2026 Anaheim National Conference

April 15-18, 2026

4/9/2026 12:00PM EST: All sessions added to My Agenda prior to this notice have been exported to the mobile app and will be visible in the app when you login, under your profile. Any sessions added now will also have to be added in the app.
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5+1 Model: Integrate Earth Science and Support Diverse Learners in Biology

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building


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A vision to support collaboration of district teachers, administrators, scientists and educators working to integrate Earth and environmental science phenomena into high school biology, chemistry, and physics courses in Baltimore City Schools. The 5+1 framework guides the integration of earth science by incorporating the following components: 1) 3-Dimensional instruction, 2) phenomenon driven units, 3) student-centered learning (specific to ML with language and content objectives) , 4) responsive instruction with “in the moment” resources, tools, and strategies;, and 5) Earth science content for all students (+1). The framework ensures the curriculum developed is aligned to NGSS, infuses Earth science content, and is accessible to all students. Participants will use the 5+1 model to examine specific unit/lesson examples, in biology, to develop instruction that is responsive, phenomena driven with considerations to use language objectives to build instruction for ML students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Using the 5+1 model for Earth science integrated instruction, participants will analyze units and lessons in biology for the presence of key components designed to differentiate instruction for all students with a focus on diverse learners with a specific focus on multi-language learners (ML).

SPEAKERS:
Kevin Garner, Andrew Collins, Edmund Mitzel, Jr., Ph.D.

Authentic, Relevant, Local: Adapting Science PBL Open Educational Resources

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Adaptation Workshop Files

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Don’t have time to build a project-based learning (PBL) science unit from the ground up? Learn how to adapt high-quality open educational resources (OER) for your students and community. This session is designed for science educators interested in working with PBL science OERs to increase student engagement and deepen learning. Learn three principles that guide adaptation. 1) Make It Authentic: revise projects to connect with local issues and phenomena that matter to students. 2) Center Students’ Identities and Interests: adapt PBL experiences to affirm students’ backgrounds and increase relevance. 3) Localize to the Community: embed projects in local histories, resources, and cultures so learning feels meaningful and connected. We’ll share how teachers in Guam adapted K-8 PBL science OER units to center students’ cultures and geographies in a unique Pacific island context. Participants will apply lessons learned from Guam and explore strategies for adapting for their own students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Informed by the experiences of educators on Guam, attendees will learn to apply tools and strategies for adapting free project-based learning science curriculum to increase authenticity, center students’ identities, and localize to their communities.

SPEAKERS:
Sara Nachtigal, Alexandra Goodell

Beyond the Bin: STEM Education with Recycled Balloon Cars

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1wVEWY5LhXqO4PAoXPHP_Da5F686Cb5_2fmjc0ks0ZXs/edit?usp=drive_link

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Discover how to transform everyday recyclables into a dynamic, learning-rich project. This session provides a practical blueprint for creating an engaging force and motion science lab centered around building a balloon-powered car. We'll guide you through the materials needed and the step-by-step setup, teaching you how to use this fun activity to illustrate key physics principles, including Newton's Laws of Motion, friction, and aerodynamics. Participants will gain the skills to lead a hands-on, inquiry-based lesson that fosters creativity, problem-solving, and an understanding of engineering concepts. Leave with a ready-to-implement lesson plan that turns a simple craft into a powerful STEM exploration.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn to implement a full force and motion lesson plan by using a hands-on balloon car project with recycled materials, effectively teaching key physics principles like Newton's Laws, force, and friction in an engaging, inquiry-based lab setting.

SPEAKERS:
Daniell Cossey

Creating High Quality Student Work in Science Notebooks with Simple Strategies

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building


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This workshop offers a hands-on experience with a simple, structured approach to science notebooking designed for both new and experienced teachers. Participants will explore how to transform everyday classroom activities into clear, student-friendly notebook pages that support deeper sensemaking. The session covers the entire process—from planning and designing notebook pages to setting up student notebooks and using straightforward daily templates in class. Attendees will examine examples of high-quality student work for inspiration, create an assignment based on their own subject matter, and receive editable slides ready for immediate use in the classroom. By the end of the workshop, each participant will have the materials and confidence to implement this game-changing approach in their own science teaching right away!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore how to transform everyday classroom activities into clear, student-friendly notebook pages that support deeper sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Kurt Dragomanovich

Exploring Sky Phenomena – Discovering Patterns in the Sky

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Resources for Exploring Sky Phenomena – Discovering Patterns in the Sky
Resources for Exploring Sky Phenomena – Discovering Patterns in the Sky Please share feedback with Shefali Mehta ([email protected])

Show Details

Discover how to engage students in sensemaking of natural phenomena with Stellarium, a free online planetarium tool. With Stellarium, students can make observations, collect and interpret data, and investigate how the sky changes throughout the year. They can track the motion of the Sun, Moon, and stars, deepening their understanding of Earth’s place in the universe. In this session, participants will learn how to access and use Stellarium to guide students in recognizing patterns and systems. All activities are adaptable across grade levels, align with NGSS science and engineering practices, and include interdisciplinary connections to math, social studies, and ELA.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore ready-to-use Stellarium lessons that ignite student curiosity, deepen inquiry into Earth and Space Science standards, and build meaningful interdisciplinary connections.

SPEAKERS:
Shefali Mehta

Genetic Engineering and Civil Discourse: Connecting Science, Ethics, and Policy

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
CRISPR and Genetic Engineering: Innovation, Bioethics, and Public Policy
CRISPR-?Cas9 gene editing and guides them through scientific, ethical, and policy debates, including its use in agriculture. Aligned with AP Biology Unit 6, it fosters civil discourse and critical thinking, with options for adaptation across grade levels and subjects.
Fostering Civil Discourse in STEM Classrooms: Tips and Tricks
Identify and implement strategies into your science class to foster civil discourse discussions with students.

Show Details

Explore interactive strategies to inspire student engagement in complex science discussions. Using genetic engineering as a focus, this session highlights how you can support students in discussing the intersection of innovation with bioethics and public policy. Learn approaches to guide students in researching diverse perspectives on GMOs and CRISPR use and regulations, analyzing case studies, and participating in discussions. Discover ways to foster civil discourse on ethical debates while building independent research and synthesis skills. You will leave with practical tools and free resources to make real-world connections, helping students strengthen communication, problem-solving, and critical thinking skills. Aligned to honors and AP Biology (Unit 6), the session also connects to environmental science, ethics, government, and economics, offering interdisciplinary connections for deeper learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will learn strategies and gain resources to engage students in real-world science conversations, with a specific focus on the intersections of genetic engineering, bioethics, and policy. This is to better support building student research, communication, and critical thinking skills.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Lane

How to Explicitly Use Core Ideas to Motivate All Students to Learn Science

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
RVCC Science Education Institute Resource Page

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Participants will make sense of a phenomenon by engaging in 3D tasks that require the explicit use and application of Disciplinary Core Ideas to develop system models and construct explanations. Participants will discuss how the Principles of Learning (How People Learn, 1999) and recommendations from the Framework (NRC, 2012) require us to rethink the role of Core Ideas to promote conceptual understanding. We will show and discuss several unique classroom videos to illustrate what this looks like in a classroom and how it motivates all students to learn science. We will share examples of student models and explanations and as well as tools and strategies to support students in using and applying Core Ideas to phenomena. Participants will have open access to these tools, which can be used with any investigation, and they will leave with strategies that build community, spark passion for science, and ensure all learners have access to meaningful science experiences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will deepen their understanding of Core Ideas in science learning and gain strategies and tools to help all students use and apply these ideas to explore and explain phenomena in any 3D investigation.

SPEAKERS:
Wil Van der Veen, Brielle Tesauro

Innovating Science in the Preschool Classroom Using Informational Texts and Hands-On Activities

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building


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Current teaching and practice in preschool classrooms often includes limited exposure to informational science texts; which are essential to building all children’s sensemaking of disciplinary core ideas. In this 60-minute presentation, participants will learn strategies for embedding language-rich discussions into read-alouds of informational science texts focused on life, Earth and Space, and physical science topics. Participants will also learn about conducting hands-on science activities based on informational science texts and real-life phenomena. High-quality nonfiction science texts and hands-on activities will be presented. Videos and pictures captured in authentic preschool classrooms will be used to help participants gain firsthand accounts of evidence-based discussion strategies for building children’s language around science using information science texts and hands-on activities in preschool classrooms. Feedback from teacher implementation will also be included.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will take away practical, evidence-based discussion strategies and hands-on activities that foster understanding of disciplinary core science ideas for all children in preschool classrooms. Participants will also come away with a list of texts and materials for classroom use.

SPEAKERS:
Robin McGinnis

Just my two ‘sense’: Engaging all students in sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides

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This session will highlight strategies for supporting two key attributes of sensemaking: student ideas and science ideas. Presenters will share an NSTA tool for evaluating lessons, focusing on equitable instruction. In small groups, participants will experience hands-on strategies that promote student discourse and equitable access, such as chalk-talk, QFT, card sorts, and whiteboarding. These strategies will be grounded in classroom evidence from Physics, Chemistry, and Environmental Science, using examples of engineering design, data analysis, and models. The session includes dedicated time for reflection, allowing participants to connect these techniques to NSTA's sensemaking criteria and plan for implementation in their own teaching. Through small-group discussions and large-group share-outs, participants will personalize their learning and gain valuable insights from their peers.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will experience and review student work from strategies that create equitable, sensemaking science environments. Focusing on science and student ideas, participants will identify strategies to implement in their own practice to improve sensemaking for all learners.

SPEAKERS:
Emilie Cross, Kevin Henson

Learning Kinematics through Speed Walking

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Kinematics Speedwalking PBL.pptx

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This presentation will share a full kinematics PBL unit based on speed walking and highlight the key activities. The presentation will begin with an overview of the project and rationale for leveraging PBLs to engage students in science and engineering practices. The PBL begins with the anchoring question “How do you win a race?”. The presentation includes an overview of the scaffolded activities to get students comfortable with the software and sensors used to collect their own speed walking data. The PBL unit includes activities to support students to analyze their collected speed walking data. Finally, the presentation details the two peer review cycles students engage in to improve their presentation skills and to get feedback on their work. Throughout the presentation, attendees will be encouraged to ask questions in addition to reflecting on how this PBL unit could fit into their context.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain access to a complete kinematics PBL unit that can be adapted to their context, including a unit outline, activities, and assignments. Attendees will learn about the unit structure, how to implement the key activities, and consider how to modify the resources to meet their needs.

SPEAKERS:
Jessica Estes

Learning Unlocked! Bringing escape rooms and puzzles to the science classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Clue development worksheet
Presentation slides
Slides from the workshop including resources for making your own puzzles and finding existing resources.

Show Details

Step into the shoes of your students and experience the power of puzzles firsthand! In this interactive session, participants will begin with a mini escape room challenge—working together to unlock a mystery box using science clues and critical thinking. Then, we’ll break down how to design and implement your own classroom escape experiences to deepen engagement, collaboration, and content mastery. From low-prep paper puzzles to more immersive breakouts, you’ll leave with practical strategies, templates, and inspiration to make any middle or high school science lesson feel like an adventure.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn strategies for using escape rooms and puzzles to transform science learning—boosting engagement, collaboration, and critical thinking while making your classroom an unforgettable experience.

SPEAKERS:
Lisa Yi, Kim Bathker

Let’s Coffee & Chat! A Live Hang with Class CrunchLabs

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


Show Details

Grab your coffee and pull up a seat. This is your chance to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team and other educators who are building the future of science class. Ask questions, share wins, swap stories, and get real-time tips from the people designing the units and using them with students. Whether you are just getting started or deep into your first mission, this is a space for honest conversation, curiosity, and community. No slides. No pressure. Just real talk with your Class CrunchLabs crew.

TAKEAWAYS:
Bring your questions, feedback, and curiosity. This is your space to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team, swap ideas with other educators, and get support from real humans.

SPEAKERS:
DeAnna Lee Rivers, Arash Jamshidi, Tommy Clayton, Rebecca Garelli, Jesse Semeyn, Megan Kuehl, Spencer Martin, Tara Graham

NSTA's Trilogy of Guides to the Three Dimensions

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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This session focuses on the trilogy of NSTA Press books on the Three Dimensions and is led by NSTA’s former in-house expert on science standards who recruited the lead authors of all three books. Helping Students Make Sense of the World Using Next Generation Science and Engineering Practices provides a play-by-play understanding of the practices. Disciplinary Core Ideas: Reshaping Teaching and Learning provides an in depth perspective on the disciplinary core ideas. Crosscutting Concepts: Strengthening Science and Engineering Learning is designed to help educators grasp the foundational issues that undergird crosscutting concepts. These books are written in clear, nontechnical language. Many of the authors contributed to the development of the Framework and NGSS. The authors also share a wealth of real-world examples drawn from their own classroom experiences to show what’s different about three-dimensional teaching and learning at all grade levels.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn techniques to use these three books to help educators have a deep understanding of practices, core ideas, and crosscutting concepts to foster better student learning in their classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Ted Willard

Planning interdisciplinary, phenomenon-based instruction for deep content understanding

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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[10 min] Participants will be provided with and introduced to our phenomena-based planning tool for content instruction that is both meaningful to students and shows how science disciplines work together. [40 min] Participants will use our tool to develop unit plans that they can take back to the classroom. First, they will: 1) identify phenomena and interdisciplinary connections for an upcoming lesson/unit; and 2) identify anchoring questions. Second, they will outline a plan for a unit. Participants will work in groups by their needs based on content and teaching context. Facilitators will circulate to each group and use timed check-ins during the workshop as a way to monitor progress, address whole group questions and offer feedback and support. [10 min] In groups, participants will share their outline for an phenomena based, interdisciplinary lesson, exchange feedback and respond to questions. To conclude, participants will map out their next steps to prepare for implementation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a phenomena-based planning tool and a draft of an interdisciplinary unit plan that promotes engaging, experience-driven learning aligned with NGSS, OpenSciEd and other curricula.

SPEAKERS:
Anthony Stetzenmeyer, Takumi Sato, PhD

STEAM-Powered Lessons for People and the Environment

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building


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Broaden young students’ environmental literacy while developing skills in scientific inquiry, modeling and data analysis. In this hands-on session, engage in creative games and collaborative problem solving on natural resource use, ecosystem health and pathways to sustainability. Create 3-D representations of global land use, model natural resource extraction, and simulate carrying capacity in nature and habitat fragmentation. Discuss the power of cumulative action for environmental stewardship with an elementary art project. The NGSS-aligned activities nurture students’ sensemaking, critical thinking and communication skills. Participants will receive lesson plans and background materials in an electronic format.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn ways to introduce elementary students to human ecology concepts, including natural resource use and interdependence in ecosystems with NGSS-aligned hands-on activities (3D simulations, collaborative problem solving and games).

SPEAKERS:
Helen De la Maza

STEM Stories in Action: Bringing the Best STEM Books to Life in Your Classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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Join NSTA Early Childhood-Elementary & BSB Committees as they explore how these award-winning books support STEM learning. Educators will engage in interactive activities, leaving with a head full of ideas on how these books enhance science & engineering practices (SEPs) in the classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants view and discuss the ten years of Best STEM Book winners and ways to incorporate them into their classrooms to teach the SEPs.

SPEAKERS:
J Carrie Launius, Anne Lowry, Simone Nance, Jennifer Williams

Supporting Equity and Justice Through Science Instruction: The Road Traveled and the One Ahead

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Supporting Equity and Justice Through Science Instruction: The Road Traveled

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All students have the right to develop a deep understanding of how the world works in ways that support their personal goals and the interests of their community. Science education can help build a more just and equitable world. Come explore how instruction can support science learning that is consequential to your students, their communities, and the broader world.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn about and apply two equity project frameworks for science education to support professional learning and implementation projects. They will learn how open education resources (http://stemteachingtools.org/) can help them develop equitable approaches to science teaching.

SPEAKERS:
Kelsie Fowler, Philip Bell

Tasting Science: Experiential Learning Through Food in the Classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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Discover how food can bring science to life in the classroom! In this interactive 60-minute workshop, we will model Pilot Light’s integrated food education approach, connecting science concepts to real-world experiences. Participants will engage in a sample live lesson, experiencing firsthand from the student perspective how food-based learning deepens understanding of NGSS-aligned practices. Through reflection, discussion, and hands-on activities, attendees will learn strategies to overcome barriers such as time, access, or uncertainty in linking food to standards. The session provides practical tools, frameworks, and digital resources to design authentic, student-centered lessons that connect science, nutrition, and sustainability, foster curiosity, and strengthen classroom and community connections.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain hands-on strategies to connect food-based experiences to science learning, and leave with practical tools, resources, and ideas to design engaging, NGSS-aligned, student-centered lessons that make science tangible and relevant.

SPEAKERS:
Megan Gottlieb

Using accountable and productive talk to foster critical thinking

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building


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In a science classroom, accountable and productive talk is essential for developing students’ understanding of scientific concepts and for fostering critical thinking. In this session, participants will engage with a breakdown of what this looks and sounds like, and how it contributes to student growth. Included learnings in the session: how to encourage students to actively participate in discussions, not just listening passively; how to encourage peer-to-peer dialogue, not just student-to-teacher talk; teaching respectful debate and understanding of multiple viewpoints; and encouraging students to apply concepts to new situations or real-world problems.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn and practice the classroom-tested practices of accountable and productive talk that turns science class into a space for thinking, not just knowing and helps students become inquirers, analyzers, and communicators (core components of scientific literacy and critical thinking.

