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Student Experience 5: How should we revise our pond model?

producers [1]

Purposes

  1. For students to form and express connections among ideas from previous experiences about producers [2] and their interactions with abiotic factors.
  2. To assess the development of students’ understanding of how the fertilizer overload affects pond producers.

Description

Revisit the driving question and cross-sectional pond models students made in Student Experience 2.  Ask students to again draw what they think might be happening in the pond based on what they have learned about producers.  After they have completed their models, have students make comparisons to their original models.

Questions to Ask Students

Science Practices
Developing and Using Models [3]  In this experience, students make revisions to their model.  The questions above are intended to help students reflect on how and why their models are changing.  At this early stage in students’ model development, it can be a good time to have students reflect on both the content and structure of their model to guide their work throughout the pathway.

One approach is to introduce students to the GAME guide sheet [4]. Explain the different parts of the GAME mnemonic (Generality, Audience, Mechanism, and Evidence) and tell students they will use the guide sheet throughout this pathway.  Assign small groups or pairs and have them exchange models and ask questions about each other’s models using the GAME guide sheet. Recognize that students may struggle with the questions during their first few times using the guide sheet. The goal is that they will begin to keep the GAME considerations in mind as they create and revise their models, not that they become proficient in this first experience.  Allow time following the peer session for students to independently revise or add to their model.  Circulate while students are working in small groups, or collect models afterwards to examine students’ models based on the teacher rubric. The rubric provides guidance for what you may want to ask students or do next in instruction to deepen their understanding.

Constructing Explanations [5]  Students’ revisions are driven by their new understandings and developing explanations of what is happening at Sunrise Farm Pond.  Their models should reflect their thinking about the predicted causes, and these new predictions should be supported using evidence from the pond water and plant growth investigations.
Crosscutting Concepts
Cause and Effect [6]  Students’ thinking about the possible causes may have changed since their initial model.  Encourage students to revise their model based on what they now predict are the causes and to be explicit about the relationship between the cause and effect.

Student Thinking

Seeing that fertilizer can promote algae growth, some students may now predict that algae growth is bad for fish and may think algae growth directly causes fish death.  Some students may hold onto the idea that the fertilizer directly harms the fish.

Implementation Tips