Lesson Objective

Students will explore how the continents have moved over time on Earth's surface. They will analyze and interpret data and identify patterns of the distributions of fossils and rocks, continental shapes, landmasses, glacial features and climate to provide evidence of past plate motions.

What evidence supports the continental drift hypothesis?

Drift
Continental Shelf
Fossil
Mantle
Separate
Skeptical

MS-ESS2-2
MSESS2-3

ELA: RST.6-8.1, RST.6-8.7, RST.6-8.9

Engage- DOK1
Explore/Explain- DOK2
Elaborate- DOK3
Evaluate- DOK1 & DOK4
STEM Module Project- DOK4

Phenomenon: Continents matching coastlines?

STEM Module Project: Rockin' Around the Park

The continents have always been located in the position that they are today.

Group work
Visuals
Sentence Starters
Graphic Organizers
Accessing Prior Knowledge

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Lesson Review 

Lesson Check 

Claim Evidence Reasoning 

 

McGraw Hill online textbook/workbook

Labs and Investigations: 

  • Investigation: A surprising Fit
  • Investigation: The Continental Drift Hypothesis
  • Lab: Reconstructing Pangaea
  • Lab: Reconstructing Gondwana