SPEAKERS:
Annette Venegas

Using Societal Challenges as Phenomena in 3D Units to Develop Student Agency

Thursday, April 16 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building


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Experience how leveraging complex culturally relevant societal challenges as phenomena in 3D teaching and learning supports student motivation and engagement and develops student agency within and beyond the classroom! The Framework for K-12 Science Education and NGSS call for learning grounded in real world phenomena and problems to ensure that science learning is relevant to all students. The AIL instructional model succeeds the 5Es and utilizes complex and culturally relevant societal challenges to anchor multiple cycles of inquiry and sensemaking, culminating with student explanations/design solutions. AIL employs science education research emphasizing coherence from students’ perspective. In this session, participants will 1) consider their own ideas about teaching complex societal challenges, 2) experience 3D learning, and 3) consider the science concepts of a societal challenge (antibiotic resistance, heart disease, food sustainability, anthropogenic changes to biodiversity)

TAKEAWAYS:
The research-based BSCS Anchored Inquiry Learning instructional model succeeds the 5Es and leverages complex societal issues as anchoring phenomena/problems, culminating tasks, and performance assessments in 3D units of instruction to motivate students and develop agency in addressing these issues.

SPEAKERS:
Cynthia Gay

From Claims to Curiosity: CER in a Flipped Chemistry Classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA presentation.pptx

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Join for an interactive session, where we will explore how the Flipped Classroom model and the Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) framework can transform student learning and engagement. This session will highlight practical strategies for shifting direct instruction outside the classroom, freeing up valuable in-class time for collaborative, inquiry-based learning in chemistry classroom. Participants will discover how integrating CER into flipped lessons empowers students to think critically, construct scientific explanations, and support their claims with evidence and logical reasoning. Through real-world examples, hands-on activities, and discussion, educators will leave with actionable tools to foster deeper understanding, promote student voice, and enhance formative assessment practices. Whether you're new to flipped learning or looking to refine your use of CER, this session offers insights and inspiration to elevate your teaching practice.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session equips educators with practical strategies for designing flipped lessons that incorporate CER seamlessly. Participants will explore real classroom examples, tackle common challenges, and engage in hands-on activities that model the CER process.

SPEAKERS:
Bhagyashree Kulkarni

Rural Secondary Educators’ Perceptions About Integrating Music into Physical Science Courses

Thursday, April 16 • 8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Dissertation Study Round Table Presentation_1
Dissertation Study Round Table Presentation_2
Sound Wave Project
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 1
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 2

Show Details

Developing a future-focus for science education with emphasis of music and arts. Bridging out for cross-curriculum among various disciplines, however, focus upon STEM education. Utilizing the ODE State Science Standards, along with state standards from various content, as well as the connections to the Next Generation Science Standards. My proposal is for the audience of 6-12 general science educators. Educators from outside of the 6-12 parameter are always welcome to attend the proposed session. The information provided for the proposed session presentation is to help all STEM educators with the integration of music and arts into the STEM education and curriculum (STEAM). Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to achieve the talented and gifted students who may not be advanced in science, but advanced in arts and music.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. There are digital programs the educators can utilize without costs to improve the connections of arts and music with STEM. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to STEAM TAG kids.

SPEAKERS:
John Davis III

Student Agency: The Latest Research

Thursday, April 16 • 8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8


Show Details

Student agency involves students taking ownership of their learning, and it can have many positive benefits, including motivation and self-efficacy. However, cultivating agency requires opportunities to do so. What kinds of agency opportunities do educators provide? How receptive are educators to providing them? Do science teachers differ from teachers in other subjects in these regards? In this session, I’ll share what we know about student agency, what it can look like in science, the findings of recent research, and what else we have yet to learn about it. Session participants will engage in conversation about the unique affordances and challenges of providing students with agency opportunities and leave with ideas, strategies, and a report on recent research findings.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn about ways to define agency, what research tells us the benefits of agency are, what agency can look like in science, and the latest research on student agency, both generally and in science.

SPEAKERS:
Nicholas Balisciano

A Google & Doodle Method: Student Vocabulary Construction

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 39



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Google and Doodle Method of Vocabulary Acquisition
This is the actual poster that was presented at NSTA Anaheim.
Handout - brainstorming for water properties
This is how I use ChatGpt to identify the cognitive level requirements of major vocabulary in a unit and piece together the vocabulary work that I have students complete.
Vocabulary Work Process
This is the step-by-step process I use to identify the major vocabulary for each unit and the required cognitive level it needs to be taught at.

Show Details

This vocabulary strategy engages students in authentic research and visual learning. Using Google and Google Images, students investigate science terms to build accurate definitions and context. They then transform their research into labeled diagrams, comparisons, and sketches, reinforcing meaning through both inquiry and visualization. By moving beyond rote memorization, this method helps students actively “piece together” vocabulary, fostering deeper understanding, stronger retention, and connections between words and concepts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave this session with a ready-to-use vocabulary strategy that combines digital research with visual synthesis, making abstract terms more concrete and memorable for students.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Davis

AWA (Alternative Writing Assignments)

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 17



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA AWA 2026 Poster
The following is a link to the presented AWA poster.

Show Details

I have found students’ fear of science, scientific concepts, and deeper understanding lingers, even in preservice undergrads. Many found science as unrelatable and something to get through. Students tended to not understand the “big picture” and concept connection to personal interests/ activities. I use alternative writing assignments to elevate HOTS levels while supporting cross-curricular understanding. I created a rubric that was general in the sense of product development but precise in the understanding conveyed. The rubric guides students to widen their understanding and incorporate individualism. Although full rubric completion takes students to an average, C letter grade, it provides multiple avenues for personal interests with the ability to exemplify superior work for them, physically linking sensemaking between science ideas and student ideas. The culminating products have been more unimaginably diverse and deeply engaging for their peers, the instructor, and themselves.

TAKEAWAYS:
My AWA (alternative writing assignment) rubric will be explained and shared, showing how concepts can be created, taught, and presented by students.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Bechtel

Elevate Your Teaching with the National Earth Science Teachers Association (NESTA]: From Phenomena to Practice Through Community and Collaboration

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 13


Show Details

The National Earth Science Teachers Association (NESTA) empowers educators to advance their instructional practice through professional learning, high-quality resources, and a supportive community aligned with the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). This session highlights how NESTA—through strategic partnerships—helps teachers integrate Earth and space science phenomena that inspire student-centered inquiry and authentic sensemaking. By fostering educator resilience, collaboration, and leadership, NESTA promotes excellence in Earth and space science education. Participants will explore NESTA’s wide range of offerings, including timely classroom resources, professional development opportunities, access to best practices through our peer-reviewed journal The Earth Scientist, and strategies for building interdisciplinary connections across the sciences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about a community that elevates Earth and space science teaching! NESTA helps educators connect, grow, and lead—transforming curiosity into discovery through shared resources, collaboration, and real-world phenomena that inspire student learning.

SPEAKERS:
Kellyn Hardin, Natalie Macke

Empowering Educators to Craft Inclusive Canvas Courses

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 14



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Poster
Presentation

Show Details

This poster showcases how you can transform your Canvas courses into inclusive, dynamic, and enriching learning experiences for all students. Swing by to tap into essential strategies, tools, and best practices to foster inclusivity, diversity, and accessibility through your school's Canvas site!

TAKEAWAYS:
Visitors will learn how to implement tools like Canvas Groups for collaborative learning, media opportunities with Canvas Studio, and using Canvas to showcase student understanding while harnessing student strengths!

SPEAKERS:
Tanya MacMartin, Ed.D.

Five Steps to Stress-free Science

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 38


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See the 5E instructional model, Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, Evaluate, come to life in a complete phenomena-based science lesson. This simple five-step framework makes teaching NGSS, inquiry-driven science easy, structured, and fun for any classroom. In this poster session, you will explore each phase through visuals, lesson examples, and student work samples. Discover how the 5E model sparks curiosity, strengthens sensemaking, and turns real-world phenomena into meaningful learning experiences without adding extra work. You will leave with ready-to-use lesson ideas, practical strategies, and a digital toolkit that makes implementing the 5E model approachable, playful, and completely doable. This session demonstrates how even teachers new to phenomena-based science can confidently design lessons that engage students and support lasting understanding.

TAKEAWAYS:
The 5E model gives teachers a simple, five-step framework to design phenomena-based science lessons that spark curiosity, support sensemaking, and engage students, all with low prep and tools ready to use immediately.

SPEAKERS:
Paddy Rich

From Lab Dreams to STEM Leaders: Meet the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge Grand Prize Winners

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 4



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
2026 From Lab Dreams to STEM Leaders Meet the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge Grand Prize Winners.pdf
26-27 Shell Awards and Competition flyer.pdf

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Step into the spotlight with this interactive poster session featuring the current Grand Prize Winners of the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge! Connect one-on-one with these outstanding science educators as they share their journey—from transforming under-resourced labs into hubs of innovation, to winning one of science education’s most prestigious awards. Learn firsthand how they’ve elevated student learning, built strong safety practices, and used the Challenge as a platform for professional growth and leadership. Whether you’re curious about applying or simply looking for inspiration to energize your own classroom or lab space, this is your chance to ask questions, gather tips, and walk away empowered by educators who’ve done it.

TAKEAWAYS:
Personal conversations with Grand Prize Winners will inspire attendees with practical ideas and confidence to transform their own science classrooms and consider applying for the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Upton

How to Transform Students’ Experience in High School Chemistry through Food & Cooking

Thursday, April 16 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 19


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How can we make chemistry more interesting, relevant, and exciting to students while still keeping rigor? Hear from teachers across the U.S. who have used lessons centered around food-based phenomena that teach chemistry concepts like atomic structure, bonding, thermal energy, intermolecular forces, and chemical reactions, and are aligned to NGSS. Learn how this has helped student engagement, disposition, and understanding of science concepts, and their ideas about what science is. Teachers can answer questions about what this can look like logistically and how to support common classroom challenges like supporting students of different levels and backgrounds, lab equipment, and providing 3D assessments that align to NGSS.

TAKEAWAYS:
See how other teachers have used different series of lessons centered around different food-based phenomena and labs and how this has helped student engagement, disposition, and understanding of science concepts, and their ideas about what science is.

SPEAKERS:
April Thompson, Jacob Rice, David Meyer, Kate Strangfeld

A Better Whey to Explore Chemical Changes, Rates & Solubility: Fresh Cheese [Teaching science through food & cooking]

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building


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How can we use cheese to explore science concepts like evidence of chemical changes, solubility, and pH? Experience how we can investigate these concepts in a fun, exploratory way that emphasizes building science practices (intended for Grades 6-8 or Grades 9-12). In this session, participants will engage in parts of a lesson that center around the phenomenon of fresh cheese. They will participate in a mini-lab and then “unpack” and make sense of the results through various second-hand data and information. This session strongly highlights how a lab can be framed in an investigative, rather than confirmatory, way. This introductory part of the lesson can be used for grades 6-8 (targeting standards MS-PS1-1, MS-PS1-2, MS-PS1-3) or grades 9-12 (HS-PS1-3, HS-PS1-5). It is a great way to teach about ways to identify if a chemical reaction occurred and introduce precipitates.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will do a simple hands-on lab that can be easily scaled up or down and see how students can make sense of curd formation by drawing on what they already know, making meaningful observations, analyzing data, asking questions, and applying an understanding of how chemical reactions work.

SPEAKERS:
April Thompson, Jacob Rice, David Meyer, Shawn Boggs, Ashley Vandgrift, Kate Strangfeld, Miriam McMillian

Assessing durable skills in STEM: Using ELIPSS rubrics to assess NGSS Science and Engineering practices and skills

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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This workshop will provide participants with strategies to use the ELIPSS feedback rubrics to assess a variety of skills within their courses and provide feedback that leads to student mastery. Student engagement with the science and engineering practices is necessary to help them meet the NGSS expectations. However, research has shown that it is not enough to provide assignments that cause students to USE particular skills; assessment of these skills is critical for student skill development. The Enhancing Learning by Improving Process Skills in STEM (ELIPSS) is an NSF-funded project that developed resources that aid instructors in aligning their intended outcomes, tasks, and assessments to address science practices and durable skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
-Overview of the ELIPSS rubrics and strategies for using rubric components in combination to assess targeted skills and science practices -Strategies for including skills in traditional content-based rubrics -Practice combining rubric categories to develop customized rubrics for your assignments

SPEAKERS:
Renee Cole, Juliette Lantz

Data Collection and Analysis 2.0

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building


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Attendees will use data collection technologies such as software, probeware, and calculators to collect, graph, and analyze data. Attendees will then use veritcal whiteboarding to discuss and share the data collected through gallery walks. Topics will include, density, velocity and acceleration, temperature, solubility and conductivity, and force.

TAKEAWAYS:
Ideas and inspiration on how to get a more student centered data collection and analysis discussion with students with authentic data that is collected by the students.

SPEAKERS:
Chris Coker

Designing for Diversity: Mapping and Protecting Butterflies with Real-World Data

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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Explore the rich diversity of butterflies through data-driven conservation! In this hands-on workshop, participants will act as student scientists using real-world datasets—expert range maps, citizen science observations, and historical records—to identify priority areas for butterfly protection at the state level. Using California as a model, attendees will analyze species richness and habitat suitability data to locate biodiversity hotspots, then design localized action plans that maximize butterfly diversity through host plant selection and habitat design. The session models NGSS-aligned practices in analyzing and interpreting data, using models, and designing solutions to real-world challenges. Participants will receive adaptable lesson materials and digital resources to localize the activity anywhere in the country—empowering students to use and collect authentic data to protect butterflies in their community.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use real butterfly biodiversity data to identify conservation priorities, analyze habitat potential, and guide students in designing localized, data-driven actions that protect diverse pollinators—moving beyond individual species to broader ecosystem awareness.

SPEAKERS:
Claire Lannoye-Hall

Drawing Connections: Blending Art and Science for Deeper Learning

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7


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How can we make room for art in our science classrooms? Join us as we share our experiences infusing art into science lessons. Learn how art can turn science into engaging, creative experiences that support sense-making, foster critical thinking, encourage personal expression, spark curiosity, and more!

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session, attendees will explore practical strategies for infusing art and design into science instruction, helping students master scientific concepts while staying engaged. Together, we’ll reimagine science classrooms as spaces where creativity and curiosity go hand in hand.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Kim, Yishan Lee

Early Childhood Engineering

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building


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The relatively new emphasis on engineering across educational settings and standards, has early childhood educators working to understand how to best engage young children in engineering experiences that develop children’s interest and skills and prepares children for future engineering learning. To do this, early childhood educators need to be aware of the foundational knowledge and skills needed for our young learners to engage in age-appropriate engineering experiences and to learn systematic ways for developing children’s engineering knowledge and skills throughout their preK and early elementary years. This session will present a continuum for Early Childhood Engineering, describing appropriate engineering experiences for preschool through the primary grades and explaining how each set of experiences prepares children for the next. And, of course, we will do some engineering!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will understand what engineering is and appreciate the need for and benefits of engineering experiences in early childhood education, while learning meaningful classroom strategies for implementing engineering with young children.

SPEAKERS:
William Straits

Electronic Portfolios in Science? A Systems Approach to the 4 Cs, Mastery, and Equity

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Electronic Portfolios in Science - NSTA Anaheim 2026

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Transform your classroom and make a lasting impact on education with one philosophical shift that puts learning back into the hands of students. Join one teacher’s journey to revolutionize assessments with renewed focus on critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, and communication. Research suggests that a standards-based electronic portfolio promotes a positive learning environment that emphasizes student mastery, develops self-regulated learning, and strengthens the classroom community. This real-world application in Physics confirms it! Explore how the systems approach has promoted equity and accessibility through universal design for learning (UDL) strategies and purposeful implementation of peer reviews, self-assessments, and revisions. See examples of how an “Ask 3” protocol and “Actionable Norms” positive behavior intervention shift student thinking from compliance to continuous growth. Let’s turn theory into practice and leave energized to effect change together.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how implementing a comprehensive learner-centered electronic portfolio system with NGSS (& AP) standards-based grading plus a clear revision process can positively impact student learning to address the 4 Cs while it also transforms teaching into a more sustainable practice.

SPEAKERS:
Albert David Valderrama

Embracing Uncertainty: Creating a Classroom Culture to Support Student Sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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As classrooms continue to retool for the Next Generation Science Standards, many teachers are finding that they and their students are uncomfortable with the sustained uncertainty that is central to phenomenon-and-problem-driven instruction. However, uncertainty is an important and valuable aspect of sensemaking, as students draw on their prior knowledge and grapple with new information to figure out and explain complex scientific ideas. In this session, attendees will workshop a series of hands-on activities that require students to sit with unanswered questions for multiple lessons. Participants will practice new strategies for mitigating students’ anxieties with not knowing the answer, and share their own experiences managing students' different levels of comfort with uncertainty in their classrooms. Attendees will walk away with a new set of elementary lessons and strategies they can put into practice right away.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participate in a series of hands-on phenomenon-based lessons, and practice new strategies for encouraging K-5 students to embrace uncertainty as an exciting opportunity, rather than a potential risk. Receive print copies of high-quality instructional materials to bring back to your students.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel Patton, Dr. Emily Harrison

Enacting Language and Racial Equity Practices in Science and STEM Classrooms

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation slide Racial Equity Practices

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This workshop invites secondary science and STEM teachers to explore strategy guides for enacting Language and Racial Equity Practices (LaREP) to support linguistically and racially diverse students’ sense of belonging, academic success, and STEM identity development. Participants will (1) explore the LaREP framework, (2) review strategy guides that translate LaREP into actionable classroom practices with instructional designs and student work examples, (3) experience two model activities—one focused on language equity and another on racial equity—and (4) discuss with participant teachers their feedback and comments on the LaREP’s potential and challenges. Participants will gain access to all resources via our project website, including the full LaREP Strategy Guide Package: one overview guide, three Language Equity Strategy Guides (e.g., Connecting Science and Everyday Words), and four Racial Equity Strategy Guides (e.g., Disrupting Structure, Funds of Knowledge and Raciolinguistics).

