ACTIVITY COLLECTION

Middle School Science Lab Station Activities

This collection of labs supports the experiments in the Middle school Lab Station equipment kits and includes activities for the wireless force and acceleration, motion, light, sound, temperature, pH, weather, and carbon dioxide sensors.

Grade Level: Middle School

Subject: Earth ScienceLife SciencePhysical Science

Activities

01) Describing Motion

Students will use a motion sensor to investigate how position, velocity, and acceleration may all be described and quantified when explaining motion.

02) Humidity and Dew Point

Students use a weather sensor to examine the differences between absolute and relative humidity and relate those to dew point.

03) Night and Day

Students will be using different models to recreate the effects of the Sun on Earth. In Part 1, students use a simple model to examine night and day. In Part 2, students use a more accurate model to examine, predict, and describe seasons.

04) Seasons and Temperature

Students will use different models to recreate the effects of the Sun on Earth. In Part 1, students use a model to examine the equinox. In Part 2, students use a protractor to place the Earth model at a tilt and examine, predict, and describe temperature differences between seasons.

05) Thermoregulation

Students will explore the relationship between internal body temperature and the skin surface temperature of their hand under different conditions.

06) Introduction to Acids and Bases

Students will use a pH sensor to determine the pH of common household substances.

07) Photosynthesis

Guide students to measure the change in carbon dioxide (in a closed system) with a carbon dioxide sensor to facilitate an understanding of the relationship between carbon dioxide, respiration, and photosynthesis in plants.

08) Acid Rain and Weathering

Students will use a pH sensor and vinegar to model the effects of acid rain on various materials.

09) Forces and Interactions

Students will investigate the relationship between force and acceleration. Newton's first law and and second law will also be explored.

10) Waves and Energy

Students learn that sound is produced by vibrating objects, that sound travels from a source through air, solids, and liquids, and its loudness depends on the amplitude of the wave. The amplitude of the wave defines the waves energy. The frequency of the wave defines the pitch.