Total Duration: |
Greater than 120 Minutes |
Materials and Resources: |
Research text: "Dam Creation" text The teacher will need to provide access to the following materials for students:
The teacher will need to provide access to the following materials for each teacher-created group:
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Technology Resources Needed: |
Computer or personal technology device (such as a tablet or iPad) with internet access Dams Breaking Compilation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=990HdxfEB0I |
Background/Preparation: |
The teacher should gain access to electronic devices prior to student introduction. Prior to the lesson, the teacher will ensure students are proficient in the following skills:
This lesson can be utilized concurrently as part of the Reducing The Impact of a Flood unit which includes the following lessons: Students will know their elbow partner is a student that sits next to them. |
Before: The teacher will introduce the lesson by showing multiple dams that have failed over the course of time. See Dams Breaking Compilation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=990HdxfEB0I The teacher will define the vocabulary words:
The students will make flashcards to study the eight terms listed previously to be incorporated into their discussions and reflections about the process of building and testing the dam. The teacher will guide a class discussion to determine if the students have any experience with flooding in their homes, or have been exposed to flooding due to a hurricane. The teacher will explain to the students that they will soon begin to evaluate the possible problems that may have caused the dams in the video to fail. The teacher will explain that the students will also design their own dams based on their knowledge of failing dams and what they hypothesize (claim) would be a better solution to preventing the flooding hazard. The students will take “silent wait time” (10-30 seconds) to think about what may have caused the dams in the video to fail. Next, the students will write their idea on a Post-it note. The students will then turn and talk to their elbow partners about what they wrote on their Post-it notes. The teacher will listen to students' elbow partner conversations and will be sure to acknowledge on-task thinking, unique ideas, and incorporation of vocabulary taught. The teacher will prompt students in peer discussions if any students appear to be off task or have trouble conveying ideas. Finally, the teacher will choose a couple of Post-it notes per table and write the students' ideas on chart paper. The students will be grouped up by the teacher and begin to research different ways to build a dam. Suggested text for research: "Dam Creation" text During: Students will use internet access with Chromebooks or portable technology devices (such as tablets) to begin researching their ideas on designing and constructing a dam to test. The teacher will facilitate the research process as needed and ensure all students are on task and using the internet appropriately. Students will review the supplies and materials to be used by their group. Students will collaborate with their group members to draw a design of the dam they plan to build and begin to prepare and or modify the materials they will be using to construct their dam. The suggested dam supply materials are as follows: bucket or small plastic storage bin, marshmallows, toothpicks, tape, paper, clay, sticks, mud, string, legos, plastic spoons, popsicle sticks, and sticks. (Students will not be required to use all materials but will not diverge from the list of offered materials for the initial test of their initial dam construction.) The students will use the group's design drawing to guide the construction process. To build the dam, the students will utilize their supplies and attempt to build a dam in the middle of the container that will keep half the container dry and keep all the water on the other side. The teacher can use any size container for this project, keeping in mind that the bigger the container, the more water and dam supplies will be needed. Once the dams are built, students will test their dams by adding water to one side of the container. Students will pour water into one side of the pan in order to test the efficacy of the dam as it is proven effective by not allowing water through to the opposing side of the dam. After: Students will observe if their dam is successful in holding water. The teacher will walk around and watch the students as they test and determine the flaws in their dams. The teacher will ensure students are evaluating their designs and discussing how designs could improve. The teacher will assess each student's learning of the objectives by using a rubric to guide and score each student’s claim, analysis of materials, evidence supporting the claim, efficacy of the dam test, and conclusion of the test. The rubric used to guide and score the students' learning of the objectives can be found at http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php?screen=ShowRubric&rubric_id=2698307&. For early finishers, as an extension, students may exchange supplies in their next attempt at the task if their initial testing fails, but they must attempt to use all supplies selected and determined by the group’s first hypothesis. |
Assessment Strategies |
The teacher will informally assess students’ claims and plans by observing student conversations during group work while ensuring students document the theories and plans of action they discuss in their journals. The teacher will informally assess students’ analysis of materials by asking probing questions such as, “What materials may have allowed water to pass around or through to the opposite side of the container?” and “What materials may have allowed the dam to be more effective?” The teacher should ensure students document the theories they discuss in their journals. The teacher will informally assess the students’ evidence that does or does not support their claim by listening for vocabulary words taught explicitly (merit, claim, problem, design solution, impact, reduce, dam, efficacy) that accurately communicate the evidence of the outcome while ensuring students document the theories they discuss in their journals The teacher will informally assess students as the groups observe whether their dam design is effective or has merit after each group has tested it by evidence of no water passing through or around the dam to the opposing side of the container or tub that the students poured the water into while ensuring students document the theories they discuss in their journals The teacher will informally assess the conclusion of the effective or ineffective dam design by observing group discussion after the test of the dam. The teacher will assess the students by scoring their individual journals that are maintained throughout the process of creating a hypothesis (stating a claim), designing a dam, constructing the dam, and testing the dam. The journal will be graded and assessed through the Engineered Solution Dam Evaluation Journal and Presentation portion of the unit. The rubric used to guide and score journaling through the design, construction, and testing process can be found at http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php?screen=ShowRubric&rubric_id=2695366&. The teacher will summatively assess the student's learning objectives by using a rubric to guide and score each student’s claim, analysis of materials, evidence supporting the claim, efficacy of the dam test, and conclusion of the test. The rubric used to guide and score the student’s learning objective can be found at http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php?screen=ShowRubric&rubric_id=2698307& |
Acceleration: |
Students working at an accelerated level who have tested their dam and found it to be unsuccessful may repeat the process by forming another hypothesis (stating a claim), designing a new dam, constructing another dam, and then testing the dam again. Students will be responsible for maintaining a journal that reflects an initial design process and an additional design process. Students working at an accelerated level, who have tested their dam and found it to be effective can begin a similar process with the task of an engineered solution for wind-resistant roofs or lightning rods. |
Intervention: |
The teacher may need to substitute modeling clay for playdoh if a student has dexterity or joint complications. The teacher will allow peer tutors to assist with the completion of vocabulary index cards as they will pertain to discussion and reflection on the dam built and tested. The teacher will prompt students in peer discussions if any students appear to be off task or have trouble conveying ideas. The teacher may need to facilitate certain groups if there appears to be a lack of cohesiveness to the task in order to facilitate productive collaboration. |
View the Special Education resources for
instructional guidance in providing modifications and adaptations
for students with significant cognitive disabilities who qualify for the Alabama Alternate Assessment.
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