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will bring with them the practical strategies, lesson examples, and insights for enacting Language and Racial Equity Practices in secondary STEM classrooms to strengthen linguistically and racially diverse students’ sense of belonging, academic success, and STEM identity.

SPEAKERS:
Won Jung Kim

Engaging Multilingual Learners in Collaborative Inquiry through Translanguaging Moves

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 (1).pptx

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It is essential for middle school science students to learn to generate new ideas, interpretations, and solutions collaboratively. In this presentation, we first convey a stance that values and leverages multilingualism and multilingual learners' (MLs) lived experiences. We then share work done with science teachers and teacher educators through the federally funded Biliteracy and Content Area Integrated Preparation (BCAIP) Project to translate this stance into moves that mobilize MLs' full linguistic repertoire (i.e., translanguaging). Specifically, we use a middle school science unit, Ecosystem Interactions and Resources, to model how bilingual texts, collaboration norms, and multilingual assessment performances serve as translanguaging moves to scaffold data and text analysis along with collaborative language development. Attendees come away with resources and tips to designing a trajectory of collaborative inquiry for their own classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Multilingual learners benefit when are supported in mobilizing their full linguistic repertoire (i.e., translanguaging) for the purpose of generating new ideas, interpretations, or solutions collaboratively.

SPEAKERS:
Edward Lyon

Fish Habitats and Underwater Remote Operated Vehicles

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B


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The 6th-8th grade students at AuTrain-Onota Public School, are in their fourth year building and wiring underwater remote operated vehicles (ROVs). The students have worked with local conservation districts on a fish habitat project, as well as won trophies at ROV competitions. This past school year, the teacher, Amy Pihlainen-Gabler, contacted the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, (WHOI), regarding their use of ROVs. WHOI scientists, including a senior scientist on the Titanic wreckage expedition, have spoken to the students several times about the real-world applications of these ROVs. Mrs. Pihlainen-Gabler traveled to Woods Hole in Massachusetts this past March and will discuss her trip to WHOI and how the scientists welcomed her on tours and provided materials and information to further inspire her students. She will also discuss future plans for the program with Kall Morris Inc. and the Lake Superior SCUBA harbor clean up effort.

TAKEAWAYS:
The most important thing as a teacher is to show students the real-world applications of what they are learning. The "why do I care/need to learn this?"

SPEAKERS:
Amy Pihlainen-Gabler

From Curiosity to Career: Connecting the NGSS and STEM Pathways

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
1. ANA26_From Curiosity to Career_ Connecting the NGSS and STEM Pathways.pdf

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This session explores how the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) can serve as a powerful foundation for helping students connect phenomena-driven learning to high-skill, high-wage, in-demand careers. This session will offer practical insights into the current postsecondary and workforce landscape and demonstrate how career-connected learning can increase student engagement by making science more relevant and purposeful.

TAKEAWAYS:
Using state science standards as a foundation for career connected learning helps students see science as purposeful and relevant by directly linking science content and application to in-demand career pathways boosting both engagement and motivation.

SPEAKERS:
Kristin Rademaker

From Pages to Practices: Using Children’s Literature to Support Science and Engineering Practices

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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Discover how NSTA Kids Press books can move from page to practice in your classroom. Presenters will share encore favorites and premiere new titles, highlighting how these books support the Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs). Participants will see practical ways to launch inquiry projects, connect to other curricular areas, and integrate literacy into science instruction. Each featured book will include classroom-ready ideas, from hands-on activities to assessment strategies, plus suggestions for extending learning with related texts. Whether you are looking to spark curiosity, strengthen student understanding, or make cross-curricular connections, you will leave with new ideas for teaching science and engineering practices through engaging stories.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore the integration of science and engineering practices and children’s literature through cross disciplinary connections and hands-on activities. Resources provided.

SPEAKERS:
Melissa Parks, Patricia Vermillion, Rina Zampieron, Katie Morrison, Simone Nance, Jennifer Williams, Anne Lowry

From SNPs to Stories: Teaching Genetics Through Consumer DNA

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Classroom Discussion on DNA
SNPs to Stories

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Consumer DNA testing sits at the intersection of cutting-edge genomics and personal identity. This session pulls back the curtain on how direct-to-consumer tests generate and deliver results, from raw genotyping data to ethnicity estimates and migration inferences. We’ll explore scientific concepts such as reference populations, SNP arrays, population structure, and statistical modeling that underlie tools like ancestry composition and historical matching. Alongside the science, we’ll examine the powerful implications of these results—how they shape students’ understanding of uniqueness, shared origins, and global connections. Attendees will gain strategies for translating the science of commercial DNA testing into classroom lessons that are rigorous, relevant, and resonant.

TAKEAWAYS:
Understand the testing methodology behind consumer DNA tests and how they can be used to teach both genetics and human connection.

SPEAKERS:
Diahan Southard

From Vision to Impact: Designing Classrooms Where Science Makes Sense

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 163, North Building


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Sponsoring Company: Kiddom

What does it take to make sense-making of phenomena through investigating the center of science instruction, not just in theory, but in daily practice? Join Dr. Mike Flanagan and explore how intentional curriculum design, when paired with powerful learning intelligence technology (LIT), can transform instruction and empower all learners. Featuring actionable strategies, this session will leave you inspired and equipped to design learning experiences that are coherent and genuinely engaging.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how thoughtful curriculum design and digital tools work together to support sense-making in science instruction, with practical strategies they can apply immediately to create more coherent, equitable, and engaging learning experiences.

SPEAKERS:
Mike Flanagan

Having Students Explore without Labs (Or Have Them Explore Labs Better!) Using Structured Visuals

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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Implementing hands-on, student-centered models of instruction such as the 5E through labs and other activities can be challenging in practice because of unavailability of time and materials. Additionally, it is a challenge to help students understand the science phenomena behind each experience, and not just the experience itself. Structured visuals bridge that gap: they are easy to make or find, and they intuitively engage students in deep, rich thinking and academic conversation. Additionally, they help level the playing field by providing all of the needed background information for students to access critical thinking opportunities about science concepts. Participants in this session will experience exploration of science phenomena from students’ perspective by engaging in peer-to-peer academic conversations using structured visuals. Participants will also be shown how to create structured visuals and structured visual resources such as The Visual Non-Glossary.

TAKEAWAYS:
Structured visuals are easy to prepare and implement, and they can either replace labs or dramatically enhance them. Structured visuals get students talking and making inferences and connections. This session shows how to find, make, and use them.

SPEAKERS:
Stephen Fleenor

Integrate to Alleviate: Contextualizing Comprehension in Elementary

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Integrate to Alleviate: Contextualizing Comprehension in Elementary SLIDES

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Educators are trying to find the time to engage students in authentic science learning experiences, but they are restricted by schedule and curricular demands. INTEGRATING science and literacy ALLEVIATES challenges such as time constraints, disconnected learning, and low engagement. Utilizing science trade books stimulates knowledge building, which engages, equips, and empowers our students by contextualizing their comprehension. This session includes evidence-based research, practical insights, and hands-on application. Participants will: EXPLORE an integrated lesson using the 5E model and literacy strategies for reading, writing, speaking, and listening that deepen students’ understanding of science content connected to NGSS standards. CREATE an integrated lesson using a template and collection of science trade books. REFLECT on their experience, challenges encountered, and key takeaways. They will leave the session empowered with practical tools to elevate their teaching practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
INTEGRATING science and literacy ALLEVIATES challenges (time constraints, disconnected learning, low engagement). This presentation includes evidence-based research, practical insights, and hands-on application, to empower educators with knowledge and practical tools to contextualize comprehension.

SPEAKERS:
Stephanie Westhafer

Juicy Nuggets from Carnival of Collisions: Using Class CrunchLabs Curriculum Supports for Contact Forces

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Juicy Nuggets - Carnival! (Class CrunchLabs NSTA 2026)

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Contact forces might be all around us, but the juicy nuggets in this unit help them make sense. This session helps you uncover key features in Carnival of Collisions that make it easier to plan, teach, and guide students through puzzling ideas like balanced and unbalanced forces, motion, and collisions. We will walk through the built-in teacher tools, prompts, and routines that support deep thinking and epic classroom moments. Whether students are knocking down bowing pins or smashing watermelons, you will leave with ready-to-use moves that help the learning stick.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover classroom-ready tools in Carnival of Collisions that help students explore contact forces and investigate what really happens when objects crash, bounce, or come to a sudden stop.

SPEAKERS:
Tommy Clayton, Arash Jamshidi, Spencer Martin

Launching the Future: Integrating Estes Rockets and Blue Origin's New Glenn into STEM Education

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
BlueOrigin_ChangingSpaceTravel_EDU_2025.pptx
MissionGreenLaunch_PropellerstoPayloads_EDU_2025.pptx
MissionGreenLaunch_StudentPortfolio_EDU_2025.pdf
MissionGreenLaunch_UnitPlan_EDU_2025.pdf

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Join us for an exciting and hands-on workshop designed specifically for educators! In collaboration with Estes Rockets and Blue Origin’s Club for the Future, this session will provide you with the tools and knowledge to inspire your students through the power of rocketry and space exploration. Learn how you can implement this New Glenn inspired lesson into your classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Enhance your understanding of rocket science and space exploration and equip yourself with practical, engaging lesson plans and activities.

SPEAKERS:
Bela Power, Kristen Yip

Making the Case for Science in the Elementary Classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D


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Science sparks students’ excitement and curiosity about the world! Explore research and discuss how to build your toolbox for engaging others in prioritizing phenomenon-based instruction in elementary students’ curricular experiences; go beyond special activities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with strategies to advocate for integrating science into students’ elementary classroom experiences, on par with ELA and Math.

SPEAKERS:
Yanira Vazquez

Next Gem Innovators: Empowering Educators with Strategies That Engage Minds

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slide Deck
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Discover how the Next Gem Innovators program is transforming STEM education across the Dayton Region through a powerful collaboration with the National Science Teaching Association (NSTA). This session will introduce the structure, impact, and opportunities within the program—designed for educators who are ready to lead real-world, innovation-driven learning both in and outside of the classroom. Participants will engage in a collaborative discussion around current challenges in bringing innovation into the classroom and explore how programs like NGI can empower educators to lead change. The session will conclude with a hands-on activity rooted in one of NGI’s core STEM principles—industry integration, pedagogical innovation, or leadership development—giving attendees a taste of the NGI experience.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a model for empowering educators to lead innovation-driven, real-world STEM learning through strategic partnerships, strong pedagogy, and leadership development—along with practical strategies they can adapt within their own schools and regions.

SPEAKERS:
Jessica Short, Colleen Biers

NSTA PRESS: It's Still Debatable: Using Socioscientific Issues to Develop Scientific Literacy, K-5

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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The Next Generation Science Standards describe a vision of scientific literacy that emphasizes informed and participatory citizenship on issues related to science in society. Many elementary teachers, however, avoid debatable socioscientific issues such as whether we need zoos, the value of a national space program, or whether certain sports are too dangerous for children because of concerns about arguments in their classrooms and fear of broaching moral/ethical issues. During this interactive session, participants will be introduced to the theoretical framework behind the Socioscientific Issues (SSI) approach. They will then collaboratively engage in an activity from the NSTA Press book, It’s Still Debatable, during which they will model negotiation of a debatable issue while analyzing the lesson’s use of SSI, NGSS three-dimensional science learning, alignment with interdisciplinary standards, and multiple means of assessment for all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
During this interactive workshop, participants will learn an array of strategies for using debatable societal issues related to science to develop their elementary students’ scientific literacy while modeling interdisciplinary, inclusive, three-dimensional science teaching and learning.

SPEAKERS:
Sami Kahn

Oxygen In, Energy Out: Using Real-Time Data and Medical Technology to Teach Cellular Respiration and Homeostasis

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building


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This session demonstrates sensemaking in action by integrating all four pillars: phenomena (observable oxygen changes during breath holding), science practices (authentic data collection and analysis with pulse oximeters and Python), student ideas (predictions about body system responses), and core disciplinary ideas (cellular respiration and homeostasis). Participants will experience a complete research-validated lesson where students collect their own physiological data, use Google Colab for visualization, and connect personal observations to ATP production and cellular processes. The lesson includes real-world biomedical applications through a hydrocephalus case study featuring VP shunts with Doppler sensors. Successfully implemented with 36 diverse high school students, this approach makes abstract molecular concepts tangible and personally relevant. Participants will leave with ready-to-use materials, including a 5E lesson plan, pre-written Python code, and samples of student work

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will gain practical, research-backed strategies to make cellular respiration tangible and relevant through authentic data collection, technology integration, and real-world biomedical connections.

SPEAKERS:
Demvia Maslian

RTI in Science and Providing Interventions

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom J / K



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
RTI in Science

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Learn how to write assessments to then identify, document, and address student learning deficiencies and implementing RTI in the Science Classroom. Participants will also learn how to add a built in intervention time during the day and how we provide extensions and also include our elective teachers into providing interventions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn concrete ways to identify students who need RTI, creating spreadsheets to track student data, and developing a intervention plan to address student needs.

SPEAKERS:
Kyla Glasser

Soil Chemistry in Action: Water, Pollutants, and Natural Hazards

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 212 A


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Why do some burned hillsides suddenly flood or slide after a storm? This session uses phenomena-based instruction to explore how soil chemistry and structure regulate water movement, nutrient transport, and pollutant filtration. Participants will engage in hands-on activities that model how soils can absorb or repel water, store and release nutrients, and contribute to hazards such as flooding, landslides, and fire-altered soils that become water-repellent. Investigating soil data and maps, educators will uncover how soil processes connect to essential Earth and environmental science concepts. Participants will leave with freely available resources, professional development opportunities, and strategies for guiding students to explain natural hazards and ecosystem functions through the lens of soil science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Why do burned slopes flood or slide? Engage your students in hands-on soil investigations to uncover how structure and chemistry regulate water flow, stability, and susceptibility to hazards and take home free resources to spark phenomena-based learning in your classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Lauren Brase, Lindsay Mossa, Natalie Macke

Start Your Engines: Middle School Physics Fun

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Start Your Engines Session Materials

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Are you wanting to learn some fun and engaging physics activities in-line with the NGSS Standards? This session will give you a lesson to bring back to school and use or share with your colleagues. In our session we will be looking at balanced and unbalanced forces, calculating speed and motion graphs.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will experience physics fun for 6-8 Science as they apply to the NGSS MS-PS3-1 standards. We will use hot wheels to collect data to calculate speed and create motion graphs using hands-on technology.

SPEAKERS:
Becky Walker, Amy Rush

STEM Includes Me

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building


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The presenter situates Hip Hop pedagogy in children’s literature as a tool for helping students discover their STEM identity. Hip-hop pedagogy and identity-centered teaching practices bridge students' cultural knowledge with mathematics. This interactive workshop will demonstrate how educators can utilize identity-centered teaching as one pathway to accessing high-quality STEM instruction and one approach that empowers students to envision themselves as future STEM leaders. Attendees will gain insights into instructional strategies and activities that support the development of student agency in STEM.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to apply a cultural identity framework in conjunction with hip-hop pedagogy to design culturally relevant STEM tasks that enhance student agency and foster inclusive environments in STEM classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Sherita Flake

Supporting All Students in Making Sense of Phenomena By Building On All of Their Intellectual Resources

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Supporting All Students in Making Sense of Phenomena By Building All of Thei

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Students bring amazing intellectual resources to make sense of science phenomena based on their personal and community experiences—including languages, perspectives, gestures, as well as knowledge, interests, and values. Come learn how to notice and leverage those intellectual gifts in your teaching! By analyzing a series of awesome learning situations, this session asks participants to work with others to ‘learn to see’ students’ diverse sense-making resources—and connect these pedagogical strategies to their own classroom practice. Come join us for this fun, interactive session!

TAKEAWAYS:
Culturally responsive education supports student sensemaking and learning in science. Inclusive science strategies help teachers learn to see and leverage students’ diverse sense-making resources. These methods help us create and adapt curriculum that is equitable and centered on justice.

SPEAKERS:
Philip Bell

The Legacy of PBL in Science

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1KWdUb27ImpOye-7AR_tDdUrM33qKBPDRa4OQU1bO6aM/edit?usp=sharing

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PBL has been proven to be an effective teaching strategy in the science classroom. This session will provide an overview of Project Based Learning including the difference between project and problem based learning, how to manage a PBL, and how to maintain a legacy PBL.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with strategies to implement PBL in their classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Nadene Klein

The STEM Scavenger Hunt: Uncovering Hidden Pathways in Every Career

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
EduProtocol Strategy - Iron Chef
Your upgraded version to a jigsaw that is faster and easier to capture students thoughts as they are working in teams.
STEM Scavenger Hunt - Presentation
STEM Scavenger Hunt - Resource Document
Document showcasing all of the sites and resources used during the presentation.

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Discover how STEM goes beyond traditional math and science. This interactive session helps teachers find hidden STEM jobs, and plan learning pathways for students of all grades, from early exposure to high school specialization. Educators will leave with a wide range of tools they need to help every student believe that they can succeed in STEM.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will uncover a wide range of STEM-connected careers, begin to map learning pathways from elementary to high school, and leave with ready-to-use tools assisting teachers in helping students see themselves as capable problem-solvers with real-world futures in STEM..

