresses. Students then create a line graph to compare the average distance the target cup moved (dependent variable on the y-axis) vs. the mass of the marble (independent variable on the x-axis). Photocopy and distribute blank data tables and graphs to save time. Table 1: Comparing Distance Target Cup Moved vs. Marble Mass Distance Target Cup Moved Marble (cm) Mass Trial Trial Trial Trial Trial (g) Average 1 2 3 4 5 Large Marble 37.1 42.2 34.3 39.2 37.6 38.1 ________20.7_______ Medium Marble 11.7 10.5 11.8 9.6 12.1 11.1 ________3.5________ Small Marble 3.1 3.2 2.5 3.2 3.0 3.0 ________1.5________ NOTE: Example data table represents one possible outcome. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 65 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Distnace cup moved (cm) Graph 1: Distance Target CupMoved Moved vs. Graph 1: Distance Target Cup vs.Marble MarbleMass Mass 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Marble Mass (g) Conclusion Each student writes a conclusion that summarizes his or her findings and tells how the data did or did not support the hypothesis. For example: “Our hypothesis that the mass of a marble has no effect on the distance a cup moves when a marble rolls into it is false. We found that as the mass of the marble increased, the distance the target cup moved when the marble rolled into it also increased. Our data show that the average distance the plastic cup moved was between 27 and 35.1 centimeters farther with the 20.7gram marble compared to the 3.5- and 1.5-gram marbles. We can conclude that marbles with more mass transfer more kinetic energy M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 66 ©2016 KnowAtomTM when they collide with an object compared to marbles with less mass.” Final Checkpoint: After Data and Conclusion As teams are ready, they should check in with the teacher to review the data and conclusion steps of their lab. One team member reads the team’s conclusion aloud to you while you review the other team member’s lab notebook. Do they restate the hypothesis? Have they made a true/false/inconclusive claim? Look for key data points that students used to form their conclusion. Is it clear? Is it persuasive? Do the data support the claim? If the results are contrary to their research, what might be responsible? How could they test for that in the future? Wrap-Up: 1. Have a dialogue with students to review the concepts of energy transfer and motion covered in the experiment. For example: • Ask one student what kind of energy transformation took place during this experiment. [Gravitational potential energy transformed to mechanical energy as the marble moved down the ramp.] • Ask another student what energy transfer took place in the experiment. [When the marble collided with the plastic cup, mechanical energy from the marble transferred to the cup, which is what caused the cup to move.] • Ask the first student how the marble was able to transfer energy to the cup. [Whenever two objects come into contact with each other, both objects exert a force on each other. When the marble collided with the cup, both the marble and the cup exerted a force on each other. This force caused the energy transfer from the marble to the cup.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 67 ©2016 KnowAtomTM • Ask another student why the experiment provided evidence for the relationship between the mass of an object and its kinetic energy. [The movement of the plastic cup after the marble collides with it is an indication of the amount of energy transferred by the moving marble. When it travelled a greater distance, it is because the marble with the largest mass transferred the most kinetic energy.] • Ask the first student to predict how the motion of the marble down the ramp would likely change if the ramp were raised higher. [If the ramp were raised higher, it would cause the amount of gravitational potential energy stored in all three marbles to increase. This would increase the amount of energy transformed into mechanical energy as the marble moves down the ramp and then transferred to the cup. The conclusion would still be the same, however, because the most massive marble would still have the greatest amount of potential energy.] 2. Continue the dialogue with students about the experiment’s results, asking student teams to assess their results compared to other teams. For example: • Were the data consistent with all teams in the class? If not, what may have caused some teams to have different data? [Answers will vary. Ask students to compare their results and analyze possibilities for any differences.] • Ask students from one team whether they experienced any challenges in conducting this experiment, and if they did, what they were. [Answers will vary. Challenges are a part of conducting experiments, and discussing them can help students think through their process, comparing their method with other student teams. One challenge might be setting up the procedure—for example, it is important that the height of the ramp remain the same for every trial so the only variable being tested is the different masses of the marbles.] • Ask students from another team how they overcame those challenges, and why they chose the approach they did. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 68 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 2 – Example Laboratory Notebook This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 69 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 2 – Example Laboratory Notebook (continued) This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 70 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 2 – Example Laboratory Notebook (continued) This complete lab notebook entry is intended to be used as an exemplar only. It is not intended for student use. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 71 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Lesson 2 – Blank Data Table and Graph Table 1: Comparing Distance Target Cup Moved vs. Marble Mass Distance Target Cup Moved Marble (cm) Mass Trial Trial Trial Trial Trial (g) Average 1 2 3 4 5 Large Marble ____________________ Medium Marble ____________________ Small Marble ____________________ Distnace cup moved (cm) Graph 1: Distance Target Cup Moved vs 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Marble Mass (g) M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 72 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Name:________________________________________________ Date:________________ Unit 1: Gravity and Motion Vocabulary Check Part I: Circle the best answer for questions 1-5 below. 1. The ______ ______ of an object refers to the gravitational force exerted on an object by a planet or moon. A. mass B. weight C. independent variable D. force 2. Mechanical energy is a form of ______ ____ because it is the energy of motion, specifically the energy of an object or substance due to its motion. A. potential energy B. gravitational energy C. kinetic energy D. chemical energy 3. Science as we know it today involves ____ ____. A. experimenting B. questioning C. observing D. all of the above 4. ___ ________is the force that holds us all on Earth’s surface because it is a force of attraction between all matter. A. Gravity B. Energy C. Acceleration D. Speed 5. A roller coaster is an example of a(n)_____ __ because it is a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole. A. experiment B. system C. pattern D. hypothesis M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 73 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Part II: Write the answers to questions 6-8 below. 6. Why do scientists follow a scientific process? _____________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ 7. Why is gravity an attractive force? Give an example of this attraction. _____________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ 8. How does potential energy relate to kinetic energy? _____________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 74 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Name:________________________________________________ Date:________________ Unit 1: Gravity and Motion Concept Check Part I: Circle the best answer to each question. 1. Louisa has two rubber bands that she stretches as far as they can go. What kind of energy do the rubber bands have when stretched? A. kinetic energy B. mechanical energy C. gravitational potential energy D. elastic potential energy 2. Why is all matter on Earth’s surface affected by Earth’s gravity and not the gravity of other matter? A. Most matter does not have gravity. B. Earth is more massive than any other matter on Earth’s surface. C. Earth is less massive than any other matter on Earth’s surface. D. Matter on Earth’s surface is not affected by Earth’s gravity. 3. There is a book on the ground and a book on a shelf. Which of the following statements must be true? A. The book on a shelf has gravitational potential energy because of its height above the ground. B. The book on the ground has gravitational potential energy because of its position on the ground. C. The book on the ground is more massive than the book on the shelf. D. The book on the ground is less massive than the book on the shelf. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 75 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Part II: Read the Splash Height scenario, and then answer the questions that follow. Splash Height Every summer, Kyle visits the outdoor pool in his neighborhood. One of the pools has a diving platform. A diving platform is a structure with platforms of various heights that extend out over the edge of a pool. Swimmers dive off the platforms into the pool. One day, some of the kids at the pool were doing “cannon ball” dives off the diving platform, creating giant splashes in the pool. Kyle noticed that when the diving platform kids dove off the highest platform, the water in the pool splashed much higher than when they dove from the lower platforms. Kyle wondered if the heights of the diving platforms had anything to do with how high the water splashed in the pool when the kids dove from them. Kyle returned to school and told his science class about his observations at the pool over the summer. Some of the students thought that the heights of the diving platforms were connected to the splash height of the water. Other students thought the diving platform had no effect on the splash height of the water. Kyle’s science teacher suggested the class work in teams to carry out an experiment like scientists to answer their question. Since the class didn’t have access to a real pool, Kyle’s science teacher suggested they use a model to represent the pool and divers instead. Models are useful when studying something that is too big or too small to investigate in the classroom. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 76 ©2016 KnowAtomTM For the model, Kyle’s teacher gave each team a measuring tape, a ball (to represent a diver), and a bucket filled with water (to represent the pool). Materials: measuring tape bucket filled with water ball Kyle and his class decided to carry out their experiment using the materials and the following question: If a ball is dropped into a bucket of water, how does the drop height of the ball above the water affect the splash height of the water? Making a Prediction 1. Write a prediction for the question in the spaces below. Hint: This question is most similar to the hypothesis in the scientific process. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ 2. Explain your prediction using information from the story and what you know about forms of energy and energy transfer. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 77 ©2016 KnowAtomTM ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ Testing the Prediction Kyle and his team took the materials and designed an experiment to compare the splash height of the water in the bucket when a ball is dropped into it from three different heights. The constants in their experiment are the ball type and the amount of water in the bucket. The independent variable in the experiment is the ball drop heights above the water and the dependent variable is the splash height of the water. Here is Kyle’s experiment procedure: Step 1: Hold the ball 100 centimeters above the water-filled bucket. Drop the ball into the water-filled bucket and measure the height the water splashes with the measuring tape. Step 2: Repeat Step 1 for four more trials. Step 3: Repeat Steps 1-2 for two more tests, first dropping the ball into the water from 150 centimeters above the bucket, and then from 200 centimeters above the bucket. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 78 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Kyle and his team drew a scientific diagram of their ball and bucket system in-progress. Testing Splash Height Diagram Analyze Data Here is the data Kyle and his team collected from the investigation: Table 1: Testing Water Splash Height vs. Ball Drop Height Water Splash Height Ball Drop (cm) Height Trial Trial Trial Trial Trial (cm) Average 1 2 3 4 5 Test 1: 100 12 14 16 13 12 13 Test 2: 150 21 20 25 22 23 22 Test 3: 200 30 35 31 29 34 32 M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 79 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Graph Data 3. Use the data from Table 1 to create a line graph to compare the average height the water splashed when the drop height of the ball changes in the blank graph below. Title the graph, create a scale for the graph, and label the x- and y-axis. Water Splash Height (cm) Graph 1: Average Water Splash Height vs. Ball 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Ball drop Height (cm) 4. Describe any patterns you notice in Kyle’s data. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 80 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 5. Look at the prediction and explanation you wrote for Questions 1 and 2. Now look at the data in Table 1 and Graph 1. Does Kyle’s data support your prediction and explanation? Yes No 6. Explain how the data did or did not support your prediction and explanation. Hint: This question is most similar to the conclusion in the scientific process. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 81 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 7. During the experiment, one team lost their ball in the middle of collecting splash height data. The team found a larger ball and decided to continue collecting data using the large ball in place of the original ball. One of the team members thought using the large ball will affect the experiment. Why? ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 82 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Appendix 1 Answer Keys Vocabulary Check Part I 1. B. weight [The weight of an object refers to the gravitational force exerted on an object by a planet or moon. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter that makes up an object or substance. Mass and weight are related because an object’s weight depends on its mass, but they are different, although the distinction between mass and weight is typically ignored by non-scientists because acceleration due to gravity is nearly identical everywhere on Earth (9.8 m/s2). A force is a push or pull that acts on an object, changing its speed, direction, or shape. An independent variable is something you change in an experiment.] 2. C. kinetic energy [Mechanical energy is a form of kinetic energy because it is energy of motion. Mechanical energy is the energy of a substance or system due to its motion. Both gravitational and chemical energy are forms of potential energy, which is stored energy. Gravitational energy is the energy stored in an object as a result of its vertical position or height, and chemical energy is energy stored in the bonds of atoms and molecules.] 3. D. All of the above [Science involves experimenting, questioning, and observing. Scientists begin all investigations with a question they want to answer. They conduct an experiment—a specific procedure that tests if a hypothesis is true or false—to generate data, which can be observations and/or measurements.] 