Unit 5 Mastery
Unit 5 Mastery
Unit 5 Mastery
Lesson Title: The Water Cycle! Each step of the cycle and what happens during it
Objectives:
Students will be able to list the stages of the water cycle in the correct order
Students will be able to define what each stage in the water cycle does
State Standards:
Standard 2. E.2: The student will demonstrate an understanding of the daily and seasonal weather
patterns
2.E.2.A.1: Analyze and interpret data from observations and measurements to describe local
weather conditions (including temperature, wind, and forms of precipitation)
Context:
This lesson will be taught to a second-grade science class. The water cycle is a very important
process that happens every day, all around us. The water cycle is what enables the availability of
water for all living organisms. The water cycle is shown in many ways that kids may start to
question at this age such as where the water goes when it rains, and why the outside of a cup gets
wet, or the grass in the morning is wet. We need to care about the water cycle and teach about it
because water is necessary for life. The students will have prior knowledge that when it rains, the
water does not stay on the earth. I will have told my students at the at the end of the last class
what we will be talking about today and gave them that thought to think about before coming to
this lesson. It is good to get their minds thinking about how and why. After this lesson, students
can start to navigate more weather patterns such as snow, hail, wind, and how temperatures
affect these acts. In this lesson, I will be teaching them the basic three steps to the water cycle to
give them the base understanding of the most common weather condition.
Data:
In this lesson, I will be making three groups, one group to discuss each stage of the water cycle.
These groups will be determined by random draw, as no particular grouping pattern is necessary.
Throughout the lesson, each station that each group is in will have a sort of physical or digital
task that they will turn in at the end of the lessons. I will also have a Kahoot game at the very end
for the whole class to play.
Materials: List all materials used (i.e. websites, apps, pencils, iPads, computers, worksheets,
diagrams, textbooks, etc.)
Part of lesson Material used link
Introduction Whiteboard, YouTube https://youtu.be/Oq8iCsV4woE
Video
Teacher Directed Ziplock bags, markers No links
Collaborative iPads, Water Cycle app https://edshelf.com/tool/water-cycle-hd/
^description of app, app available for iPad
use only
Independent Digital iPad, Edpuzzle, pencil, https://edpuzzle.com
notebook
Closure iPad, Kahoot https://kahoot.it/
Rationale: You must have at least two paragraphs (one for each mandatory piece of
multimedia)
Youtube Video:
For introducing the lesson, I thought a fun, catchy video would be a great way for the students to
get excited to engage in these activities they are about to do. This lesson is for second graders
and they may have a hard time staying focused for a long period of time. They also may not be
interested in the topic being taught, so it may be hard for their young minds to engage in the
lesson. Using a fun, upbeat, catchy song will catch the students attention and help them to get
excited about the upcoming stations. The video I chose goes along with exactly what I am trying
to teach the students in my lesson. This video is great to use because I can also turn on closed
captioning for those with hearing impairments, as well as throughout the video fun, engaging
visuals to go with the words.
Edpuzzle:
Edpuzzle is a great app to use when teachers want to assess their students. Assigning a video for
students to watch can be difficult, because the students may not actually watch the video. In
order to know that the students watched and understood the video, I can assign an Edpuzzle to
the class. I will be able to see the progress the students have made on their video, as well as the
questions they got right or wrong. This is great for listening comprehension skills. I am also able
to have my students watch a video completely of my choosing, as well as making all of the
questions that go along with the video myself. This way, I will know that my students can do
them and that they will meet all standards. This is also a great review tool to use at the end of a
lesson, or as a homework assignment. Edpuzzle has closed captions as well.
Kahoot:
Kahoot is one of the most used apps throughout all ages from elementary to even college level.
Kahoot is a great way to review the content you have learned by also making a game out of it. It
is great because I get to make the questions and answers myself, so I know they will all fit
exactly what my students should have learned throughout the lesson, as well as going along with
the standards and objectives. As much as this game is a review, it is also a great way for me as
the teacher to see who understood and really took in the content, and who struggled and needs
more help with the topic. Another benefit of Kahoot is the competitive nature it will bring out of
the students and encourage them to want to be on that leaderboard throughout the game and
especially at the end.