SPEAKERS:
Kia Thomas, Randy Kolset

The Untapped Toolbox: Teacher Resources to Elevate OpenSciEd

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Untapped Toolbox Landing Page
Untapped Toolbox Presentation Slides

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The first year implementing OpenSciEd is often about keeping pace with the flow of units. In this session, we’ll share what we’ve learned about going deeper within the curriculum by tapping into valuable tools that often get overlooked in the first year. The GEMS-Net project, based at the University of Rhode Island’s College of Education, has been collaborating with teachers in their first few years of OpenSciEd implementation to explore supports, including the Teacher Handbook, Teacher Tools and Resources, and Unit Overview documents. Teachers have found this work to be valuable for planning, instruction, and supporting student sensemaking. Join us to dig into these resources together and leave with concrete strategies for elevating your OpenSciEd implementation beyond the first pass.

TAKEAWAYS:
Join us for a deep dive into often overlooked OpenSciEd resources and leave with strategies for advancing your instruction beyond the first year of implementation. Discover how to leverage valuable resources to deepen planning, instruction, and student sensemaking when teaching with OpenSciEd.

SPEAKERS:
Holly Emery, Catherine Knasas, Sarah Reis, Caroline Stabile

The Virtual STEMM Academy from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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This workshop introduces an innovative online platform coupled with in-class activities to engage students in STEMM. Each module is anchored in a real-world case study woven into a story where students assume the role of scientists or clinicians, making decisions using authentic data from pediatric research. The modules build scientific literacy and problem-solving by utilizing inquiry-based modules, classroom discussion and manipulatives. Students are guided through diagnostic reasoning, data analysis, and treatment exploration leading to a deeper understanding of research. The interactive workshop will demonstrate how narrative-driven learning makes complex biomedical concepts accessible while highlighting emerging areas such as genomics, gene therapy, and data science. Participants explore strategies for integrating the platform into science curricula to inspire curiosity, connect the classroom to current research, and promote career pathways in health and biomedical sciences.

TAKEAWAYS:
This workshop highlights an online platform that uses narrative-driven learning modules about pediatric cases to teach life science concepts. Teachers will learn practical ways to integrate the modules into their courses to inspire curiosity and health science career interest.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Etherington, Summer Jasper, Kyle Bichsel

Thermodynamics in the Science of Fire Safety

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building


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Look up at the ceiling when you’re at the grocery store, your school, or offices. What will you often see? Fire sprinklers! What role do fire sprinklers have in engineering and designing fire-safe spaces? In this workshop we evaluate the structure and function of a fire sprinkler to understand how thermodynamics lead to the bulb breaking and how a system of fire sprinklers work to limit the impact of fire. Xplorlabs: The Science of Fire Safety was developed in partnership with UL Research Institutes' Fire Safety Research Institute and the National Fire Sprinkler Association. Participants will preview the no-cost Science of Fire Safety pathway and consider its potential as part of their classroom curriculum. During which they will observe the effectiveness of a home sprinkler system using actual lab footage from ULRI, explore the phenomenon of thermal expansion to activate a sprinkler, and ideate how students can use this to design fire safe spaces.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants leave inspired to consider ways for students to design safer spaces and make informed fire safety decisions based on safety science. Participants also consider the opportunity to integrate any of the no-cost Xplorlabs pathways as part of their classroom curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Daniel Sternberg, Jessica Sparacino, Abi NeSmith, Justin Guida

Unlocking Potential: Equity-Driven Science Teaching for All Students

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Unlocking Potential Equity-Driven Science Teaching for All Students (1).pdf

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Experience the joy of inclusive science learning! This interactive session begins with a brief review of NGSS instructional shifts and its three dimensions: Disciplinary Core Ideas, Science & Engineering Practices, and Crosscutting Concepts. Engage in a collaborative "Notice and Wonder" exercise, followed by a two-part pen dissection using the "Parts, Purposes, and Complexities" routine. Participants will explore Strategic Shifts from the Exploratorium’s Institute for Inquiry—Discourse, Equity, and 3D Learning—through a hands-on Making Thinking Visible activity from Harvard’s Project Zero. This session emphasizes modeling, reflection, and strategies to support multilingual learners and students with disabilities. Walk away with practical tools to make science accessible, meaningful, and fun for every student.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower every learner through inclusive, NGSS-aligned engineering instruction that advances students’ cognitive, emotional, and social growth.

SPEAKERS:
Bella Githere, Delgel Pabalan

Using Children’s Literature to Foster Sensemaking in Elementary Science

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Here Eyes on the Sky Lesson Plan
Rooting for Plants Lesson Plan
Secrets of the Sea Lesson Plan
Teaching Sensemaking with Childrens Literature Slide Deck
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind Lesson Plan

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Participants will learn how using children's literature in science instruction can help students get interested in science topics, gain needed context about phenomenon, and share prior knowledge. We will share how interactive read alouds can generate student collaboration and facilitate discussions.

TAKEAWAYS:
We want participants to take away a list of recent children's literature about science topics and how to use these books in their science teaching and learning. Techniques will be shared and lesson plans tied to NGSS will be handed out.

SPEAKERS:
Alexandra Chester, Jordan Kobielus, Jim McDonald

Using learning maps for individualized instruction: Approaches for the inclusive classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Annotated list of DLM science resources with weblinks
The Dynamic Learning Maps® (DLM®) assessment system includes a suite of science resources for science educators, primarily designed to support accessible, standards-based instruction for students with significant cognitive disabilities. These materials support both instructional planning and understanding of the DLM science assessment. In addition, these resources can provide guidance for teachers working in inclusive science classrooms on how to adapt instruction for all students.
NSTA 2026 ANA. Annotated Lesson Organizer. SCI EE.8.PS.Forces-1.pdf
This annotated lesson organized provides an example of a lesson sequence, based on an inquiry routine, and aligned with the Essential Element SCI.EE.8.PS.Forces -1 (Use observations and measurements to determine how an object's mass affects the force needed to change its motion.)
NSTA 2026 ANA. Lesson Organizer Template. Blank. MS Word.docx
This lesson plan/ instructional sequence template serves for inquiry-based instruction and science routines.
NSTA 2026 ANA. Lesson Organizer Template. Blank.pdf
This lesson plan/ instructional sequence template serves for inquiry-based instruction and science routines.
NSTA 2026 ANA. Minimap SCI.EE.8.PS.Forces-1 Full.pdf
Visual representation (mini-map) and content specifications of how skills and concepts connect across linkage levels within the DLM Essential Element SCI.EE.8.PS.Forces
NSTA 2026 ANA. Relation Essential Elements and NGSS PE.pdf
This document provides an example of the DLM science elements development, based on NGSS performance expectations' reduction in breadth, depth and complexity.
NSTA 2026. ANA. Minimap Graphics. SCI.EE.8.PS.Forces 1.pdf
Graphic representation of nodes and connections (mini-map) associated to the DLM Essential Element SCI.EE.8.PS.Forces1
NSTA 2026. ANA. Presentation slides. Learning maps for inclusive classroom.pdf
Presentation slides with links to DLM science digital resources

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Join our session to learn about resources developed to support instruction in inclusive classrooms. These resources, designed within the Dynamic Learning Maps (DLM) Assessment System at the University of Kansas, are based on “learning maps”—cognitive models that specify multiple pathways for student learning, accounting for diverse learning needs. Learning maps show progressions of knowledge and skills in all three science dimensions, allowing for flexible integration of dimensions to help educators meet students where they are and work toward common learning goals for all students. This session will use the SEP Planning and Carrying Out Investigations to illustrate how learning maps can support planning targeted and individualized inquiry-based instruction in middle school. Teachers of science in general education classrooms, special educators who teach science, and science educators interested in supporting all students’ learning are encouraged to attend.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn about 3-D science learning maps and how to use related resources from the Dynamic Learning Maps system that are publicly-available, aimed at planning targeted and individualized inquiry-based instruction in inclusive classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Richardson, Dante Cisterna

Voice of the Lab: Empowering Students with Meaningful Jobs

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Voice of the Lab

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Discover how to create a more functional and engaging classroom by empowering students through meaningful roles and validated scientific inquiry. This session will explore how a structured system of classroom and lab jobs can foster student responsibility, build a strong sense of community, and develop critical skills. It will also highlight the benefits of centering student ideas in science, which boosts confidence, encourages risk-taking, and deepens learning. Learn how to combine these strategies to cultivate an environment where students feel valued, confident, and motivated to contribute to their learning community. The second half of the session will demonstrate how celebrating student ideas in the science classroom can encourage responsible risk-taking and promote deeper learning. By validating student contributions and framing mistakes as growth opportunities, educators can create a collaborative environment that boosts confidence and fosters student-driven discovery.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a toolkit of actionable strategies to implement both systems, empowering students to take ownership of their learning and become valued, contributing members of the classroom community.

SPEAKERS:
Caitlin Quinn, Amy Couch

Who Owns Scientific Innovation? Balancing Rights and Responsibilities

Thursday, April 16 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Fostering Civil Discourse in STEM Classrooms: Tips and Tricks
Identify and implement strategies into your science class to foster civil discourse discussions with students.

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How do we balance innovation, private rights, and civic responsibility? This session connects America’s founding principles to modern challenges in science and engineering. Using primary sources and considering modern challenges, you will explore activities and civil discourse practices that help students analyze whether discoveries should be shared for the public good or protected as private property. Gain strategies to guide students in designing inventions that address civic needs and in proposing how innovations should be shared. With alignment to engineering and civics standards, and integration of literacy and technology, the session offers an engaging way to connect the 250th anniversary of America’s founding, or U.S. history more broadly, to science and engineering classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn strategies to guide students in examining the balance between scientific innovation, private rights, and the public good in U.S. history and today. This integrates engineering, civics, and civil discourse as students design solutions to civic needs.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Lane

Adapting Physics Curriculum to Focus on Climate Justice, Local Solutions, and Issues of Indigenous Self-Determination

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
S3: Adapting Physics Curriculum to Focus on Climate Justice, Local Solutions, an

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We show how instructional materials can be adapted for local contexts—and how to elevate issues of climate justice and ethical responses to the climate crisis. Participants will learn about how a high school physics unit from OpenSciEd about reliable energy sources was adapted to attend to Indigenous land rights and sovereignty.

TAKEAWAYS:
Related to STEM projects in society (e.g., energy transition, ecological restoration), teachers will learn how to engage students in exploring moral and ethical dimensions of trade-offs in project approaches. A broadly applicable framework for equity-focused curriculum adaptation will be shared.

SPEAKERS:
Kelsie Fowler, Philip Bell

AI, Please!

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
CER Poster.pdf
Current Electricity
Read & Respond Flocabulary
current-electricity-lyrics.pdf
EV's Mini Lesson Slides.pdf
EV's Student CER Handout.pdf
https://drive.google.com/file/d/16ljDWlhcre_Gh3kq1l0XIsUz9RYN_GOl/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oMYOFrwC6VDBXjZ7Qjsg4NJs64RD2Adn/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qlFUcbGX7HHWiQSGsVD5c1aN2oZYEQAN/view?usp=sharing

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In this session, we will model close reading lessons using both a document camera (traditional method) and a computer (technology integration) to demonstrate intentional annotation in science texts and assessments. Participants will engage in simulated classroom experiences, gaining a clear understanding of what effective text analysis with purposeful annotation looks and sounds like, as well as how to facilitate it. Short, manageable science passages will be used to ensure active participation and meaningful discussion. We’ll begin by exploring traditional annotation techniques using the document camera, then transition to digital tools—showing how uploaded texts can be annotated to support 21st-century learners. This hands-on approach will equip participants with practical strategies for blending traditional and modern methods to enhance comprehension and critical thinking in the science disciplines.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session empowers teachers to use intentional annotation (AI) to guide students in navigating grade-level science texts. AI, Please! boosts close reading and comprehension by combining purposeful annotation with practical classroom strategies to elevate science literacy.

SPEAKERS:
Yolanda Williams

Amplify Language Learning Through Engineering Design

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 4:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 2


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Engineering in K-5 classrooms creates rich, authentic opportunities for students to communicate and make meaning. In this hands-on workshop, you will experience an engineering design challenge that optimizes opportunities for language learning and sensemaking. You will discover how engineering can surface students' assets and connect to their community and lived experiences - and how it naturally encourages all students to communicate. We will share tools to support multilingual students that include and go beyond scaffolding. You will then apply these insights to your own work and context by modifying and adapting your existing curriculum materials, or creating your own activities, to amplify opportunities for sensemaking in engineering. This session builds on work done in collaboration with teachers in the San Diego Unified School District as a part of the Elevating Engineering with Multilingual Learners (EEMLs) research project.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to amplify language learning opportunities for all students through engineering! You will leave the workshop with practical tools and strategies to take back to your classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Tanya Warren, Nico Janik

Batology: An Integrated STEAM and ELA Unit on Bat Structure, Diversity, and Their Vital Role in the Ecosystem

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1pzZpRwlVtlEp6WdaQWZhkNkxTdD4CO2_WdQuhvKza0w/edit?usp=sharing

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Capture your students’ imagination with a journey into the world of bats! From blood-loving vampires to tiny bumblebee bats and giant flying foxes, this unit explores the science behind these misunderstood creatures while answering the question, “Why should we save bats?” Students dive into science, engineering, math, and literacy activities, learning about bats’ structure, function, and role as keystone species. The session highlights how to use trade books to teach science and literary standards. The culminating activity—a Save the Bats Breakout—immerses teachers in an escape-room style challenge that applies ELA standards, Greek/Latin stems, science, and math. Along the way, students uncover how misconceptions create prejudice and how knowledge empowers them to advocate for positive change. Fly away with a unit full of unforgettable, hands-on learning!

TAKEAWAYS:
This integrated STEAM/Literary unit immerses learners in the fascinating world of bats to explore science, math, engineering, and literacy. Discover how bats function as keystone species, bust myths, and learn how to use argumentation to advocate for this misunderstood creature.

SPEAKERS:
Wendy Wing

Blastoff! Engaging Young Latinas and Parents Through A Rocketry Program

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Blastoff Materials
A Google Folder of all materials referenced!

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Come hear about how our NSF-funded informal science education project inspired bilingual (English/Spanish) 5th–6th grade Latinas and their parents through hands-on rocketry and culturally responsive science learning. This 7-week program, grounded in Family Problem-Based Learning and Community Cultural Wealth, fostered curiosity, confidence, and family engagement in science. Presenters will share key curriculum elements and artifacts from three successful iterations, highlighting strategies that bridge home and school learning. Attendees will participate in two interactive activities. In the first activity, we will design personalized NASA mission patches while exploring their symbolism and history. In the second activity, we will model an activity that celebrates contributions of Latino/a scientists and engineers by designing a social media post. Come ready to create, collaborate, and take home practical ideas to launch inclusive family science experiences in your own community.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how culturally responsive, family-centered rocketry experiences can ignite young Latinas’ curiosity and strengthen science identity through hands-on, bilingual engagement for both students and parents.

SPEAKERS:
Caitlyn Ishaq, Peter Rillero, Margarita Jimenez-Silva

Breaking Down Modeling: Using Templates to Boost Student Sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Breaking Down Modeling: Using Templates to Boost Student Sensemaking

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Modeling is everywhere in NGSS, but too often it’s treated as a final product instead of a thinking process. This session reframes modeling as an iterative cycle of develop → revise → predict that makes student sensemaking visible at every stage. Participants will walk through the cycle themselves, starting with initial sketches, updating as evidence is introduced, and ending with predictive models. Alongside their own work, they will examine authentic student examples from lessons on seasons, energy systems, and engineering. To lower barriers, attendees will explore ready-to-use templates and a universal flowchart that help teachers choose the right modeling pathway for a given standard. Grounded in equity and accessibility, this approach ensures that modeling is not reserved for advanced learners, but a core practice that empowers all students to build, test, and refine ideas.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain tools—including modeling templates, prompts, and a decision flowchart—to support equitable student engagement in the complete NGSS modeling cycle.

SPEAKERS:
Reyna Rivera

Building durable skills in STEM learning: Constructing questions and tasks to facilitate skill development and skill assessment

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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This workshop will provide participants with strategies, practice, and feedback in writing skill-rich questions and assignments. Skills such as teamwork, critical thinking, and problem solving are important outcomes for STEM courses, but these skills are not always explicitly developed during class time. Research has shown that it is not enough to provide assignments that cause students to USE particular skills; questions and tasks must reveal use of these skills in student written work or group interactions. The ELIPSS project feedback-focused rubrics will be used to support efforts in constructing tasks that support student development of skills. Enhancing Learning by Improving Process Skills in STEM (ELIPSS) is an award winning, NSF-funded project that focuses on the development and assessment of durable skills and the NGSS science and engineering practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
-Evaluate questions for their ability to produce evidence of skills and support their development -Practice strategies for constructing questions in assignments that develop skills such as teamwork and critical thinking -Identify ELIPSS rubrics that support the assessment of these skills

SPEAKERS:
Renee Cole, Juliette Lantz

Concrete vs. Canopy: Teaching Heat Transfer with NASA’s Urban Heat Data

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 212 A


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This workshop equips both middle and high school teachers to use My NASA Data’s Earth System Data Explorer to investigate the Urban Heat Island Effect as a phenomenon for teaching heat transfer and thermodynamics. Participants will work with authentic NASA satellite datasets—land surface temperature, albedo, and vegetation indices—to explore how urban and rural environments differ in absorbing and releasing energy. Case studies from California and North Carolina provide contrasting examples of geography, land cover, and climate, helping participants connect conduction, convection, and radiation to real-world contexts. Educators will leave with NGSS-aligned, classroom-ready lessons and strategies for guiding students in analyzing satellite data, constructing explanations, and applying science concepts to local and global challenges of urbanization and climate resilience.

