Science Unit Planner
Design a science unit anchored in phenomena and driving questions, where students use science practices to investigate, explain, and apply concepts instead of memorizing facts.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
- Print-friendly layout, works on screen or paper
- Includes Flip's pedagogical notes and tips
When to use this template
- Planning a multi-week science unit anchored in a real-world phenomenon
- Teaching to NGSS performance expectations or similar three-dimensional science frameworks
- When you want students to develop science practices alongside content understanding
- Building a unit where investigation and explanation connect throughout
- When you want to move away from chapter-by-chapter content delivery
Template sections
Science units work when the phenomenon creates a genuine need to learn the underlying concepts, so students are always learning science in the service of explanation, not just memorization. This planner helps you anchor a unit in a real phenomenon, sequence lessons that progressively build students' ability to explain it, and develop science practices alongside content.
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Science Unit pairs well with lab work: the structured phases keep inquiry focused while leaving room for student-driven investigation.
About the Science Unit framework
Effective science unit planning starts with a phenomenon, something observable in the real world that students cannot yet fully explain. The phenomenon creates a genuine need to learn the underlying science, making every lesson purposeful rather than arbitrary.
Phenomenon-centered design: A phenomenon is anything observable that raises questions: why does ice float? Why do earthquakes cluster in certain places? Why does bread rise? The phenomenon anchors the unit because students return to it throughout, building their explanation lesson by lesson as they learn the underlying science.
Three-dimensional learning: Modern science education (grounded in the Next Generation Science Standards and similar frameworks internationally) requires three dimensions: disciplinary core ideas (the content), science and engineering practices (investigation, modeling, argumentation), and crosscutting concepts (patterns, cause and effect, systems). Strong science units develop all three dimensions together.
Driving question: The phenomenon generates the driving question: "Why does X happen?" or "How does X work?" The driving question guides the unit's investigation sequence. Every lesson should connect back to the driving question and build students' ability to explain it.
Science practices: Science is not just content; it is a way of knowing. Science units should include regular opportunities for students to practice: asking questions, developing and using models, planning and carrying out investigations, analyzing and interpreting data, constructing explanations, and arguing from evidence. These practices develop scientific thinking.
CER structure: Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) writing is one of the most effective tools in science education. Students write claims about the phenomenon, support them with evidence from their investigations, and explain the reasoning connecting evidence to claim. This template includes space for regular CER practice throughout the unit.
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