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Planning Investigations

Use science notebooks to make your classroom experiments both hands-on and minds-on.

Notebooks can help make your classroom experiments both hands-on and minds-on.

About This Guide

Below, you'll find guidance related to helping students plan investigations, including:

Because we know teachers appreciate seeing the results of using these strategies, we've also created an example gallery containing student work and photographs of scaffolds on the walls of classrooms.

Gallery of Examples from Student Notebooks

Introduction

When many teachers think of a science investigation, they think of lab reports or the scientific method – a rigid set of steps students adhere to in order to complete an assignment. In fact, real scientists don’t often follow such a prescribed path. Instead, they follow questions and curiosities, which might lead them to read or research or experiment, which might lead them to more questions, etc. etc. The process can be messy and complex.[i] Student work in the classroom can mirror the work of real scientists. Read this page to learn how students can use notebooks to both catalyze and catalog their own scientific process.

[i] “How Science Works” graphic © 2008 by The University of California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley, and the Regents of the University of California.

From Gluing to Doing

The notebook can be a powerful tool for students to learn how to plan investigations. Perhaps you’ll start out the year by handing students a worksheet or lab report and asking them to glue it into their notebooks, but as time goes on, you can empower your students to create their own structures for planning and carrying out investigations.

Scaffolded Planning for Investigations

If students have little lab experience, notebook scaffolds can help them get prepared for an investigation. Here are a few options:

Semi-Scaffolded Planning for Investigations

Once students have experienced one or two heavily scaffolded investigations, you can help them transition towards planning their own investigations. Here are some examples of intermediary scaffolds that enable students to make more of the decisions.

Unstructured Planning for Investigations

After a few transitional investigations that are jointly planned by teacher and student, consider giving your students the opportunity to fully design their investigations. Here are a few tips for an open-ended planning session.

See more examples in our Gallery

Notes from the Classroom

Jinney was preparing for a celery investigation from her 5th grade curriculum. Her students had already experienced a few hands-on investigations, so she didn’t want to just hand them a ready-made procedure. She wanted to give them an opportunity to design the experiment themselves. So, here’s what she did.

To set the stage, she had students discuss a few questions: Are plants living organisms? Are plants made of cells? Are cells alive? How do plants get the resources they need for life? Jinney did not answer these questions – she just encouraged students to talk with each other about their ideas. Then, she showed them the materials they would have at their disposal – celery, pitchers of water, a scale, etc. Finally, she gave them a focus question for the investigation: "Will celery with leaves absorb more water than celery without leaves?" After that, the students were on their own. In groups, they designed investigations to answer the focus question. You can see several of their plans here