TAKEAWAYS:
Middle and high school science teachers will gain classroom-ready, phenomena-based lessons using NASA satellite data to investigate Earth’s energy budget, making heat transfer and thermodynamics meaningful through the Urban Heat Island Effect.

SPEAKERS:
Kellyn Hardin, Natalie Macke

Developing Engaged, Future-Ready K-6 Science and STEM Learners: Emphasizing Explorations, Sense-Making, Essential Skills, and Effective Use of Innovative Technology Tools, Including Robotics, Data Collection Tools and Analysis, and Engineering Design Processes

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building


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Data collection and robotics are accessible, engaging learning experiences, offering ALL students opportunities to explore, engage in hands-on learning, and experience success, using technology-rich devices, while learning essential science processes and concepts. Testing variables, analyzing their effects, and watching a device ‘work’ are positive learning experiences. Attendees will actively engage with a wide range of technology-rich devices and learn how to implement engineering design processes and robotics concepts, providing accessible portals of learning for ALL K-6 students, including ELL’s and special needs learners, as students develop computational and critical thinking skills and become successful, innovative problem solvers. Attendees will learn how to add complexity and rigor to tasks, as students gain skills and understanding. Practical strategies and applications will be explored, maximizing opportunities for equitable, accessible learning for ALL students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to design accessible learning experiences using innovative devices, helping students learn essential science concepts, data collection and analysis, engineering design processes, and robotics, and how to add rigor and complexity as learners gain skills and understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Donna Knoell

Discover Distracted Driving Dangers with Touch Tracks: Test drive students’ skills with simple, finger-mazes and other fun STEM activities from the free “Crash Science in the Classroom” program.

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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Complete a fun, distracted driving hands-on activity and discover award-winning videos and more inquiry-based activities from IIHS’s free Crash Science in the Classroom program. This lesson integrates timely, real-world phenomena — e.g., car crashes, crash-avoidance technologies, and other teen driving issues—so students can see science, engineering, and technology’s influence on society (a NGSS Crosscutting Concept). The scaffolded lesson and website design ensures accessibility and promotes equitable classroom practices through multimodal strategies: high-interest videos, guiding questions, formative assessments, exciting demos, English/Spanish captions, and virtual 3D 360° tours. This lesson offers teachers a high-interest, high-impact way to integrate core STEM concepts and practices, crash science research, and real-world relevance into their classrooms while equipping students with knowledge that could save lives.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants measure their reaction time and complete a distracted driving simulation using a series of 4 activities simulating the 4 major types of driving distractions. Participants will also learn how to access lesson plans, assessments, teacher tips videos, student lab sheets and answer keys.

SPEAKERS:
Pini Kalnite, Griff Jones

Effective Techniques to Evaluate Climate Change Information for Accuracy and Validity

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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Addressing climate change can be challenging. Students are given tools for evaluating information then provided a series of myths about climate change. Using reputable data, they dispel the myths with accurate information and use multiple explanations to understand common misconceptions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Students are provided with a checklist to determine if information is accurate on a fictional web page. Through small group discussions, students share their perceptions of accurate data and what it means, then challenged to decide if this information is valid in helping to understand climate change.

SPEAKERS:
Laura Tucker

From Phenomena to Pathways: Linking Science and CTE

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
2. ANA26_From Phenomena to Pathways_ Linking Science and CTE.pdf
Co-Planning Handout.docx (1).pdf

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Students often wonder how the science they learn in class connects to life beyond school. This session tackles that question by showcasing practical strategies for bridging core science instruction with Career and Technical Education (CTE) pathways and career applications. Participants will explore how phenomena-driven, three-dimensional science learning naturally aligns with the skills and knowledge used in engineering, health sciences, technology fields, agriculture, and more.

TAKEAWAYS:
Through examples, discussion, and ready-to-use ideas, attendees will discover how to help students see the relevance of scientific thinking in authentic career contexts.

SPEAKERS:
Kristin Rademaker

From Space to Plate: Using ISS Food Science to Combat Hunger on Earth

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Down To Earth: Space Science For Community Change
Use science and innovation from the International Space Station and beyond to solve real-world environmental challenges in your community.
SciFri Space Activities.pdf
SciFri Space Stories To Share.pdf
SciFri Space to Plate NSTA 2026.pdf

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Down to Earth is a free program with six design challenge missions using International Space Station (ISS) research to inspire middle schoolers to address real-world environmental challenges. Each mission includes hands-on investigations, engineering design challenges, background information, worksheets, and implementation materials. This session showcases two new missions focused on food science in space. Cosmic Crops explores how NASA's hydroponic systems grow fresh food in microgravity and how these technologies combat food insecurity on Earth. Orbital Eats explores how scientists develop safe, nutritious meals for extreme environments, with applications for food access challenges on Earth. Attendees experience sample activities and design challenges while learning implementation strategies for diverse settings. Activities align with NGSS standards, UN Sustainable Development Goals, and Career and Technical Education pathways. Walk away with ready-to-use resources.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will gain hands-on experience with activities that use ISS food science to engage students in solving local food security challenges, plus free lesson plans, assessment tools, and implementation strategies for connecting space agriculture technology to community-based action.

SPEAKERS:
Sandra Roberts

How Indigenous Sustainability Practices Can Assist in Teaching Students about Climate Change

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Arctic Ice Case Study
Cultural Burning Case Study
Great Lakes Maple Tree Decline Case Study
Indigenous Science Book List
Using Case Studies to Teach Indigenous Science and Sustainability
Using Indigenous Science to Teach Sustainability and Climate Change Slides

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Indigenous practices of sustainability provide powerful entry points for teaching K–12 students about climate change. These traditions emphasize long-term relationships with the land, cycles of renewal, and reciprocity between people and ecosystems. By examining practices such as seasonal harvesting, controlled burns, rotational planting, and respect for biodiversity, students see concrete examples of how communities have lived in balance with their environments for generations. These practices highlight the importance of observing natural patterns, valuing interdependence, and considering the impact of decisions on future generations. In the classroom, Indigenous perspectives can help students move beyond seeing climate change as abstract science toward understanding it as a lived reality that requires responsibility and care. This approach not only deepens ecological literacy but also encourages students to think critically about sustainability solutions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how Indigenous sustainability practices can enrich climate change teaching, gaining practical strategies supported by handouts and classroom case studies to integrate cultural and scientific perspectives into K–12 learning.

SPEAKERS:
Alexandra Chester, Jordan Kobielus, Jim McDonald

Hue are you?: Light, color, and your phone’s screen

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building


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Learn how your eyes perceive light and color from your phone’s screen. Join us as we investigate how your eye–brain system sees your phone through fun, content-rich, easy-to-do, NGSS-aligned hands-on activities from the Exploratorium Teacher Institute. All materials are designed to be effective, inexpensive, and easily obtainable. The Exploratorium is a hands-on science museum located in San Francisco, CA. The Teacher Institute has been a home for professional development for teachers since 1984.

TAKEAWAYS:
The technology in your phone is based on how your eye–brain system perceives the world. We’ll explore how various wavelengths of light (PS4.B) interact with specialized cells in your eye (LS1.A) and influence the engineering and technology (ETS1.A) of your phones' display (PS4.C).

SPEAKERS:
Desiré Whitmore, Eric Muller

Infinity Stones Rock Cycle: Geology & Pop Culture Unite

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F


Show Details

Harness the power of the Infinity Stones to teach the rock cycle! Each stone represents a rock type (igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic), and students journey through Earth processes in Marvel-themed stations and comic-style CER writing. This geology unit blends superheroes, hands-on modeling, and NGSS-based Earth science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with an NGSS-aligned, Marvel-themed rock cycle unit that makes geology unforgettable and fun.

SPEAKERS:
Ricardo Padilla

Integrating Real-World Data & Data Sensemaking Practices into NGSS Classrooms

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 4:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Resource Document
Access the shared Resource Document for this and other sessions from NSELA & NSTA 2026 for links to related resources, slides, and other opportunities.

Show Details

Data sensemaking is the process by which students explore, analyze and interpret data as they seek to make sense of science phenomena (Griffith et al. 2026, in press). It is central to students’ ability to think critically, draw evidence-based conclusions, and engage in authentic science practices. In this workshop, participants will unpack what data sensemaking practices (e.g., interpret patterns in context) are and how they were designed to enhance students’ SEP 2, 4, 5, and 6 skills. We will explore various strategies (e.g., Hypothesis Array), in the context of real-word climate data and freely available lesson plans and resources, to broaden participants' toolkits for integrating data into their own curricula. Through hands-on learning with data, small-group collaboration, and whole-group reflection, participants will gain strategies for increasing students’ data skills and leave equipped with free, research-based resources to bring authentic data sensemaking into their classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn research-based data sensemaking practices and strategies, experience them with real-world climate data, and explore Data Puzzles lessons and Puzzle Piece resources they can adapt to strengthen NGSS-aligned data use in their own classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Bridget Walsh, Kristin Hunter-Thomson, Annette Brickley

Interdisciplinary Lessons - how to get everything done with limited time!

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Copy of NSTA - Integrating Science with ELA and Math Standards_ A Comprehensive Approach.pptx

Show Details

This session will highlight activities that we have done K-5 to weave science lessons with math and ELA standards to make sure all subjects get the time they deserve. They also use real world experiences to make the ideas tangible and relatable for students. The presentations will include background information of how we narrowed down the standards taught, and how we developed the lessons. THen participants will get to try out some of the activities and walk away with lesson plans and worksheets .

TAKEAWAYS:
Science lessons easily incorporates ELA and Math standards, so why not write your lessons this way? Making science an interdisciplinary study allows students to use their lessons in a new and meaningful way, and allows teachers to hit all their standards in a reasonable amount of time!

SPEAKERS:
Samantha Levine

Johns Hopkins Wavelengths: How Robots Are Mapping the Seafloor

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building


Show Details

This session focuses on a NSTA and Johns Hopkins University lesson, connecting the ocean exploration and marine technology expertise of Dr. James Bellingham, author of How Are Marine Robotics Shaping Our Future?, to the classroom. Participants will explore how the lesson fosters student sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
The Johns Hopkins Wavelengths lesson explored in the session provides opportunities for secondary students to use physical science ideas to explain how marine technologies aid in seafloor mapping.

SPEAKERS:
Jim Bellingham, Patrice Scinta

Making Sense of Science: Tools to See, Support, and Assess Student Learning

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building


Show Details

Helping students make sense of the natural world is at the heart of science teaching. This session explores how thinking strategies make student reasoning visible and serve as powerful assessment tools. Participants will see examples from 7th- and 8th-grade classrooms where students use prompts and data to explain Earth and chemical processes, including a local water quality study that connects chemistry, geography, and human impact on ecosystems. These strategies help students explain ideas clearly, test them with evidence, and revise their understanding as they connect scientific concepts to real-world systems. They also support diverse learners, including multilingual, neurodivergent, and differently engaged students, by offering multiple ways to represent and share their thinking. Teachers can use this evidence to assess both understanding and process as all students engage in authentic scientific sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how to use thinking strategies as assessment tools to make student reasoning visible, support diverse learners, and deepen understanding through authentic, evidence-based scientific sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Lara Kossiakoff

Mark Rober As Co-Pilot: How To Launch Storylines, Teach with Video, and Smash Watermelons (Added Bonus!) in Class CrunchLabs

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


Show Details

Ever wish Mark Rober could co-teach your class? This session shows how Class CrunchLabs uses video, voice, and story to spark curiosity and launch rigorous learning. We will break down how to introduce a storyline, use Mark’s videos as authentic investigation starters, and weave hands-on challenges through episodes of science and engineering. You will also get a peek behind the scenes at how the team builds each unit to help students explain ‘the how’ after experiencing ‘the wow.’ Optional bonus: watermelon smashing included.

TAKEAWAYS:
See how NGSS storylines, teacher supports, and Mark Rober’s videos work together to launch engaging science units that get students asking questions and thinking like scientists from day one.

SPEAKERS:
DeAnna Lee Rivers, Spencer Martin

Minerals = Engaging...For Real!!

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
minerals = engaging.pdf

Show Details

Reach that hard-to-address uneven distribution of mineral resources standard head on with an innovative Catan-style game! Students will learn as they trade and build. Add some mineral play and songs for all-around fun!

TAKEAWAYS:
Minerals are everywhere around us and their use impacts us in a personal way as well as socially and economically.

SPEAKERS:
Jen Taylor

My School is a Wildlife Corridor? 8th Graders Transforming their Communities

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building


Show Details

This session features an 8th grade unit designed to connect science learning with students' local community. Anchored in the importance of biodiversity for humans and other species to thrive, the storyline invites students to ask what impact access to nature and biodiversity has on our mental health and how can we make biodiversity accessible to everyone? Participants will engage in selected lessons that show how teachers can launch learning with student questions and investigations that ultimately build toward understanding of the influence of environmental conditions on trait frequencies and the importance of green space corridors to serve as wildlife bridges for species. Effective field experiences inspire students to take action and implement design solutions in their community that expand the benefits of biodiversity and ecosystem services, illustrating how careful classroom design can link three-dimensional science learning with meaningful opportunities for action.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use the phenomenon of biodiversity impacting mental health to engage students in rigorous, three-dimensional science learning while highlighting the power of community partnerships and field experiences to inspire students to explore local solutions and enact change.

SPEAKERS:
Brian Learn, Diana Tafoya, Jeremiah Potter, Graham Montgomery

Not Just for Coders: Computational Thinking Demystified

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest


Show Details

If the idea of integrating computational thinking (CT) feels overwhelming, this workshop is for you! Together, we’ll demystify CT and explore strategies to bring it to life in your classroom. Through hands-on activities—both plugged and unplugged—and practical examples, you’ll discover how CT can spark problem-solving and creativity across subjects, not just computer science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk away with a clearer understanding of what computational thinking entails and practical strategies to make this 21st-century skill accessible to all students.

SPEAKERS:
Bo Yu, Yishan Lee

Over the Moon About Observable Patterns In Space

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building


Show Details

In this session, we will integrate science with language arts to share hands-on activities about observable patterns in space, including the sun, moon, and stars. The activities address NGSS progressions for elementary space standards. Several children’s books and language arts strategies will be shared. Integrating science and language arts provides students an opportunity “to develop reading and writing skills and to apply comprehension strategies while simultaneously learning about science concepts and processes” (Clark & Lott, 2017, p. 702). Attendees will leave with strategies that integrate science with the six language arts: reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing, and visually representing. Please join us for an out of this world experience!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with strategies that integrate science with the six language arts: reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing, and visually representing.

SPEAKERS:
Sandra Lampley, Frances Hamilton

Overwhelmed by OpenSciEd?

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10


Show Details

Overwhelmed by OpenSciEd? We were too! Come hear real (sometimes reluctant) teachers share what we’ve learned so far about the transition to a fully OpenSciEd curriculum. We will share practical tips to make Open SciEd easier for newbies, our experiences for a district planning the transition, and how we approached modifications for ELL, Special Ed and substitutes in our classrooms. We will also discuss best practices for scientist circles, notebooks, assessments and progress trackers. Come find that you are not alone in the transition.

TAKEAWAYS:
Practical ideas for implementation of OpenSciEd across middle school grades from real teachers who had to do it.

SPEAKERS:
Jayne Coughlin, Melissa Thomas, Samantha Genier

Selecting Phenomena to Stimulate Student Sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5


Show Details

The session will focus on the shift from traditional instruction to three-dimensional, phenomenon-based teaching. Participants will explore how students learn better with phenomena that stimulate student questions and a storyline where each lesson builds on what students have learned in earlier lessons and sets the stage for learning in later lessons. Participants will review examples of anchor phenomena and review a storyline to see how investigative phenomena can be used to support student collection of evidence to answer their questions about the anchor phenomena. We will emphasize having students construct explanations and develop models of phenomena to gather insights into student thinking. Finally, participants will learn a process of developing a phenomenon-based storyline. Through this process, they can see how a coherent storyline can be developed to address all three dimensions, leading to greater student engagement, and fostering a more equitable learning environment.

TAKEAWAYS:
How having students make sense of phenomena leads to greater engagement and better understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Ted Willard

Sensemaking through Wonder and Awe: Using Toy Phenomena and the 5E Model to Explore Electricity, Engineering Design, and Computer Science

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 4:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 1



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slides

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How can a toy chicken spark wonder, ignite curiosity, and anchor deep scientific sensemaking? In this interactive hands-on workshop, participants will experience how every day objects can be transformed into powerful phenomena that hook students in authentic STEM explorations. Aligned with NGSS and guided by the 5E instructional model, we will facilitate an inquiry sequence beginning with a toy chicken that chirps when a circuit is completed. Next, participants will engage in guided exploration, questioning, and sensemaking to uncover which materials conduct electricity, compare similar phenomena, and build conceptual understanding of circuits. The learning cycle concludes with an integrated STEM challenge that connects the science concepts to the children’s book, Lion Lights by Richard Turere, applies computer science through micro:bits and coding, and explores engineering design to solve real world problems using knowledge of electrical circuits.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore how everyday phenomena can spark curiosity and support sensemaking using the 5E model. Through hands-on science, literacy, computer science, and engineering activities, attendees gain ready-to-use strategies, resources, and assessments for classroom integration.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Ponder, Amanda Cramer

STEAM up your classroom with PhET!

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


Show Details

This session will give participants a Birdseye view of how to use PhET SIMS in their science and math classroom to enhance conceptualization of concepts. We will go from just using worksheets with PhET to using PhET to have whole class discussion, create clicker questions and engage students in explorations.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a better understanding of how to implement PHet into their classroom using various strategies.