4. A. Gravity [Gravity is the force that holds us all on Earth’s surface because it is a force of attraction between all matter. Earth’s gravity pulls downward on us toward Earth’s center, which holds us on the surface. Acceleration is an increase in speed over time. Speed is the rate at which an object covers distance in a period of time. Energy is the ability to do work.] 5. B. system [A roller coaster is an example of a system because it is a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole. It includes the cars and track, and energy transfers out of it due to drag and friction as the cars move over the track. An experiment is a specific procedure that tests if a hypothesis is true or false. A hypothesis is a statement that can be proved true or false. A pattern is something that happens in a regular and repeated way.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 83 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Part II 6. [Scientists follow the scientific process because it provides scientists with a framework for answering questions, and leads them through a logical progression of steps to follow on that path. Each step is important because it allows the experiment to be clearly followed and replicated by other scientists.] 7. [Gravity is an attractive force because attractive forces pull objects between them, rather than pushing them away (which is what opposing forces do). Gravity pulls objects rather than pushes them away. An example of this attractive force is a ball thrown up in the air that falls back to the surface. Earth’s gravity is attracting the ball, pulling it toward Earth’s center rather than away from Earth.] 8. [Potential energy is energy that is stored. Kinetic energy is energy of motion. The two categories of energy are related because they are constantly transforming from one to the other. Potential energy transforms to other kinds of potential energy or kinetic energy, and kinetic energy transforms into other forms of kinetic energy or potential energy.] Concept Check Part I 1. D. elastic potential energy [When Louisa stretches a rubber band as far as it can go, it has elastic potential energy. Elastic energy is energy stored in objects when stretched. It is a form of potential energy because it is stored energy. Gravitational potential energy is another form of potential energy, but it is stored energy related to an object’s height above the ground. Kinetic energy is the energy of motion, and mechanical energy is a form of kinetic energy that is the energy of a substance or system due to its motion.] 2. B. Earth is more massive than any other matter on Earth’s surface. [All matter on Earth’s surface is affected by Earth’s gravity and not the gravity of other kinds of matter because Earth is more massive than any other matter on Earth. The strength of gravitational interactions depends on the masses of the interacting objects.] 3. A. The book on a shelf has gravitational potential energy because of its height above the ground. [If there is a book on the ground and a book on a shelf, it must be true that the book on a shelf has gravitational potential energy because of its height above the ground. Gravitational energy is stored energy related to an object’s height above the ground. The book on the ground cannot have gravitational energy because it is on the ground. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 84 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Therefore, it does not have gravitational energy. The statement in the question does not reveal anything about the mass of either book.] Part II This assessment asks students to analyze an investigation into how the drop height of a ball above water affects the splash height of the water. These questions assess the NGSS standards MS-PS3-2 and MS-PS3-5. They also partially assess the NGSS standard MS-PS3-1. 1. In this question, students are asked to make a prediction about how the drop height of a ball above water affects the splash height of the water. Students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Asking Questions and Defining Problems, as well as the disciplinary core ideas of Definitions of Energy and Relationship Between Energy and Forces. They are also partially assessed on the crosscutting concept of Energy and Matter. o Student answer should demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between a ball’s height above the water and the height of the splash after the ball is dropped into the water. For example: “Increasing the drop height of the ball above the water increases the splash height of the water when the ball is dropped into the water.” “Increasing the drop height of the ball above the water decreases the splash height of the water when the ball is dropped into the water.” “There is no way to predict the splash height of the water based on the drop height of the ball.” 2. In Question 2, students are asked to explain their prediction using information in the story about diving platforms at a pool, as well as their own knowledge about forms of energy and energy transfer. By explaining their prediction, students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Constructing Explanations and Designing Solutions. They are also partially assessed on the disciplinary core idea of Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer, as well as the crosscutting concepts of Energy and Matter and Systems and System Models. o Student answer should connect the ball and water in a bucket with what they know about energy transfer. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 85 ©2016 KnowAtomTM For example: “When a ball is released from a position above the ground and into a bucket of water, gravitational energy is transformed into mechanical energy as the ball falls. The force of the ball hitting the water produces a force that transfers the mechanical energy of the ball to the water, which results in water splashing up. The higher the drop height is, the more gravitational energy is put into this system of the ball and bucket of water, which will result in an increased splash height.” 3. By creating a line graph that compares the average height the water splashed when the drop height of the ball changes, students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Using Mathematics and Computational Thinking. Water Splash Height (cm) Graph 1: Average Water Splash Height vs. Ball Drop Height 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Ball Drop Height (cm) 4. In this question, students are asked to describe any patterns they notice in the data. Students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Analyzing and Interpreting Data, as well as the disciplinary M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 86 ©2016 KnowAtomTM core idea of Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer. They are also partially assessed on the crosscutting concept of Patterns. o Student answer should demonstrate an understanding of how to analyze the graph for patterns. For example: As the ball drop height increased, the water splash height also increased. When the ball was dropped from 200 centimeters above the bucket, the water splashed 32 centimeters, compared to 13 centimeters when the ball was dropped from 100 centimeters above the bucket. 5. By using the data to analyze their prediction in Question 1, students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Analyzing and Interpreting Data. o Student answer should reflect that student analyzed the prediction based on the data provided. 6. By explaining why the data did or did not support the explanation of how the drop height of a ball above water affects the splash height of the water, students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practices of Engaging in Argument from Evidence and Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information, as well as the disciplinary core ideas of Relationship Between Energy and Forces and Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer. Students are also partially assessed on the crosscutting concept of Systems and System Models. o Student answer should reflect that the student evaluated Table 1 and/or Graph 1 to determine how the splash height of the water is affected by the ball drop height. For example: Our prediction that increasing the drop height of the ball above the water increases the splash height of the water when the ball is dropped into the water is true. The data show that as the ball drop height increased, the water splash height also increased. The average splash height of the water when the ball dropped from 200 centimeters above the bucket was between 10 and 19 centimeters greater than when the ball was dropped from 100 and 150 centimeters above the bucket. We can conclude that the kinetic energy of the ball increases when dropped from a higher point because it had more gravitational potential energy. Increasing the gravitational potential energy of the ball allowed it to transfer more kinetic energy to the water, causing the water to splash higher than it would if the ball was released from a lower point above the bucket.” M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 87 ©2016 KnowAtomTM 7. By analyzing the effect of replacing the original ball in the experiment with a larger ball during the experiment, students are partially assessed on the science and engineering practice of Engaging in Argument from Evidence, the disciplinary core idea of Relationship Between Energy and Forces, and the crosscutting concept of Cause and Effect. o Student answer should reflect an understanding of how changing the mass of the ball in the middle of the experiment adds another variable to the experiment that will confuse the results. For example: More massive objects have more kinetic energy than less massive objects. When a larger ball is used during part of the data collecting, it changes the results. Because of this, it would be impossible to tell whether the data gathered result from the changing height of the dropped ball or the mass of the ball used. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 88 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Lab Manual Answer Key Section 1 Review MC1. A. what you change in an experiment [An independent variable is the variable changed by the scientist. It can be a factor, trait, or condition that can exist in differing amounts or types. There are independent and dependent variables. The dependent variable in the experiment is what changes as a result of the independent variable. A constant is something that remains the same in an experiment. A hypothesis is a clear and concise statement that can be proved true or false, why data are the numbers you come up with to support your hypothesis—the observations or measurements gathered from an experiment.] MC2. B. I think fish are delicious. [The sentence I think fish are delicious is not a hypothesis because hypotheses should not include opinions. They should be able to be proved true or false. The statements: all birds fly south in the winter, corn is