Chemistry Graphing Activity Bundle - Graphing Every Week
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Description
This chemistry graphing set contains differentiated graph interpretation exercises teachers can use throughout the year!
Please check the preview to see a sample set, teacher instructions, and a table of contents.
Graphing Throughout the Year!
These graphs were meant to be used relatively in-order throughout the year. You could give them out of order if you feel your students are ready for a particular skill.
They are set up each week so that you can choose to use one of the four versions each week, depending on time and the graph learning goal that week. Graphing by hand is an important skill, but it can take a lot of class time to have students graph by hand each week. If you are short on time, you could choose one of the two interpretation options during a particular week. If you are out on a particular weekday, you might choose the graphing-by-hand option as a sub plan.
Version information (all but 3 sets have 4 versions):
1. Basic Graph Interpretation: Simpler, straight-forward graph and questions for exposing middle school students to different types of graphs or high school students who need a little review.
2. Higher-level Graph Interpretation: A graph with a few straight-forward questions and some higher-level questions. This version is meant for high school students on level or above.
3. Graphing By Hand (with premade axis): Using data, students will create their own graph and explain its meaning by writing its own short yet detailed caption.
4. Graphing By Hand (blank): Using data, students will create their own graph and explain its meaning by writing its own short yet detailed caption.
Repetitive Questions... On Purpose!
You will see that many of the questions from page to page are similar and this is on purpose!
There are a few teaching goals built into these activities:
* Students need to be able to identify in general terms what the study or graph is about. Therefore I ask them to write the title (or write their own title in the more challenging version.)
* Students need to know how to identify what was different between groups in an experiment. I ask them to write the independent variable (or what scientists changed between groups or data points).
* Students need to know how to identify what is actually being measured or counted. I ask them to write the dependent variable (or what scientists measured!)
* Students need practice writing. They need practice summarizing an experiment in their own words and identifying the main trend in a graph or experiment’s results. For each page, I have them write a short few sentences to describe what was found in the graph or study.
Topics in the Graph Interpretation Exercises:
Atmospheric Composition on Enceladus
NYC Temperature
Density of Metals vs Temperature
Protons and Neutrons in Stability
Decay of a Radioactive Substance
Decay of Different Isotopes
Electron Distribution Around the Nucleus
Isotope Abundance of Zinc
Electron Affinity
Ionization Energy
First, Second, and Third Ionization Energies
Atomic Radii
Electronegativity and Atomic Radius
Volume and Temperature
Volume and Pressure
Time and Temperature Graphs 1 & 2
Phase Diagrams 1 & 2
Solubility Cures 1 & 2
Titration Curves 1 & 2
Reaction Rate Graphs 1 & 2
Would you like homework pages to help your students review what they've learned in class? Check out our chemistry homework pages here.
Contact Us
If you have any questions or concerns, please reach out to us on the question and answer section of my store and we will get back to you quickly!
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