SPEAKERS:
Cecelia Gillam

Supporting multilingual learners in doing science and using language

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 A


Show Details

“Doing science” requires students to participate in science practices to figure out phenomena, like analyzing and interpreting data, and engaging in argument from evidence. However, these practices involve students “using language” as they make sense of the natural world. For multilingual learners, this is especially difficult when instruction is often presented or expected in English. In this session, we introduce a list of strategies to help consider how to adapt instructional materials to support multilingual learners in “using language(s) and doing science.” Participants will analyze classroom video from an 8th-grade chemical reactions lesson and a 4th-grade Earth processes lesson. Participants will reflect and unpack how the instructional strategies can be used to support multilingual learners in figuring out phenomena, while expanding what counts as sensemaking in science. Then, participants will reflect on and share how they can apply the strategies in their instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will walk away with a set of instructional strategies to notice, support, and engage with multilingual learners in science and engineering practices to explain a phenomenon.

SPEAKERS:
Susan Gomez Zwiep, Samuel Lee

The Dirt on Dog Parks: Exploring Nutrient Runoff Through Inquiry

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building


Show Details

What is the impact of having a dog park in your community? In this hands-on session, participants explore the chemistry of runoff from dog parks and how excessive phosphates from dog waste can disrupt ecosystems and contribute to water pollution. Participants will test soil samples for phosphate levels and use the data to design eco-friendly dog parks that minimize the impact of dog parks on the local community. Learn how phosphate buildup leads to problems like algal blooms and eutrophication. Copies of lessons are provided.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore the chemistry of runoff from dog parks and how phosphates from dog waste can disrupt ecosystems and contribute to water pollution. Participants will apply analytical skills to measure soil chemistry and use the data to design eco-friendly dog parks.

SPEAKERS:
Cameron Good, Madeline Stallard, M. Gail Jones

The Next Time You See: The Integration of Children's Literature with Everyday Phenomena in the Natural World

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


Show Details

Led by NSTA Early Childhood-Elementary Committee members, the session addresses the relationship between the NSTA book series and natural phenomena, providing an interactive platform for educators to discover how this series of books can support & enhance SEPs in the classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore the integration of this series with science and engineering practices through cross-disciplinary connections and hands-on activities. Resources provided.

SPEAKERS:
Simone Nance, Anne Lowry, Melissa Parks, Jennifer Williams

The Wildfire Effect: Understanding Soil Changes in a Fire-Prone Climate

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 9


Show Details

Wildfires severely impact soil through physical, chemical, and biological changes. Physically, they destroy protective vegetation, causing immediate erosion, mudslides, and the formation of water-repellent hydrophobic soil. Chemically, fire releases some nutrients but removes vital nitrogen, leading to long-term soil deficiencies and disrupting the nutrient cycle. Biologically, intense heat kills critical microbial communities and beneficial fungi, slowing post-fire recovery for years. This science is translated into 3-D (DCI-SEP-CCC) aligned learning opportunities, including investigations in soil chemistry, microbiology, and physical properties. Climate change has made wildfires a personal issue for so many students, and therefore, culturally relevant pedagogies are addressed within the workshop and materials. All workshop materials will be freely available.

TAKEAWAYS:
Wildfires cause severe physical, chemical, and biological soil damage, leading to erosion, nutrient loss (nitrogen), and microbial death. This workshop will share freely available, and 3-D NGSS-aligned investigations that engage students in the science and issues related to wildfires.

SPEAKERS:
Margaret Holzer

The Wonder of Nature: Igniting Curiosity Through Nature

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
_ Science in Nature - NSTA 2025 Conference.pdf

Show Details

Children are natural wonderers—always noticing, questioning, and imagining. This session explores how natural phenomena can spark curiosity and serve as a powerful provocation for learning. Through crosscutting concepts such as patterns, cause and effect, and structure and function, we will discover how nature inspires inquiry, reimagines how we live and learn, and opens engaging opportunities for children to explore science with joy and wonder.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how nature transforms science from abstract ideas into real, hands-on experiences making rich, interdisciplinary connections while sparking curiosity and deep, authentic learning.

SPEAKERS:
Christie Wylie

Upskill Students through POGIL-based Data Science Modules: Science Education with Social Impact

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 4:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
POGIL Worksheet and Materials
We sincerely apologize for being late to the workshop in Anaheim---we got mixed up with the multiple Ballroom C/D venues! We understand some of you may have attended at the beginning and left. Please let us know if you have any questions or comments! Our contact information is at the bottom of the worksheet. Thank you!

Show Details

In this hands-on 120-minute workshop, participants will engage in the design and implementation of data-enabled POGIL (Process-Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning) modules using a no-code to low-code tool, such as CODAP (Common Online Data Analysis Platform), that lowers the barrier to data analysis. These modules are interdisciplinary, culturally relevant and foster natural collaboration around real-world, high social-impact challenges that intersect with science, specifically geosciences, food and water systems, environmental science and health disparities; this aligns well with the conference strand #Trending in Data Science Education. Participants of this workshop will be trained in POGIL and CODAP and will be provided with instruction materials to enable them to deliver data-centric content. Expected outcomes in students include: increased engagement, data analytic skill development and empowerment through action. This workshop material was created through NSF grant #2304100.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will receive training in both the pedagogical approach of POGIL and the technical application of CODAP. This will prepare them to help their students develop the knowledge and skills necessary to work with and learn from data.

SPEAKERS:
Earvin Balderama, Marc Boumedine, Ravanasamudram Uma

Using Literature to Instruct the Physics and Physical Science Concepts of Energy

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


Show Details

Using the book The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer 2010, attendees will integrate the story with the concepts of energy and basic circuits (PS3.A: DEFINITIONS OF ENERGY). This literary piece focuses on one young man’s quest to build a wind mill to pump water, light two small light bulbs, and power the family’s radio. Attendees will utilize small windmills to convert the mechanical energy of the windmill to light a small light bulb and lift a small mass.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will receive a 5 E learning cycle, linked to English standards, Common Core Math Standards and NGSS as well as the instructions for 3 D printing a Simple Windmill, wires a bulb holder and small bulb.

SPEAKERS:
Jan Mader, Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck

Water Walkers: Sharing stewardship with a culture of destructive ownership

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026_ Water Walkers_ Sharing Ideas of Stewardship with a Culture of Ownership.pptx
When students approach complicated science issues through multiple disciplines, they gain the depth needed to find meaningful solutions- such as using the 19th century forced diaspora of Native Americans and its lasting impact on the Great Lakes watershed as a lens for understanding today’s environmental challenges. For thousands of years, Native peoples were wise stewards of North America’s waters, protecting ecosystems of great richness. In contrast, non-Native settlement and declared ownershi

Show Details

When students approach complicated science issues through multiple disciplines, they gain the depth needed to find meaningful solutions. Using the 19th century forced diaspora of Native Americans and its lasting impact on the Great Lakes watershed as a lens for understanding today’s environmental challenges. For thousands of years, Native peoples were wise stewards of North America’s waters, protecting ecosystems of great richness. In contrast, non-Native settlement and declared ownership brought devastating consequences—rivers that caught fire, freshwater seas declared “dead,” the evaporation of saltwater lakes, and the collapse of the Colorado River basin. Today, Native communities, such as the Water Walkers, are leading efforts to heal these waters and inspire change. Through storytelling, music, science, writing, and debate, attendees will experience strategies they can take back to their classrooms—helping students imagine, collaborate, and act as responsible stewards of water.

TAKEAWAYS:
Addressing complex environmental issues requires integrated teaching connecting multiple disciplines. Presenters will show how integrating learning helps students make connections, understand complexity, and develop thoughtful, real-world solutions.

SPEAKERS:
Deborah Draper

What’s So Phenomenal about Phenomenon?

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building


Show Details

Engaging students in real world science is an important first step in three-dimensional science instruction, but what do you do with phenomena once students are hooked? In this session, we look at the next steps of learning through phenomena, getting students to ask questions, collect evidence, and make meaning using claim, evidence, and reasoning. Attendees will dive into what makes a good phenomenon, eliciting questions from students, and how to structure instruction to guide students through the CER process. They will leave with strategies for creating a true 3D environment and graphic organizers to help them on their way.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to build true NGSS learning off of strong phenomena, taking the "next steps" in thinking like real scientists.

SPEAKERS:
Obie Martin

Wired for Wonder: Brain-Based Strategies for Equitable Science Sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 2:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Wired for Wonder Presentation

Show Details

What does brain science tell us about how students learn—and how can we design classrooms where all learners thrive? In this interactive session, participants will experience an explore-before-explain lesson and directly connect it to how the brain processes and retains science learning. We’ll examine a redesigned workshop model that blends the 5E framework, student discourse, and equitable practices, all grounded in the Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs). This workshop is ideal for teachers and leaders working with diverse populations who want strategies to help every student make sense of science and remember it long-term.

TAKEAWAYS:
Science learning lasts when instruction aligns with how the brain works—engaging the frontal and parietal lobes through exploration, discourse, and purposeful lesson sequencing. Participants will leave with a 5E workshop model and strategies to turn learning into lasting understanding for students.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Rolater, Pam McWilliams

"How to build a successful school science fair"

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
How to create a successful science fair
“How to Create a Successful Science Fair” This presentation provides a practical guide to planning and executing a successful science fair from start to finish. It includes actionable ideas for engaging students, a clear timeline to keep projects on track, and effective strategies for supporting inquiry-based learning. Attendees will also explore sample rubrics, expectations, and assessment tools to ensure consistency and fairness. Key takeaways include tips for organization, student motivation
How to create a successful science fair.pdf
“How to Create a Successful Science Fair” This presentation provides a practical guide to planning and executing a successful science fair from start to finish. It includes actionable ideas for engaging students, a clear timeline to keep projects on track, and effective strategies for supporting inquiry-based learning. Attendees will also explore sample rubrics, expectations, and assessment tools to ensure consistency and fairness. Key takeaways include tips for organization, student motivation
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1PsSbTBS4a6u8I3v20fPQxcNwXsfHUfkkqJfJR-34dzI/edit?usp=sharing

Show Details

Interested in building a successful science fair for your classroom or school? Want to host a science fair that inspires students, engages families, and strengthens your schools science program with hands on learning and discovery? This session offers a practical roadmap for organizing a science fair at your school- whether you are starting from scratch or revitalizing an existing program. You'll walk away with judging rubics, timelines, templates and communication strategies that have been tested and proven. We'll explore ways to promote equity and access, foster student ownership of projects and align with NGSS and Ohio state standards, and science and engineering practices. Ideal for teachers, STEM coordinators and administrators.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn the essential components and timeline of planning a science fair, gain access to ready to use templates, rubrics, parent/student communications, explore strategies to ensure inclusivity and student engagement and understand how to align science fairs with standards.

SPEAKERS:
Kimberly Pittman, Christina Jandrokovic

Anchoring Phenomena in Action

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
01_StudentGuide.pdf
01_StudentGuide_Ex.pdf
01_StudentHandout_CattleCards.pdf
01_StudentHandout_CommercialBeefProductionGraph.pdf
01_StudentHandout_FoodAnimalImages.pdf
01_StudentHandout_HistoricalBreedComparisons.pdf
01_StudentHandout_WildAnimalImages.pdf
01_TeacherGuide.pdf
NSTA CA Resource Links.pdf
NSTA_Anaheim_Anchoring_Phenomena_in_Action_Workshop.pdf
Phenom Farm QR Code.pdf
ScienceClassroomDiscourseSupport.pdf
TeacherTalkCompilation.pdf
UnravelGenetics_UnitGuide.pdf

Show Details

This session showcases how a single anchoring agricultural phenomenon can launch and sustain a coherent storyline across a unit. Participants will experience a sample lesson from a high-quality genetics unit, focusing on a phenomenon of the influence of genetics and environment on cattle growth over time. Activities include observation of an agricultural phenomenon, modeling predictions, and developing a Driving Question Board. Teachers will reflect on how anchoring phenomena can be used in their own classrooms and receive a one-page snapshot mapping the phenomenon to NGSS dimensions and teacher moves.

TAKEAWAYS:
Anchoring phenomena rooted in agriculture topics can spark curiosity and drive coherence across lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Angela Gulotta

Books that Build STEM Thinkers: Using the 2025 and 2026 Best STEM Winners in Instruction

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


Show Details

Discover how the 2025 and 2026 Best STEM Books were selected and explore practical ways to bring them into your classroom. This session will highlight the award criteria, selection process, and the unique power of STEM-rich literature to spark curiosity and critical thinking. Attendees will gain strategies for connecting books to the science and engineering practices (SEPs), along with concrete examples of classroom projects and activities inspired by specific titles from the recent award lists. Whether you are new to STEM literature or already use it in your teaching, you will leave with fresh ideas and ready to use projects that link literacy and STEM learning in meaningful ways

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to integrate the 2025 and 2026 Best STEM Books into their classrooms by connecting them to science and engineering practices and adapting sample projects that make STEM learning meaningful, engaging, and literacy-rich.

SPEAKERS:
Melissa Parks, Simone Nance, Katie Morrison, J Carrie Launius, Jennifer Williams

Boost Elementary Science Learning with Sensemaking Notebooks

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation

Show Details

Ditch the workbooks, coloring pages, and foldables! Discover how sensemaking notebooks can transform your K–5 science lessons into powerful tools for learning. In this session, you’ll explore how to help students document their thinking, analyze data, and build literacy while strengthening their 3-dimensional understanding of NGSS. Together, we’ll tackle key questions: What should an elementary science notebook look like? What belongs inside? How do we guide students to record observations, explain their reasoning, and make sense of phenomena? You’ll see examples of how notebooks support the Science and Engineering Practices, integrate writing and drawing, and provide a window into student thinking. Sensemaking notebooks give you the flexibility to adapt to your teaching style and your students’ needs—all while centering the four essences that drive meaningful, lasting learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will walk away with clear strategies and examples for designing flexible sensemaking notebooks that help K–5 students record observations, explain reasoning, analyze data, and connect literacy with 3D NGSS learning—making science meaningful and accessible for all learners.

SPEAKERS:
Lesley Gates

Designing Ecosystems: Engaging Students in Modeling and Sensemaking

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Designing Ecosystems: Engaging Students in Modeling and Sensemaking
All Resources from the presentation and to complete the lab attached.
Designing Ecosystems_ Engaging Students in Modeling and Sensemaking.pdf

Show Details

Bring ecosystems to life with “Ecosystem in an Envelope,” an interactive, NGSS-aligned lesson that turns students into ecologists. Designed as an anchoring phenomenon for ecology units, this activity engages learners in analyzing real ecosystems from around the world to explore how biotic and abiotic factors interact to shape stability and change. Participants will experience how students model ecosystems, apply data analysis and argumentation, and use sensemaking to explain energy flow and matter cycling. Leave with classroom-ready strategies that make ecology engaging, evidence-based, and memorable.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how to use “Ecosystem in an Envelope” as an NGSS-aligned anchoring phenomenon to help students model real ecosystems, analyze interactions among biotic and abiotic factors, and use data and argumentation to explain energy flow and matter cycling.

SPEAKERS:
Shane E Raggio

Designing Instruction with AI: Elementary STEM Integration Supporting the Future Workforce and Community Partners

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Overview Slideshow for the Conference
This slideshow will be updated after the workshop.
Padlet of Resources for Career Pathway Videos and Lessons

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This workshop tackles the challenge of preparing students for future career success by adopting a backward design approach. We will demonstrate how early, intentional exposure to career fields—starting in the elementary grades—can mitigate the narrowing of student choices that typically begins in middle school. Participants will learn how to select and design Project- or Problem-Based Learning (PBL) units that align with real-world phenomena and connect to the core competencies outlined in the state's pathways. Key strategies will include mapping existing science standards to relevant career clusters and developing AI-supported systems to support student success.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave equipped to use backward design and equitable project-based learning to intentionally align K–5 STEM instruction with future career pathways, ensuring daily classroom experiences connect real-world phenomena to long-term student awareness and success.

SPEAKERS:
Annette Larson

Empowering Multilingual Learners and High Needs Students Through Science Notebooks

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
LA-2026-Empowering Multilingual Learners.pptx

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In this interactive session, we will explore the transformative power of science notebooks as a versatile tool for engaging and empowering ELs and high-needs students in science education. Unlike traditional one-size-fits-all approaches, science notebooks can be tailored to meet the unique needs and learning styles of diverse students. Participants will learn how to effectively implement science notebooks, allowing students to take ownership of their learning, build their own science resources, and foster creativity. We will delve into strategies for differentiation, language support, and fostering a safe and inclusive learning environment. Key Topics Covered: - Customizing Science Notebooks: Moving beyond rigid templates to empower student creativity. - Hands-Off Teaching: Allowing students to work through problems and build their own science resources. - Differentiation: Providing translated notes, vocabulary support, and drawing aids for ELs and high-needs students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower ELs and high-needs students by embracing flexible science notebooks, fostering creativity, and promoting inclusivity in science education.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth Warren

Engaging and Empowering Young Children in Science and STEM Explorations and Investigations: Rich Hands-On Explorations, Combined with Use of New, Cutting-Edge Technology Tools Designed Specifically for Young Learners, to Inspire Sense-Making and Sustained Curiosity!