heavier than rice, and metals always sink are examples of hypotheses because they are clear and concise statements that can be proved true or false.] CT1. [The answer should explain that the hypothesis or claim is a step in the scientific process. Scientists use hypotheses to test possible answers to scientific questions.] CT2. [It is important to leave opinions out of hypotheses because opinions cannot be proved true or false; therefore, it is impossible to set up an experiment to test them.] CT3. [Scientists are careful in how they set up experiments, making sure to write down everything clearly and specifically in their laboratory notebook because results are not scientifically valid unless someone can replicate the experiment. This is why scientists follow a process and are very clear and specific.] CT4. [Scientists don’t conduct experiments that intentionally don’t produce data because the point of conducting an experiment is to generate data that can be used as evidence to support or refute the hypothesis. Data can be quantitative (numerical) and/or qualitative (observational). Sometimes experiments don’t produce data because of how they are set up, but when that happens, scientists need to design a new experiment to try to get data.] CT5. [The sentence I think candy tastes delicious is not a conclusion because a conclusion should not include any first person personal pronouns such as I think. Conclusions also need to include specific data from the M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 89 ©2016 KnowAtomTM experiment to either support or reject the hypothesis. The sentence above is a personal opinion that cannot be proved true or false in an experiment.] Section 2 Review MC3. C. gravity [When you throw a ball up into the air, gravity is the force that causes it to fall back to the ground. Gravity is the force of attraction between all matter, and Earth’s gravity pulls all objects near Earth’s surface downward. A variable is the part of an experiment that you change. It can be a factor, trait, or condition that can exist in differing amounts or types. Acceleration is an increase in speed over time. Weight is the gravitational force exerted on an object by a planet or moon.] MC4. A. More massive objects have more gravity. [The relationship between mass and gravity can best be explained by the statement more massive objects have more gravity. The force of attraction depends on the mass of the two objects. This is why Earth’s gravity is the dominant gravitational force here on Earth, because Earth is so much more massive than anything else on Earth.] MC5. B. Energy is transferred out of the roller coaster system. [Roller coaster cars lose energy as they move over the track because energy is transferred out of the roller coaster system. Energy is never created or destroyed, but it does transfer into and out of objects and systems. For example, friction and drag are two forces that cause energy to transfer out of the roller coaster system.] CT6. [The answer should explain how to respond to Mary, who doesn’t believe that all objects have gravity because there isn’t a force of attraction between objects such as pencils, cars, and people. Everything that has mass has gravity. We don’t feel the force of attraction between objects such as pencils, cars, and people because Earth is so much more massive than any of these things that Earth’s gravity is the dominant force.] CT7. [Answers will vary. A system is a set of connected, interacting parts that form a more complex whole. For example, a light bulb is a simple energy system. Electrical energy generated from a power plant transforms into light energy and heat. Another example is an animal, which eats food and then moves.] CT8. [The answer should explain how friction is a force that slows motion whenever two objects rub against each other by turning mechanical energy into heat. The heat felt is evidence that some of the mechanical M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 90 ©2016 KnowAtomTM energy has transferred out of the system, making the surrounding environment warmer.] Section 3 Review MC6. C. both A and B [When Pedro hits the tennis ball with his racquet, Pedro’s racquet transfers mechanical energy to the ball, causing the ball to move forward. At the same time, the ball transfers energy to Pedro’s racquet, causing the racquet to move backward. This is because whenever two objects come into contact with one another, they exert a force on each other that can transfer energy.] MC7. A. Object 1 has more kinetic energy than Object 2. [If Object 1 and Object 2 are moving at the same speed but Object 1 is more massive than Object 2, then Object 1 has more kinetic energy than Object 2 because mass is proportional to kinetic energy.] CT9. [The answer should explain that a baseball player generally wants to hit the ball with a lot of force because the greater the force applied to the ball, the more energy will be transferred and the farther the ball will travel.] CT10. [The answer should explain that when a baseball player’s bat makes contact with the baseball, there is a loud noise because some of the mechanical energy of the player’s swing is transferred out of the system, transforming into sound energy.] CT11. [The answer should explain that the ball eventually falls back to the ground or another player’s glove because of gravity’s attractive pull. Everything on Earth’s surface is pulled toward Earth’s center by the force of Earth’s gravity. This gravitational pull acts on the baseball, pulling it back to the ground.] CT12. [The answer should explain that if a baseball hitter gently taps the ball rather than swinging with a lot of force, causing the ball to roll forward on the ground, the ball eventually stops rolling because of the force of friction. Friction slows motion by turning mechanical energy into heat.