Crayons. PP STEM Lessons K-2

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Transcription:

Crayons PP STEM Lessons K-2

Lesson Objectives Science and Engineering Practices Asking Questions and Defining Problems Planning and Carrying Out Investigations Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information Disciplinary Core Ideas PS1.B Chemical Reactions ETS1.A Defining and Delimiting Engineering Problems Crosscutting Concepts Energy and Matter Cause and Effect

CCSS Connections Reading: Literature Key Ideas and Details K-2.1 Craft and Structure K-2.6 Reading: Informational Text Key Ideas and Details K-2.1 Craft and Structure K-2.5 Integration of Knowledge and Ideas K-2.9 Writing Text Types and Purposes: K-2.3 Mathematics Measurement and Data 2.MD.1 and 1.MD.10

Engage Mystery Bag Inferences

Engage

Engage Is this book fiction or non-fiction? How do you know? Who s telling the story? How does the text show the crayons points of view? Why do you think the author, Drew Daywalt, wrote the book this way? How does the illustrator, Oliver Jeffers, help tell the story? What were some of the ways the crayons were changed?

Engage Today we re going to learn both science and engineering concepts by observing crayon properties, exploring how crayons can be changed, and learning how crayons are made.

Explore After reading The Day the Crayons Came Home, what are you wondering about crayons? What properties of this crayon could we observe?

Explore: Crayon Observations Using your crayon, draw a detailed picture of the crayon. Remove the wrapper from your crayon and use all your senses (EXCEPT taste) to make and record observations of the crayon. Measure and record the length of the crayon. List some ways you could change your crayon.

Explore: Crayon Observations Do you think your crayon is a solid, a liquid, or a gas? Why? What are some ways you could change your crayon?

Explore: Crayon Observations Break your crayon into 3 or 4 smaller pieces. How is your crayon different now? How is it the same? Is your crayon still a solid? Is it possible to change a crayon from a solid to a liquid? How do you think you could change your crayon from a solid to a liquid? Keep your pieces for another activity.

Explore Now what are you wondering about crayons?

Crayon Questions

Explain Use your How Crayons Are Made cards to show how crayons are manufactured in a factory. You will have the opportunity to reorder the cards as you listen to a book about the crayon-making process.

Explain

Explain: How Crayons Are Made Cards 1. Wax melts. 2.A worker adds color. 3.The wax is shaped. 4.The wax gets hard. 5.A worker checks the crayons for chips or dents. 6. A machine wraps the crayons, 7. A machine sorts the crayons. 8. The crayons are boxed. 9.The crayons are sent to stores. 10.I draw pictures with many colors.

Crayon Questions How does the wax turn into a gooey liquid? How is the wax made into the shape of a crayon? How does the wax become solid again? When a worker finds a crayon with chips or dents, what does he/she do with it?

Reversible Change What can you do to ice to change it into a liquid? How can you reverse the change and make water become solid again? What can you do to solid wax to change it to a liquid? How can you reverse the change and make the wax become solid again?

Explain: Melting Crayons Demonstration What changes did you observe? How does this demonstration show a reversible change? Work with a partner and think of a change that is NOT reversible.

Explain: How People Make Crayons http://cet.pbslearningmedia.org/reso urce/959d7d86-78fa-44e1-91a1- dcfa163ce7a0/how-peoplemakecrayons

Explain: How People Make Crayons 1. How does the book compare to the video? What is the same? What is different? 2. Does the video provide any new information?

Explain: How People Make Crayons Think about all the science and engineering involved in making an ordinary crayon! How do you think scientists and engineers might be involved in making crayons? How do you think new crayon colors are invented?

Number of Votes Favorite Crayon Colors Graph Favorite Colors

Elaborate Reread pages 27-28. Why would a crayon melt in the dryer? How did the turquoise crayon get in the dryer? Why is it a bad thing if a crayon gets in the dryer? Reread pages 13-14. Why did the red and orange crayons melt?

Elaborate: Crayon Recycling Design Challenge Take out the broken crayons from our Explore phase. Turn and talk to brainstorm a simple and safe way to recycle the crayons into new crayons. Turn and talk how you might design a step-by-step process for recycling the crayons with new shapes and colors. Share and combine to create a class process to try together.

Elaborate: Crayon Recycling Design Challenge How are the crayons the same as they were before being recycled? How are they different after being recycled? Do you think this change could be reversed? How well did our recycling process work? What would you change to make the process better?

Evaluate: Postcard from a Crayon Write a friendly letter from the point of view of the crayon you observed at the beginning of the lesson. Use first person (I, me, my, we) Describe all the things that happened to the crayon during the recycling process. First, then, next, last Solid, liquid, heated, cooled Beginning: Think of a creative way your crayon could have been broken. Ending: How your crayon was recycled into a new crayon with a new color and shape, describing all the steps in the recycling process in between.

Crayons What did you learn today? What was your favorite part of the lesson? See your STEM at Home sheet for another experiment you can do at home.

Source Picture Perfect STEM Lessons, K-2. (2017.) National Science Teachers Association.