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building


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Speaker will help attendees grasp the vast scientific concepts and exploration opportunities that comprise the young child’s everyday world. She will actively engage attendees with explorations and discourse, and offer strategies and ideas teachers can implement, to set up Science and STEM explorations and simple engineering problems for young children that support NGSS. She will discuss the importance of nurturing a child’s natural curiosity and will offer strategies to help children develop their observation and thinking skills. She will emphasize the importance of engaging young children in manipulation of objects and materials so they can recognize the effects of their actions. She will offer strategies to help children develop their science vocabulary. She will model how instruction that starts with children’s questions and provides rich opportunities for exploration and investigation is the most engaging way to introduce and teach science concepts to young children. Handouts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn strategies and engaging exploration ideas, to create sense-making opportunities for young children, and to inspire children’s sustained curiosities. Activities will be easy and inexpensive to replicate and will help launch a trajectory of learning for young children.

SPEAKERS:
Donna Knoell

Enhancing Middle School Science with Free Interactive Lab Simulations by LabXchange

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Middle School Lab Simulations SlideDeck

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Experience how LabXchange’s interactive lab simulations can elevate middle school teaching and learning. In this hands-on workshop, participants will learn how to navigate the LabXchange platform, exploring a variety of virtual lab simulations such as photosynthesis, osmosis, cellular respiration, and using a light microscope. LabXchange simulations encompass the scientific method—from predictions and protocol, to analysis and reflection—all while providing real-time hints and feedback for students. Discover how inquiry-based virtual labs can foster a deeper understanding of science topics, strengthen curiosity, and develop critical skills in a no-cost, safe online environment. Participants will leave with ready-to-use educator resources and new strategies for facilitating science learning in both in-person and virtual settings. Note: Participants should bring a device with Wi-Fi capabilities to actively participate.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how LabXchange’s free interactive lab simulations can make science learning accessible and engaging to enhance your middle school classroom experience, no matter your budget, time, or experience.

SPEAKERS:
Paul Schwein, Angela Campbell

Explore TryEngineering Resources to Inspire Intellectual Curiosity

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest


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TryEngineering is a collection of resources developed by the members of IEEE, the world’s largest technical professional association, committed to inspiring the next generation of engineers and technologists. During this session, you will learn how to introduce elementary students to the engineering design process with fun challenges and low cost materials. We will complete an engineering design challenge during this session and share resources to help you bring engineering to your classroom. Engineering habits of mind are important for all children to learn, as they foster creativity, resiliency and problem solving. As a public charity, all of TryEngineering’s resources are free to everyone. Come to the session and learn more!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how beneficial engineering design challenges can be for students, and how easy it is to implement them with TryEngineering resources, available at no cost at tryengineering.org.

SPEAKERS:
Debra Gulick

From Phonemes to Phenomena: Integrating NGSS and the Science of Reading to Deepen Literacy

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building


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This session bridges the Science of Reading and the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) to help educators design interdisciplinary learning that builds strong readers and critical thinkers. Participants will explore how the five essential components of reading—phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension integrate into the NGSS science and engineering practices when viewed through the STEM4Real Connect, Create, Cultivate Framework. Using this framework, attendees will learn how to connect foundational literacy with real-world scientific phenomena, create lessons that engage students in discourse and evidence-based reasoning, and cultivate a culture of language-rich, inquiry-based classrooms. Through hands-on examples and model lessons, educators will discover how to leverage NGSS to reinforce reading comprehension and vocabulary development without replacing existing curricula. Leave with a curriculum-agnostic lesson that supports reading, literacy and STEM.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with a practical, culturally-responsive and adaptable learning sequence aligned to the Science of Reading and NGSS that strengthens literacy, builds background knowledge, and supports all learners; regardless of curriculum or grade level.

SPEAKERS:
Leena McLean

How Supernovae Reveal the Nature of the Universe

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building


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Rubin Observatory is a major public US observatory funded by the NSF and the DOE. Educational materials are freely available to all under a Creative Commons license. “Exploding Stars” is an interactive, classroom-ready, online lesson that uses real data. Designed to support the NGSS, it includes an investigative phenomenon, teacher guide, presentation slides, videos, and a variety of three-dimensional assessments and scoring guides. The investigation encourages student sensemaking as they progress from their initial ideas by integrating science practices and ideas such as analyzing data and using models and mathematical relationships to discover how supernovae can be used to measure distances in space. During the workshop we will explore the phenomenon and investigation, role-playing both teacher and student perspectives. Active learning strategies for formative and summative assessment will include think-pair-share, using a Driving Question Board, and whiteboarding.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to implement the Exploding Stars investigation and phenomenon designed to support sensemaking and 3D learning, and explore formative and summative assessment strategies that support inclusive techniques for building student data literacy skills.

SPEAKERS:
Ardis Herrold

Interactive Notebooks

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Interactive Notebooks

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Have your students take ownership of their learning while strengthening their scientific reasoning by using interactive notebooks. They are a powerful tool for sensemaking, modeling, and tracking growth throughout the year. In this session, you’ll discover how to design and assess notebooks that go beyond simple note-taking. Learn strategies for incorporating activities such as CER writing, card sorts, graphic organizers, and models that help students organize their thinking and make connections. You’ll walk away with practical resources, classroom-ready ideas, and assessment tools to support engagement, accountability, and long-term learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to design and assess interactive notebooks using practical strategies and resources that support student sensemaking, engagement, and growth tracking.

SPEAKERS:
Kyla Glasser

It Starts with the Task: Designing a Culturally Relevant STEM Classroom

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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Culturally relevant teaching begins with the tasks we design. In this workshop, participants will learn how to unpack and redesign STEM standards that validate culturally acquired knowledge, which affirms every learner’s cultural identity. Guided by the presenter’s Justice Centered Task Framework, the presenter will model how to transform traditional standards into inclusive, high-cognitive-demand tasks that connect rigorous content with students’ cultural experiences. Grounded in research and real classroom experiences, this session equips educators with practical tools to create STEM classrooms where generational currency drives engagement and deep learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn a process for unpacking and designing STEM tasks to embed culturally acquired knowledge and create tasks that affirm identity, promote agency, and sustain rigorous learning for all students.

SPEAKERS:
Sherita Flake

Leveraging Students’ Cultural Resources to Strengthen Disciplinary Learning

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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Teachers seek ways to make learning more meaningful, relevant, and rigorous. We will share a practice-based approach that supports teachers in leveraging students’ cultural resources, such as community knowledge, lived experiences, and local practices, to deepen understanding of the three dimensions of scientific knowledge: disciplinary ideas (DCIs), scientific practices (SEPs) and crosscutting concepts (CCCs). Using classroom-tested frameworks and examples from diverse settings, participants explore how integrating cultural resources serve as powerful vehicles to promote sensemaking and engagement. Teachers will engage with anchoring phenomena, student artifacts, and instructional routines to experience how to weave cultural resources into the three-dimensional design of a unit. Teachers will leave with tools, planning templates, and concrete strategies for implementing instruction that honors students’ identities and enhances mastery of the three dimensions of scientific knowledge.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how to adapt lessons so that students’ cultural and community knowledge becomes an asset for driving investigations, constructing explanations, and developing disciplinary understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Clausell Mathis, Joseph Krajcik

Middle School Share-a-thon hosted by National STEM Scholar Program

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Sustainable Materials: Creating and Evaluating Bioplastics
Tracy Vassiliev

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Engage. Inspire. Innovate! Join us for an interactive session filled with teaching ideas, make-and-take science tools, and creative strategies to make learning exciting and accessible for all students. We are the National STEM Scholar Program (NSS), a group of middle school science teachers from around the U.S who have created and implemented Challenge Projects in our schools to advance science education, strengthen scientific literacy, connect learning to real-world problems, and inspire the next generation. Funded by the National Stem Cell Foundation, the NSS Program selects ten middle school teachers each year from across the US to participate in innovative professional development while networking with each other. At this Share-a-thon, Scholars will showcase their projects, complete with curriculum, classroom resources, and results. Come discover fresh ideas, gather hands-on tools, and connect with fellow science educators from across the country!

TAKEAWAYS:
Come discover new ideas, lessons and effective real-world projects that you can use in your middle school classroom while networking with other middle school science teachers.

SPEAKERS:
Tracy Vassiliev, Rico Tyler, Aprille' Morris-Butler, Kerrie McDaniel, Lalita Khemka, Jo Slavitz, Renae Lewis, Alexandria Wicker, Melanie Hardy

Model Organisms in Action: Teaching Big Ideas Through Small Creatures

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building


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Model organisms may be small, but they’ve unlocked some of science’s biggest discoveries—from genetics to epigenetics and beyond. In this engaging session, explore five model organisms and discover how they can bring authentic science into your classroom. Participants will examine real-life research examples, engage in hands-on demonstrations, and walk away with free resources to adapt for their own teaching. Learn how model organisms connect directly to NGSS practices, inspire curiosity, and show students how scientists investigate questions that impact human health.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with resources and strategies to use model organisms as powerful tools for teaching genetics, epigenetics, and the nature of science in engaging, NGSS-aligned ways.

SPEAKERS:
Cory Kavanagh

Murder, Mayhem and All Things Forensic

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Murder, Mayhem and All Things Forensic.pdf

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Step into the role of a CSI to experience how science can be applied in a real-world investigation. Participants will collect, document, and analyze evidence as they work to solve a simulated crime scene, practicing the same skills their students will use in class. See how storytelling, collaboration, and problem-solving increase engagement and deepen understanding. Participants will gain access to a shared Google Drive with ready-to-use documents and resources, making it easy to replicate these activities in their own classrooms. Teachers will leave with practical strategies to create immersive learning environments such as a body farm, blood spatter chamber, and outdoor crime scenes with limited resources. This session demonstrates how to transform classroom content into engaging, real-world applications that align with best practices and standards, while challenging students to think critically, apply scientific knowledge, and arrive at valid conclusions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to create an interactive learning environment where students act as CSI's to collect evidence, document evidence and analyze evidence and will be able to create these learning environments with limited resources and no additional training required.

SPEAKERS:
Lori Barber

Science Reading for All: Making complex text accessible for multilingual learners

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
De-Mystifying Complex Texts
What are "complex" texts and how can we ensure ELLs/MLs can access them? Elsa Billings and Aída Walqui
FOSS Science-Centered Language Development Chapters and Videos
Slide for Reading Complex Text NSTA 2026

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Reading science text can be challenging for students, especially for those who are learning English. Join us for a hands-on learning experience where we will model and discuss evidence-based reading strategies that elicit and leverage students' prior knowledge, lived experiences, and language skills to increase comprehension of complex science ideas.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be able to implement reading comprehension strategies that support multilingual students in reading complex science texts.

SPEAKERS:
Claudio Vargas, Diana Velez

Storm Tracking in 3D: Engaging in Phenomena and Inquiry-Based Science

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Resources for Storm Tracking in 3D
Resources for Storm Tracking in 3D. Please share feedback with Shefali Mehta ([email protected])

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Tracking hurricanes and typhoons offers a powerful way to engage students with the three dimensions of NGSS while exploring real-world climate science. In this session, participants will learn how to use the WUnderground website to monitor global storm development and movement. As they analyze real-time data, students will begin to formulate questions and engage in meaningful discussions about atmospheric processes, climate, and human-environment interactions. This approach promotes scientific practices such as data interpretation, modeling, and evidence-based reasoning. At the same time, it connects disciplinary core ideas in the ESS standards to crosscutting concepts like patterns and cause-and-effect. Teachers will gain strategies for integrating these tools into inquiry-based lessons that make complex phenomena accessible, relevant, and engaging for all learners. Ready-to-use lessons will include options for various grades and classroom situations.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore inquiry-based lessons focused on the phenomenon of global storms as a method to explore Earth’s systems.

SPEAKERS:
Shefali Mehta

Stronger Together: Science & Technical Pathways

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
3. ANA26_Stronger Together_ Science and Technical Pathways.pdf
Co-Planning Handout.docx (1).pdf

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Career and Technical Education (CTE) teachers bring powerful real-world expertise, but too often, their work sits apart from core science instruction. This session focuses on putting PLCs together so teachers from science and CTE can strategically align units with their disciplines, creating opportunities for authentic, applied learning that benefits both students and teachers. Participants will explore a framework for identifying natural connections between NGSS science domains and CTE pathways, such as welding with physical science, health careers with life science, agriculture with earth and environmental science, and engineering with physical and mathematical modeling. Attendees will learn how collaborative planning between science and CTE educators can result in lessons and projects that meaningfully incorporate scientific ideas and technical applications.

TAKEAWAYS:
Through examples, planning tools, and shared experiences, participants will leave with strategies for matching CTE expertise to the science content where it naturally fits and designing instruction that blends scientific sensemaking with hands-on technical skills.

SPEAKERS:
Kristin Rademaker

The "Ionic Compound Dance"

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Ionic Compound Dance Poster for Classroom
The Ionic Compound Dance

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When I began my teaching career in 2005, I was struggling to explain how to create the chemical formulas for ionic compounds to my students. In return, my students struggled to write the chemical formulas for various ionic compounds. Until it hit me...teach them how to DANCE!!! The "Ionic Compound Dance" was born out of determination to create an engaging lesson on teaching students how to write the chemical formulas for ionic compounds utilizing the learning styles of all students in the chemistry classroom. Learn how to DANCE...The "Ionic Compound Dance" method.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use the "Ionic Compound Dance" to effectively teach writing chemical formulas for ionic compounds to all learners from special needs to gifted/talented students across all disciplines of middle school science to AP Chemistry and beyond.

SPEAKERS:
Nichole DePaul

The Fantastic Five: An Anatomical Exploration of Fingers

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA SP26_Worksheet.docx
NSTA_SP26.pptx
NSTA_SP26_Histology Guide.docx

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Our fingers help us play instruments, game, communicate, and hold our favorite beverage. How do fingers function when they have no muscles? Using this relatable, everyday phenomenon, students explore the structure and function (DCI LS1.A) of fingers by sharing their own experiences with how they use their fingers in everyday life, asking questions to explain the phenomenon, digging into the histology of the different tissues that make up the parts of the finger, and developing and using models (SEP) to explain their findings. Intentional engagement which encourages students to share their personal experiences as they relate to their own cultural and linguistic norms, including translanguaging, will be explored and modeled. Alternative activities are provided for classrooms that do not have access to microscopes or the needed histology slides. Attendees will participate in the student experience. This lesson is structured to align with NGSS Performance Expectation HS-LS1-2.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will be provided with a hand-on experience and lesson plan to explore the structure and function of the fingers. We will use the pillars of sensemaking to study histology. This lesson is relevant to those who teach Anatomy & Physiology.

SPEAKERS:
Sophia Garcia

Title: It’s Not Just About You or Me, but We: Ubuntu Pedagogy

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA UBUNTU.pptx
Ubuntu Toolkit.pdf
This document has useful links to help implement Ubuntu in the classroom.

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How might we build equitable and cohesive classroom communities with Ubuntu pedagogy? Ubuntu pedagogy is grounded in the African philosophy of Ubuntu, meaning “humanity to others” in Bantu. It is a transformative decolonial approach that emphasizes social justice, equity, inclusion, and our shared humanity. In this workshop, we will examine the implications of individualism in our communities and share real-world strategies of how we infused Ubuntu pedagogy into classroom practices. Participants will critically examine their practices and brainstorm collaboratively to create learning environments that are supportive, inclusive, and empowering for all students. Participants will walk away with a toolkit of activities and strategies to kickstart Ubuntu pedagogy into their practice and to turn key within their school communities.

TAKEAWAYS:
If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go together. Learning is not an individual pursuit, but a collective journey. Explore Ubuntu Pedagogy to empower classroom communities, ensuring that every student’s growth is tied to the community’s success.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Spadaro, Alvis Wilson, Kernita Mwalumogo, Ellie Williamson

Unlocking Curiosity: The Impact of Reflective Questioning in Science Education

Thursday, April 16 • 3:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Unlocking Curiosity.pdf

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This one-hour workshop is designed for secondary science educators in middle and high schools. Participants will learn about the significance of probing questions—open-ended inquiries that encourage deeper thinking and discussion among students. The session will begin with an introduction to the foundational concepts of probing questions and their role in transforming traditional instructional methods into more engaging, student-centered experiences. Through the lens of current educational research, including studies on active recall and cognitive load theory, attendees will explore the neurological impact of inquiry-based learning. Participants will gain insights into how probing questions enhance memory retention and strengthen neural connections, aligning with the NSTA's commitment to science literacy and evidence-based practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn to use probing questions in secondary science education to boost student engagement and critical thinking. The workshop will share strategies for a question-rich classroom and highlight the benefits of inquiry-based learning for fostering curiosity and lifelong learning.

SPEAKERS:
Katherine Meraz, Dominic Ramos

A better way to take notes! Visually processing science content with sketchnotes.

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Handouts.pdf

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Do your students forget the notes they just took? Students love to sketchnote in science! Come learn how visual note taking leads to deep processing and retention of content. Editable templates will be provided. This hands on session provides you with a mini workbook to practice making visual notes. This session is for 6-12th grade teachers.

TAKEAWAYS:
How to greatly increase student processing using templates and a new strategy of sense making called Sketchnotes.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Weibert

Breaking Barriers: Leveraging UDL to Boost Science Text Comprehension

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Folder of Materials
These are our session materials. I will add the session deck after our time together on Friday morning.

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Science texts are central to instruction, yet many students—especially multilingual learners and those with IEPs—struggle to access them. Curricula often provide texts without guidance for supporting comprehension. This interactive workshop addresses that challenge by leveraging insights from the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and aligning with the NRC Framework for K–12 Science Education and the NGSS Science and Engineering Practice of Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information. Participants will engage in a model literacy-rich science experience, then apply strategies to spot text barriers, analyze vocabulary demands (focusing on Tier 2 words), and plan scaffolds to support all students. Leave with practical tools to adapt lessons or implement high-quality materials, ready to design inclusive supports that help every student access and succeed in science learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn to analyze vocabulary and structural demands in science texts, identify potential barriers, and apply UDL- and science-of-reading–based strategies to adapt materials so all students can access and make sense of science content.

