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Design for Deeper Learning

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Recent Designs

Galactic Getaways: Planets & Packing Tips!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

"Travel Brochure to a Planet":Combine science with persuasive writing and graphic design. The Project: Students choose one planet (or exoplanet) and design a travel brochure for future space tourists. Requirements: Include "packing tips" based on temperature (e.g., a suit that can withstand 800°F on Venus), "activities" based on gravity (e.g., how high you could jump on the Moon), and travel time. Learning Goal: Synthesize planetary data like atmosphere, gravity, and composition into a creative format.

Dizzy Days: Earth’s Spin and Tilt Adventure

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Modeling Earth’s Movements in Space Have student lab groups model Earth’s movements to cause day and night and/or the seasons. Use materials like craft balls, wooden skewers, Styrofoam blocks, protractors, North Star label, season labels, and lamps. Use the North Star label from the Explore C activity. Mark the equator, landforms, and water on the craft ball using an appropriate medium to make a model Earth. The land forms do not have to be exact replicas of structures on Earth. Push a wooden skewer through the “Earth” model to form the north and south poles. Use the protractor to measure the proper tilt angle for Earth, and then push the south pole into the Styrofoam block to secure Earth model and tilt. Position the Earth model to tilt toward the North Star label. Once the models are set up, turn on the lamps and turn off the classroom lights. Have the students manipulate the models to simulate Earth’s movements in space for either rotation or revolution.

Sand vs. Water: Temperature Tug-O-War!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Earth: The Water Planet Have your students design an investigation to compare how the significant presence of water on our planet affects temperature fluctuations. The manipulated variable is the type of material used to absorb—and release—radiant energy: water or sand. The responding variable is the rate of temperature change in each sample. Students will use temperature probes to obtain quantitative temperature data for the energy absorption and release in a water and sand sample using equal volumes of water and sand. Have them insert temperature probes and expose both samples to radiant energy for three hours while they collect temperature data at 15-minute increments. Next, have them remove both samples from the energy source and continue to collect temperature data every 15 minutes for an additional three hours. Students will graph and record their results in lab journals. Set up the temperature probe, interface, and designated graphing calculators with the appropriate programs for the measurement probes. Students must have a link cable ready to transfer the data to their own calculators or computers if appropriate. Share the manufacturer’s instructions for using the program to set the parameters for the investigation. For this investigation, the suggested temperature collection time parameter is 15 minutes. Remind students not to get the wire and plug wet when they’re cleaning the probe. Ask the students: When the two samples were removed from the radiant energy source and the temperature of the samples decreased (thermal energy transfer), where did this energy go? The environment.

Black Hole Blunders and Beyond!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

​​The Black Hole Find a copy of the Disney film, The Black Hole. Watch it and list the mistakes in the way it depicts the science of black holes. Create a google slide research project about black holes.

Hubble Bubble: Stargazing Survey Surprise!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

What Does the Hubble Space Telescope Do for Us? Have students conduct a survey of students or adults about the Hubble Space Telescope to see what they know about it.

Mighty Mississippi: The Flood Factor Impact!

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Initial ideas

Students will explore how the Mississippi River contributes to flooding and how this impacts: • Residential areas (Kings neighborhood, Highway 61 South) • Local businesses in lower downtown • Transportation and accessibility • Tourism and economic activity

Town Time Travelers: Unveil Our Past!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

Organize a local history project, where students research and present the history of their town or city. This will include visits to historical sites and interviews with long-time residents. 8th grade social studies standards

Pokemon Tide Tactics: Rocky Shore Quest!

Grade Level:

Initial ideas

I want to design a project about the rocky shore that incorporates NGSS standards. It will blend math, science, and literacy, with students working together in groups to explore key concepts. My students love Pokemon this year. We want to visit the Birch Aquarium.

Design your own project

Learn more

What if there was a tool to help us take our wild project ideas and create a scope and sequence? There is! Inkwire and the Professional Learning team at High Tech High’s Graduate School of Education designed an AI-assisted curriculum planning tool.

Powered by High Tech High's Kaleidoscope framework for project-based learning (PBL) design, this AI assistant helps educators – and learners! – integrate standards and curriculum requirements into a cycle of PBL Essentials.

The AI-assisted Kaleidoscope tool is co-designed by Inkwire & the High Tech High Graduate School of Education Professional Learning Team. The "Design for Deeper Learning Kaleidoscope" framework is copyright by the High Tech High Graduate School of Education.