Science Lesson 2 Taught
Science Lesson 2 Taught
Science Lesson 2 Taught
4.1a Energy exists in various forms: heat, electric, sound, chemical, mechanical, light.
4.1d Energy and matter interact: water is evaporated by the Suns heat; a bulb is lighted by
means of electrical current; a musical instrument is played to produce sound; dark colors may
absorb light, light colors may reflect light.
Other Evidence:
Teacher will note students understandings from notebooks.
Learning Plan
Classroom Arrangement:
Students will work in groups of two to four students for this lesson.
Materials:
Science notebooks
Plastic trays
Wooden meter stick, yardstick
Foil
Twine
Tuning forks
The teacher will gather students to the carpet and read Ty's One-Man Band by Mildred
Pitts Walter (Author), Margot Tomes (Illustrator)
Procedure
Story Problem (Rubric Line 40): Living in the country it is very peaceful. Sometimes at night my
family hears a train but we do not live by any train tracks. How come we hear the sound of the train?
Can the sound of the train travel and if so how?
Discrepant Event
The Story Problem presents the discrepant event.
Prior Knowledge Activation: Have students brainstorm their ideas about what they think
about sound, a knowledge-level question on Blooms Taxonomy. (Write down all their
ideas.) Have them respond in the same way to the question, How does sound travel?
(a comprehension question on Blooms Taxonomy).
Procedure:
Begin lesson by asking students to review how they produced sounds in lesson 1 with
the tuning forks.
Challenge students to think about how sound gets from place to place. Ask them to
write their ideas in their science notebooks.
Invite students to share some of their ideas in a classroom brainstorming session. The
teacher will make a list on a blank SMART Board and label the slide How Sound
Travels
Focus students attention on the objects displayed at the distribution center: meter
sticks, foil, twine. Ask them which objects they think sound will travel through best and
why.
Teacher will tell students that today we will be investigating how sound travels. One
student will hold the end of the tuning fork near one end of the object while another
student listens at the other end. Tell students that when testing the string, it will work
best if they wrap one end of the string around the stem of the tuning fork before striking
the tuning fork; then to listen. They should stretch the string out between them and the
fork.
Ask students to think about two questions then they are investigating:
-Can you hear the sound of the tuning fork through all the materials you are testing?
-Which materials do you find that the sound travels through best? (Resulting in the
loudest sound)
Have students collect materials and begin their investigations.
Challenge students to think of other ways to determine whether sound travels through
the objects being investigated. If they do not suggest this, have them repeat the
experiment, touching the end of the object with their hands rather than listening. Allow
time for all students to experience this investigation.
When they have finished testing the materials they have been given, encourage
students to try other materials such as a broom handle, window glass, their desktop, a
whiteboard, or a wall.
Students investigate and document findings in journal. Students may need guidance
with a method to record findings (like a chart).
Closing Activity:
After each team has had time to investigate whether sound travels though the objects,
direct students to return the materials to the distribution center.
Ask the teams to report what they observed to the class. Encourage students to tell
what they did and what questions they now have. Add the questions to the chart from
lesson 1. Questions we have learned about sound
References
Walter,M.,&Tomes,M.(1980).Ty'sonemanband.NewYork,NY:Four
WindsPress.