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Strategies
and Teaching Materials for Introducing Students to LabWrite |
How
to Use LabWrite |
A
basic PowerPoint presentation that provides an overview of all
the components of LabWrite—its stages, its resources, and
its formats. This presentation is a great way to acquaint your
students with the LabWrite site. |
Introduction
to Lab Reports |
A
series of teaching materials you can use to help students better
understand what a lab report is and the role it plays in the lab.
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Lab
Activities For Instructor-Guided Use of LabWrite |
Various
simple lab experiments (both hypothesis-driven and descriptive)
you can have students engage in so that they can get guided hands-on
experience with LabWrite while completing a lab. |
Introduction
to Science as an Inquiry-Based Process |
A
number of activities you may conduct with your students to help
them understand the nature of scientific inquiry and how labs
and lab reports are key players in that process. |
Introduction
to Lab Reports
Oftentimes,
treatments of the parts of the lab report are very dry, consisting of
a list of the parts with brief descriptions of each. The problem is that
students don't have a sense of the context of the parts of the lab report,
why they are important and what significance they have for the laboratory
experience.
The
goals of this introduction are to:
- establish
the function of lab reports in the science laboratories,
- define
the parts of the lab report,
- compare
the lab report to a scientific journal article,
- give
students the opportunity to analyze the parts of a sample lab report.
Activity:
Use the annotated PowerPoint presentation
to meet the goals for this introduction, and follow the instructions in
the note field of the presentation to guide you through this activity
(you will have to save the PPT presentation to your compuer in order to
view the notes field). For teaching suggestions, go to Basic
Teaching Strategies.
Handouts
you’ll need to give your students:
-
A
Sample Lab Report (choose one from this link)
-
Guide
for Analyzing a Lab Report
NOTE:
If you don’t want to use PowerPoint or you don’t have access
to it, see the materials that follow.
Introduction to Lab Reports
(for those without access to ppt)
-
Brainstorm with
your students what they think the purpose
of a lab report is.
-
After discussing
the purpose, ask students to list and describe the parts of a lab
report. You may use the “Parts of a Lab Report” overhead
and/or the handout during this discussion.
-
Have students
brainstorm the differences between a lab report and a scientific journal
article. Click the following link to show them a sample journal article,
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG/journal/issues/v66n6/991447/991447.html
or find one of your own. Use “A Comparison of the Scientific
Article and the Lab Report” as an overhead or handout during
this discussion.
-
Pass out a sample
lab report and “Guide for Analyzing a Laboratory Report”
handout.
-
Put students into
groups and either assign each group analyze one part of the lab report,
or have each group analyze the entire lab report.
-
Have an open discussion
where groups share what they learned during this activity.
Handouts
you’ll need:
-
OVERHEAD/HANDOUT:
Parts of a Lab Report with Brief
Descriptions
-
OVERHEAD/HANDOUT:
A Comparison of the Scientific Article and
the Lab Report
-
A
Sample Lab Report (choose one from this link)
-
Guide
for Analyzing a Lab Report
Lab
Activities For Instructor-Guided Use of LabWrite
You
can use any of the following labs to give students an opportunity to use
LabWrite before they have to use it officially. These experiments are
very simple labs that you can do quickly with your students as they use
all the components of LabWrite.
Click
on an experiment:
Experiment
#1— Heat Energy
Experiment #2— Properties of Water
Teaching Strategies:
-
Have students
read the question and background material and then direct them to
the PreLab. Have them answer the questions on the PreLab and discuss
in groups or as a class.
-
Have students
do the experiment while they use InLab. If you do not have computers
in your classroom, have the InLab
Handout available to students. If you have a computer set up with
a projector, you may display InLab as students work through the lab.
-
Once students
complete their lab, they can write the lab report in groups using
the PostLab.
-
Have groups exchange
lab reports, and have them use the LabCheck Evaluation Guide to grade
each other’s reports.
-
Give students
a chance to discuss their experiences. Ask students to list the parts
of LabWrite they used.
-
If you have a
computer with a projector, you can access these parts as they come
up.
Introduction
to Science as an Inquiry-Based Process
One
of the chief values of writing a lab report is that it provides students
the opportunity to be active participants in the most fundamental aspect
of science--scientific inquiry. It's important, then, that students understand
what scientific inquiry is. In the Introduction to Writing Lab Reports,
scientific inquiry becomes the foundation for helping students to see
the value of writing good lab reports.
