SEARCH RESULTS: physics
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Acrostic forms for force, motion, work, gravity, friction, and inertia.
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2 DOWN: an opposing force.
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Physical description game. Students interview each other to uncover identities of people on the page. Jeu de description physique. Les élèves s'interrogent pour découvrir l'identité des gens sur la page.
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Use this four page notebook to answer targeted questions and collect information about a bird, from physical features to cool facts.
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[member-created with abctools] Trace and cut out. This cylinder-shaped shapebook is a fun way for early readers to learn about magnets. Includes writing prompts on the subject of magnets.
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Report planner, KWL, and a lined page to write a report about force and motion.
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[member-created using abctools] Find magnet theme words from "attract" to "repel" in this magnet-shaped word search.
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This reading comprehension explains some concepts from physics and then looks at them in terms of a popular sport. ("What is acting on a soccer ball when it stays in one place until a player moves it?")
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A two page description of the study of Physical Science with multiple choice and short answer and a writing prompt.
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Introduces the idea of push and pull in force, with space for students to list examples from their own lives; reviewed with a simple experiment.
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Associate states of being with reactions to find the mystery expression.
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Partners must obtain name, address and age of "suspects" by giving physical description.
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A one page explanation of surface tension followed by two related experiments and a teacher's note.
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Each card features a definition and a helpful illustration. Five pages, four cards per page.
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Introduces the idea of motion and work in force, with space for students to list examples of friction in their own lives; reviewed with three science experiments.
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A set of seven experiments that demonstrate that the sciences of biology, chemistry and physics are part of our life at home. Set 1 of a series of experiments titled Science at Home, includes a description of experiments, scientific method report form and an explanation of probable results.
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Introduces the idea of magnets, with space for students to list examples of magnetism in their own lives; the concept is reviewed with three science experiments.
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Reading comp of the laws of forces and motion, illustrated, simple experiments, short response and completion questions, vocabulary crossword.
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Use this page to divide portfolio categories or for a notebook cover.
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