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 91 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Appendix 2 Common Core Connections KnowAtom lessons cover many Common Core ELA and math standards in the lab manual, discussion, and hands-on activities. The lab manual is designed to further connect science content to other disciplines with assignments that can be used as homework or in-class. The lab manual highlights one math and ELA standard: ELA (page 17 of lab manual) Reading Informational Text: Grade 6 Key Ideas and Details • ELA-Literacy.RI.6.2 - Determine a central idea of a text and how it is conveyed through particular ideas; provide a summary of the text distinct from personal opinions or judgments. The article gives a brief overview of how roller coasters transfer energy, as well as an introduction to why the rides feel so exhilarating for riders. Example Answer Key: 1. [The central idea of this article is that the design of roller coasters creates an energy system that uses the downward pull of gravity to move people around the track, and it is the interactions of forces that cause the exhilaration that people often experience when they ride a roller coaster.] 2. [The author lays out the energy transfer that takes place on a roller coaster, and then uses the well-known motions of a roller coaster (sharp curves, loopthe-loops, etc.) to describe the forces that cause the sensations people experience on a roller coaster (gravity, acceleration, and inertia (the principle that an object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force)).] 3. [Roller coasters harness the forces of gravity and acceleration to create a ride that push riders in different directions, causing the feeling of exhilaration and/or fear. They do this by transferring gravitational energy to mechanical energy and back throughout the ride.] M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 92 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Math (page 23 of lab manual) Ratios and Proportional Relationships: Understand ratio concepts and use ratio reasoning to solve problems. • 6.RP.A.1 Understand the concept of a ratio and use ratio language to describe a ratio relationship between two quantities. • 6.RP.A.3.D Use ratio reasoning to convert measurement units. The metric system is the system of measurement used in almost every country in the world. All science labs and activities require the use of metric units when collecting data. This sometimes requires students to convert between units of measurement. To prepare students to use these math skills, this activity allows students to practice solving conversion problems using ratios (conversion factors). Answer key: 2.54 centimeters = 568 x 2.54 centimeters 1. 568 inches x 1 inch = 1,442.72 centimeters 2. 50 liters x 1,000 milliliters 3. .5 kilograms x 1 liters 1,000 grams 1 kilogram M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 = 50 x 1,000 milliliters = 50,000 milliliters = .5 x 1,000 grams = 500 grams Unit 1 – Page 93 ©2016 KnowAtomTM The following Common Core ELA standards are covered in this unit as students work through the reading, class dialogue, and hands-on portion of the lessons. ELA Standards Applying ELA Connections to the Unit Writing W.6.1. Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence. • In Lessons 1 and 2, students write a conclusion to summarize their findings to the bounce height and marble mass experiments, using their data to support their conclusion. W.6.2. Write • In Lessons 1 and 2, students develop and write out the informative/explanatory process they follow to conduct the bounce height and texts to examine a topic marble mass experiments in their lab notebooks, and convey ideas, including the question, research, hypothesis, experiment concepts, and summary, materials, procedure, scientific diagram, data information through the charts, graphs, and conclusion. selection, organization, and analysis of relevant content. W.6.4. Produce clear and • In Lessons 1 and 2, students produce clear and coherent coherent writing in writing as they use their lab notebooks to work through which the development, the bounce height and marble mass experiments. The lab organization, and style notebooks must be clear, concise, and specific enough are appropriate to task, that someone else could replicate the experiment. purpose, and audience. W.6.9. Draw evidence • In Lessons 1 and 2, students use the nonfiction reading from literary or from their lab manuals to support their analysis, informational texts to reflection, and research during the lesson. support analysis, reflection, and research. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 94 ©2016 KnowAtomTM Speaking and Listening SL.6.1. Engage effectively • In Lessons 1 and 2, students engage in Socratic dialogue in a range of before beginning the experiments. Students apply what collaborative discussions they have read in their nonfiction reading, as well as any (one-on-one, in groups, personal experiences or observations, to the dialogue. and teacher-led) with During the experiments, students work collaboratively in diverse partners on teams, discussing how they will carry out the grade 6 topics, texts, and experiments. At the end of the experiments, students issues, building on come back to analyze each team’s results as a class. others' ideas and expressing their own clearly. SL.6.4. Present claims and findings, emphasizing salient points in a focused, coherent manner with pertinent descriptions, facts, details, and examples; use appropriate eye contact, adequate volume, and clear pronunciation. • In Lessons 1 and 2, students analyze what they have learned in the lesson in the wrap-up portion of class, coming together as a class to discuss their experiment results. Student teams compare results, using their data and background knowledge to support their claims and evaluate other teams’ claims. Science and Technical Subjects RST.6-8.1. Cite specific • In Lessons 1 and 2, students use the information from textual evidence to their lab manuals to support their understanding of the support analysis of bounce height and marble mass experiments. science and technical texts. RST.6-8.2. Determine the • In Lessons 1 and 2, students read their lab manuals, central ideas or determining the main ideas and conclusions of the text. conclusions of a text; They use this reading to inform and support the Socratic provide an accurate dialogue portion of the lesson. summary of the text distinct from prior knowledge or opinions. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 95 ©2016 KnowAtomTM RST.6-8.3. Follow precisely a multistep procedure when carrying out experiments, taking measurements, or performing technical tasks. • In Lesson 1, students develop and follow a multistep procedure to determine the relationship between a ball’s height above the ground (gravitational potential energy) and its resulting rebound motion (kinetic energy). • In Lesson 2, students develop and then follow a procedure for testing how the mass of the marble affects the distance a target cup moves when a marble rolls down an inclined plane and into the cup. RST.6-8.10. By the end of • In Lessons 1 and 2, students work on developing their grade 6, read and understanding of science/technical texts, using the unit comprehend vocabulary, context from the lab manual, and Socratic science/technical texts dialogue to support their comprehension of the in the grades 6-8 text nonfiction reading. complexity band independently and proficiently. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 96 ©2016 KnowAtomTM pattern can indicate cause and effect system Unit 1: Appendix 3 Sample Concept Map looks at data for scientist includes behaviors of can be traced through a follows a process that includes science includes the study of energy hypothesis experiment produces data can indicate relationship in proportion categories of potential energy a type of gravitational energy work caused by change in matter caused by force a type of M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 kinetic energy a type of mechanical energy gravity Unit 1 – Page 97 weight difference between mass ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Appendix 4 Support for Differentiated Instruction Core Expectation Assessment Strategies MS-PS3-5. Construct, use, and present arguments to support the claim that when the kinetic energy of an object changes, energy is transferred to or from the object. Low Entry Point • Identify different forms of energy. • Recognize that energy is never created or destroyed. • Give examples of evidence of an energy transfer (e.g., a change in motion or temperature). At Grade-Level Entry Point • Describe the relationship between force and energy transfer. • Explain how energy can be transferred into and out of an energy system. • Use the conservation of energy to support the claim that energy is transferred into and out of energy systems. M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 98 Possible Primary Evidence • bounce height lab notebook entry completed by student • marble mass lab notebook entry completed by student • student diagram tracing the transfer of energy in an energy system when an object’s kinetic energy changes ©2016 KnowAtomTM Unit 1: Appendix 5 Materials Chart Unit Kit Consumable Goggles Pipe insulation Plastic cups Non-Consumable Bouncy balls Large marbles Medium marbles Small marbles Digital scales Teacher Tool Kit Measuring tape Masking tape Scissors Hand-outs Laboratory notebooks Gravity and Motion lab manuals Visuals Lesson 1 Lesson 2 Lesson Quantity Notes all 2 2 1 per student 1 section per team of 2 2 per team of 2 safety equipment for creating inclined planes for inclined plane model 1 1 per team of 2 2 1 per team of 2 for bouncy ball height experiment for mass experiment for mass experiment for mass experiment 2 2 2 1 per team of 2 1 per team of 2 1 per team of 2 1, 2 1 per team of 2 2 1 per team of 2 2 1, 2 1, 2 shared 1 per student 1 per student Used Again for measuring marble mass for measuring height and distance for marking measurement intervals and securing inclined plane for cutting plastic cups and pipe insulation for Labs 1 and 2 Download Scientific Process Visual, Who is a Scientist Poster, Gravity Visual, Energy and Roller Coasters Visual, Energy Systems Visual, Energy Transformation Visual, STEM Cycle Visual Energy Transfer in Billiards Visual, Mass and Energy Transfer Visual M6 NGSS Curriculum v. 3.1 Unit 1 – Page 99 ©2016 KnowAtomTM