The
goal of this Introduction is to acquaint students with the idea of science
as an inquiry-based process by having them consider the concepts of science
and scientific inquiry.
Activity:
Use the annotated PowerPoint presentation
to meet the goal for this introduction, and follow the instructions in
the note field of the presentation to guide through this activity (you
will have to save the PPT presentation to your compuer in order to view
the notes field). For teaching suggestions, go to Basic
Teaching Strategies.
Additional
Activity:
Further Exploration into Hypotheses—The hypothesis plays a central
role in the scientific method. It is worth exploring the concept of the
hypothesis further.
-
Divide students
into groups and give each group a scientific scenario from the “Science
Scenarios” handout.
-
Ask them to formulate
hypotheses and design an experiment that is both feasible and efficient
for testing the hypothesis.
-
Ask them to think
about how the data would look and how they would represent it.
-
Let them report
back to the class using the “Science Scenarios” overhead.
HANDOUT/OVERHEAD: Science
Scenarios
Introduction to Science as
an Inquiry-Based Process
(for those without access to ppt)
1-Exploring Science:
Brainstorming
Activity:
Begin by reminding students that this is a science lab. When they are
in this lab they are expected to think like scientists and act like scientists.
So it's a good idea from the start to talk about what that means--to think
like scientists and act like scientists.
Conclude
the brainstorming activity by summing up the various ideas about scientists
that have been suggested. Help students find different patterns in their
answers that give an overall conception of what a scientist is. For example,
they may describe scientists as Truth-finders, as laboratory technicians,
pure objective observers of the world, or as mad scientists.
2-The Scientific Method:
Small-group
activity:
The classic way of understanding scientific inquiry is to see it as a
form of inquiry that is grounded in the scientific method. Your students
have probably been introduced to various formulations of the scientific
method. This exercise is intended to start with what they know about the
scientific method and bring it into focus.
-
Divide the class
into small groups of 3 or 4 and ask each group to explore the scientific
method by discussing it among themselves and agreeing on the steps
that comprise the method. They should write the steps.
-
As each group
finishes ask them to put their steps on the board.
-
Ask the class
to identify the general steps that the group responses have in common
and then write down those common steps on the board or on a blank
transparency.
-
Place overhead
“The Scientific Method: An Overview” handout on the projector
and read it aloud or ask students to read it aloud. (You may choose
to project the Handout, if you have a computer with projector)
-
Ask students
to point out the similarities and differences between the class version
of the scientific method and the standard version on the overhead.
OVERHEAD/HANDOUT:
The Scientific Method: An Overview
3-Looking at the Hypothesis:
Class
Discussion:
For
Comparison:
Scientific
theory—An explanation of why and how a specific natural phenomenon
occurs. A lot of hypotheses are based on theories. In turn, theories may
be redefined as new hypotheses are tested. Examples of theories: Newton’s
Theory of Gravitation, Darwin’s Theory of Evolution, Mendel’s
theory of Inheritance, Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.
Scientific
law—A logical, mathematical statement describing a consistency
that applies to all members of a broad class of phenomena when specific
conditions are met. Examples of scientific laws: Faraday’s Law of
electromagnetic induction, Coulomb’s Law of electrostatic attraction,
Dalton’s Law of partial pressures, Boyle’s Gas Law.
4-How the Scientific Method
is Reflected in Scientific Writing:
Small-group
activity:
The parts of the scientific paper provide a good way to understand scientific
inquiry and the scientific method. In fact, one of the reasons that the
scientific paper has this format is that it reflects the way scientists
think. Here is an activity that helps students to see the relationship
between the steps of the scientific method and the parts of the scientific
article.
-
Divide the class
into groups of three or four.
-
Quickly review
the steps of the scientific method using the handout from the previous
section.
-
Pass out the
handout "Parts of the Scientific Article" and ask the groups
to decide on which steps of the scientific method are associated with
the parts of the article. They are to write the steps beside the appropriate
part.
-
Have a class
discussion, and if possible, get the class to agree on one version.
It may look like this:
- Introduction:
"Identify a problem" and "Formulate a hypothesis"
- Materials
and Methods: "Test the hypothesis with an experiment"
- Results: "Report
the data of the experiment"
- Discussion
and Conclusion: "Make conclusions from data"
OVERHEAD/HANDOUT:
Parts of the Scientific Article
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