SPEAKERS:
Althea Hoard, Daniel Sonrouille

Cooking Up STEM

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Cooking with ste

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What do recipes, kitchens, and food science have to do with STEM? Everything! This session will explore how culinary arts provide a powerful and engaging way to teach science, technology, engineering, and math. Participants will discover hands-on strategies and classroom activities that connect cooking to STEM concepts such as chemistry, heat transfer, measurement, ratios, data analysis, and the engineering design process. From scaling recipes to experimenting with food science, educators will walk away with practical ideas they can bring back to their classrooms. The session will also highlight career connections—from nutritionist and dietitian to food scientist and agricultural engineer—showing students the many STEM pathways that begin in the kitchen. Join us to learn how food can spark curiosity, creativity, and problem-solving while making STEM meaningful and memorable.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use food and culinary arts as engaging, hands-on tools to teach core STEM concepts—linking science, technology, engineering, and math to real-world experiences and career pathways.

SPEAKERS:
Daniell Cossey

Designing Science Lessons that Foster Student Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building


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In this session, we will explore strategies and use tools to create and adapt lessons that foster sensemaking and active participation. Teachers will engage in a hands-on science task, debrief on how that task supported opportunities for sensemaking, and analyze an assortment of tasks for features that support varied learning opportunities. Attendees will leave with strategies for creating and modifying lessons to promote sensemaking and active student participation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn practical strategies to design and adapt science lessons that foster student sensemaking and active participation, leaving with tools they can use immediately in their classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Laura Shafer, PhD

Designing STEM Experiences That Invite Deeper Thinking: Projects, Error Climate, and the Subtle Art of How We Teach

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Designing Stem Experiences that Drive Deeper Thinking (1).pdf

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In this session, we share how authentic STEM projects, curriculum design, and classroom climate work together to help students embrace uncertainty, analyze their own thinking, and build resilience. Participants will explore three cornerstone projects from an 8th-grade curriculum (Rocketry, Soldering, and Amusement Park Design) and consider how each one creates different opportunities for students to test ideas, confront misconceptions, and experience the scientific and engineering process in action. The presenters will connect these experiences to the research-based concept of error climate, the classroom culture around how mistakes are handled, showing how error tolerance, curiosity, and precision can coexist in rigorous STEM learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
STEM learning is about building the conditions where intellectual risk feels safe, and accuracy becomes a shared pursuit rather than a source of shame. Attendees will leave with ready-to-use assessments, prompts, and design strategies to create classrooms that cultivate both rigor and resilience.

SPEAKERS:
Abbie Cornelius, Hannah Bundrick

Educators Teaching Grades K-12 Can Apply for Grant Funding for STEM Action Projects

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 A


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Do you have an innovative idea for improving Science, Technology, Engineering or Math learning in your classroom? Is your idea project-based learning with measurable outcomes? What do you need to make learning math and science fun for your students? Engage with teachers who received funding for their ideas and learn tips on how to apply.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn about a grant funding opportunity to implement an innovative idea in their classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Sue Whitsett

Empowering Minds: Using Emotional Intelligence to Build Resilience and Interest in Science

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Emotional Intelligence in Science Education Fostering Resilience and Engagement.pdf

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This presentation examines the crucial role of emotional intelligence (EI) in science education, highlighting effective strategies to foster resilience and engagement among students. Participants will gain a deep understanding of EI's five key components: self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills. The session will introduce practical approaches for creating an emotionally supportive classroom, such as establishing safe spaces, conducting emotional check-ins, and integrating social-emotional learning activities into math lessons. Engaging interactive discussions will allow participants to share experiences and insights, fostering a collaborative learning environment. Attendees will leave with actionable resources to enhance EI in their teaching practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to effectively integrate emotional intelligence strategies into their teaching practices to foster resilience and engagement in science education, ultimately creating a more supportive and collaborative classroom environment.

SPEAKERS:
Katherine Meraz, Dominic Ramos

Engaging Minds: Analyzing and Interpreting Data Through Games and Graphs

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Charty Party Link
Link to purchase Charty Party. Note: The PURPLE All Ages edition is recommended for in schools, but still use your professional judgement and review all cards before using!
Engaging Minds Slides
Link to NYT Graph of the Weeks
Notecatcher
Notecatcher and summary of session
Over 75 NYT Graphs
Article explaining the New York Times Graph of the Week.
Whats Going On in This Graph Organizer
To analyze and organize thinking from NYT Graphs.

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In today’s data-driven world, the ability to analyze and interpret data is essential for students’ success in science and engineering. This interactive session will provide science educators with innovative strategies to integrate data analysis into their classrooms using engaging games and the New York Times Graph of the Week series. Participants will explore how to transform data into a dynamic learning experience that fosters critical thinking, collaboration, and curiosity. Join in for an engaging session that empowers educators to bring data into their classrooms in fun and meaningful ways. By utilizing low-floor, high-ceiling games and real-world data, we can inspire our students to become proficient in analyzing and interpreting data, preparing them for future scientific challenges.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will leave with ready-to-use, quick, and engaging activities that make interpreting graphs and charts fun while strengthening students’ data literacy and critical thinking skills.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth Reinhold

Equity Meets Engineering: Transforming Climate Change Lessons into Actionable Learning

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building


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This session immerses educators in the process of designing an interdisciplinary, project-based unit that uses the phenomenon of climate change to drive sense making and real-world application. Teachers will experience strategies that connect science, social studies, and engineering as students explore the causes and impacts of global warming, examine the historical roots of industrialization, and confront issues of environmental equity affecting marginalized communities. Participants will learn how to scaffold inquiry, integrate NGSS-aligned practices, and use student-driven projects, from 3D-printed sustainable city models to DIY hydroponic kits and climate PSAs, to deepen learning. The session models real classroom examples of step-by-step strategies, rubrics, and classroom-ready tools that empower teachers to transform complex global challenges into authentic, local learning experiences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn to design interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned projects where students investigate climate change, explore environmental justice, and engineer sustainable community solutions through hands-on design and activism.

SPEAKERS:
Glenroy Foster, Nicole Marcellin

Exploring Scientific Practices, the Nature of Science, and STEM in Society: Analyzing Historical Primary Sources from the Library of Congress

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Analyzing Historical Primary Sources in the Science Classroom
This is the PPT used for our session.
Library of Congress Primary Source Analysis Tool
A graphic organizer for analyzing primary sources
Primary Source for Analysis
This is a primary source we will analyze in today's session.
Sample Primary Sources for Science Educators
A sampling of 35 primary sources that K-12 STEM educators can use with their students
Sample Primary Sources URL List
URLs associated with the "Sample Primary Sources" document.

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Digitized versions of Alexander Graham Bell’s notebooks, Robert Hooke’s drawings of cells, photographs from the Dust Bowl, and early 20th century newspaper articles about electric cars all provide opportunities to understand how scientists and engineers think, practice, and apply scientific principles in the real world; how scientific ideas evolve over time; and how science and engineering are related to society. The Library of Congress has millions of free primary sources online. In this workshop, Library education experts will facilitate hands-on activities showing how K-12 students can analyze such sources to make sense of the world, while meeting educational standards and goals, particularly around the nature of science, science and engineering practices, and the relationship between STEM and society. Participants will also reflect on how other teachers and students have used these strategies, and how they build critical thinking skills and highlight interdisciplinary connections.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to access millions of free digitized primary sources and use them to facilitate hands-on activities that build critical thinking skills, while providing insights into the nature of science, science and engineering practices, and the relationship between STEM and society.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Lowry, Lora Taylor, Michael Apfeldorf

Exploring Tools and Strategies to Broaden Participation of Multilingual Learners in Science through the Instructional Conversation (IC) Pedagogy

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Mellom_Broadening Participation of MLs in Science through Instructional Conversations_NSTA Conference 2026_60 Min Workshop_4.17.26.pdf
This is the powerpoint of our presentation and includes links to the accompanying materials.

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Researchers and educators agree that locally contextualized, language-rich science and engineering-based instruction exploring scientific phenomena is essential to achieving access and rigor for all students, including multilingual learners (MLs) (Lee et al., 2019; Marshall, et al., 2021). This session aims to engage participants in exploring innovative science lessons developed through an NSF-funded project and demonstrate tools for integrating language into science content instruction. The session will engage participants in the Instructional Conversation (IC) pedagogy (Mellom, Hixon, & Weber, 2019) – a collaborative, conversation-based, and culturally and linguistically-responsive instructional approach, found to positively impact the academic and linguistic growth of MLs. Participants will explore tools and scaffolds that establish a learning environment where multilingual learners feel safe to take intellectual and linguistic risks and engage in Science and Engineering Practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be introduced to the Instructional Conversation (IC) pedagogy (a model for differentiated small group instruction) and explore the application of the IC pedagogy and practice using tools and strategies within ICs to engage multilingual learners (MLs) in science content instruction.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Hixon, John Mativo, Robin Osborn, Paula Mellom, KeShaun White, Wren Cheatum

From Starlight to Insight: Exploring the Role of Mass and Fusion in Stars

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building


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“Stellar Safari” is a free classroom-ready lesson. Designed to support the NGSS, it includes a phenomenon, teacher guide, and three-dimensional formative and summative assessments. The workshop begins with a data-based phenomenon activity, in which participants will engage in sensemaking as they wonder what causes differences in stars, such as brightness and temperature. During the investigation, students compare data of main sequence stars like the Sun to discover how stellar properties are related and are the result of a star’s mass and fusion rate. Finally, they experiment with stellar models used by astronomers to determine star distances and age. During the workshop we role-play both teacher and student perspectives. Active learning strategies for formative and summative assessment will include think-pair-share, using a Driving Question Board, and whiteboarding. Rubin Observatory is a major public US observatory. All educational materials and services are freely available to all.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to implement the Stellar Safari online investigation and phenomenon designed to support sensemaking and 3D learning, and explore formative and summative assessment strategies that support inclusive techniques for building student data literacy skills.

SPEAKERS:
Ardis Herrold

From Wonder to Reasoning: Using the 4-Quadrant Short Inquiry Cycle to Build Science Literacy and Critical Thinking

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10


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Discover how the 4-Quadrant Short Inquiry Cycle transforms classrooms into vibrant spaces of sense-making and critical thinking. Rooted in NGSS and equity-driven practices, this model engages students in claiming, investigating, reasoning, and making learning visible through authentic phenomena. During the session, participants will participate in each step of the 4-Quadrant cycle, collaboratively analyze their experiences, and develop their own inquiry sequences. Leave empowered to implement these strategies right away, equipped with practical tools—sentence frames, scaffolds, and exemplars—to support multilingual and diverse learners while fostering curiosity, literacy, and passion for science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will: understand how the 4-Quadrant cycle fosters science literacy, critical thinking as well as strategies for integrating NGSS sense-making pillars into daily lessons to leave with a ready-to-implement lesson sequences.

SPEAKERS:
Henri Shimojyo

Games, Games, Games! Quick Activities for Big Thinking

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5


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Curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking are hallmarks of strong scientific thinking. In this high-energy session, experience four quick, engaging games that spark these skills in just 15 minutes. Walk away with ready-to-use activities that engage learners in science practices—no extensive prep required. Come play, discover, and leave inspired to make your science teaching more interactive and fun!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with everything they need to implement 4 mini-lessons that build sense-making and can be done in only 15 minutes.

SPEAKERS:
Terra Tarango

How Do Rodents Survive in the Desert? Using Phenomena Based 3D Learning to Drive Student Sensemaking in AP Biology

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
How Do Rodents Survive in the Desert? (handout)
How Do Rodents Survive in the Desert? (slides)
How Do Rodents Survive in the Desert? (website resources)

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This session introduces “Survivor–American Southwest,” a Unit 1 storyline for AP Biology. Attendees will view a video showing challenges faced by desert rodents and participate in activities, including building a driving question board that increases motivation for inquiry. Participants will conduct an investigation to collect data for statistical analysis and graphical interpretation to answer questions about the benefits of crypsis. A related investigation of the hygroscopic properties of seeds will show how students explore burrowing behavior while connecting to water properties, macromolecules, statistics, and natural selection. Sample student lab CER posters and impacts on exam performance will be highlighted. The session will end with a question and answer session.

TAKEAWAYS:
After an introduction to Lab Hamster’s AP Biology Unit 1 storyline, participants will leave with the knowledge and skills needed to implement student inquiry activities, apply science practices, and use pedagogical strategies that boost student engagement and reduce teacher workload.

SPEAKERS:
Laura Christiansen, Chandra Mitnik, Kristin Clements, Noel Pauller

Integrating Sensemaking and Design Thinking in K-12 STEM Classrooms with Teach Engineering

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
TE EDP Flyer - NSTA 2026
TE Info Flyer - NSTA 2026

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This hands-on workshop introduces Teach Engineering, a free digital library of 1,900+ classroom-tested, peer-reviewed, standards-aligned K-12 STEM lessons and activities. Participants will act as students and tackle a real-world design challenge in a hands-on activity from the Teach Engineering collection, where they design adaptive features for animals to thrive in specific environments. Through this phenomena-based and three-dimensional learning experience, educators will see how sensemaking and design thinking can be seamlessly integrated into instruction, using science and engineering practices to drive inquiry, modeling, and problem-solving. The session emphasizes interdisciplinary learning by showing how engineering design enriches science instruction, making STEM more relevant, engaging, and accessible for students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use Teach Engineering's free resources to integrate phenomena, sensemaking, and design thinking into STEM instruction, equipping students with deeper understanding and problem-solving skills.

SPEAKERS:
Ellen Sukovich

Listening as a Lens: Using Student Voice To Guide Science Instruction

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2


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How can we know which teaching strategies will truly engage students and move their learning forward? The answer lies in listening. In this interactive presentation, participants will explore how teachers can use student talk and questioning to make instructional decisions that directly support sensemaking in science. I will share how I purposefully had students engage as active contributors to figure out phenomena, utilizing science and engineering practices to uncover the necessary disciplinary core ideas. This session will highlight ways to gain real-time insight into what students know, think, and wonder. These insights help educators decide whether to probe deeper, clarify students' initial thinking, or shift instructional strategies altogether.

TAKEAWAYS:
When teachers intentionally listen to students, they gain the clarity needed to choose the most effective instructional strategies to ensure student success through engagement while meeting the needs of all students.

SPEAKERS:
Tonya Woolfolk

Making Thinking Visible: Using Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning (CER) in the Engineering Design Process

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slides

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This session explores how integrating Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning (CER) into the Engineering Design Process (EDP) makes student thinking visible and strengthens critical problem-solving skills. Participants will examine how CER prompts deepen reflection by moving students beyond “what happened” to “why it happened,” aligning with NGSS practices such as Engaging in Argument from Evidence. Classroom-ready examples, including a "Crash Test" design challenge, will illustrate how students can justify design choices, connect evidence to scientific concepts, and communicate solutions with clarity. Educators will leave with practical strategies for embedding CER into labs, exit tickets, and engineering challenges—transforming everyday activities into rich opportunities for sensemaking, argumentation, and real-world problem solving.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how integrating Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning (CER) into the Engineering Design Process (EDP) makes student thinking visible, moves learning from “what” to “why,” and equips students with critical reasoning, reflection, and communication skills for real-world problem solving.

SPEAKERS:
John Murphy, Mary Dillon

Phenomena First: How to Launch Units with Real-World Phenomena That Drive Inquiry

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA_Phenomena_First_Template.pdf
Phenomena_Card_Sort.pdf
Phenomenon First PDF Presentation
Wonder of Science (Phenomenon Bank)

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What if your science units started with curiosity instead of content coverage? In this interactive session, participants will explore how to anchor instruction around compelling, real-world phenomena that spark student questions and sustain inquiry across a unit. We’ll model the process of choosing and framing phenomena that are authentic, relevant, and three-dimensional, from local environmental issues to global scientific breakthroughs. Teachers will engage in sample sensemaking routines to experience the shift from “learning about” to “figuring out,” and we’ll unpack strategies for guiding students to generate questions, connect crosscutting concepts, and apply science and engineering practices. Attendees will leave with practical tools, planning templates, and a bank of classroom-tested phenomena to immediately adapt for their own grade level and discipline.

TAKEAWAYS:
The main takeaway for this session is for teachers to understand how shifting science instruction from covering content to anchoring learning in real-world phenomena fosters curiosity, student-driven questions, and deeper sensemaking, while giving teachers practical tools to implement this approach.

SPEAKERS:
Brittany Rhea-Neely

Science of Sound and Music

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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In this workshop, participants will learn about the science of sound, waves, and vibrations, and how they relate to music. For this, we will use a series of physical hands-on activities and interactive web applications created by our team at https://listeningtowaves.com/. The applications allow users to visualize, create, and play with sound; they have an associated NGSS-aligned curriculum developed in collaboration with the San Diego Science Project at UC San Diego, and are being widely used in California and throughout the world. Children and teachers love them. The curriculum is focused on 8th grade but it can be easily adapted to other age groups. The workshop will be led by Victor Minces, a neuroscientist of music, sound artist, and program creator. For a brief overview of the applications and program, see https://youtu.be/pvsie4P7G0E

TAKEAWAYS:
You will learn how to use everyday objects and free digital tools to explore the science of sound and music. You will create beats and sound compositions, and tune an orchestra made with beakers and water as an anchoring phenomenon to bring to your students.

SPEAKERS:
Alec Barron

Secondary Science and Student Engagement Accelerators

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Secondary Engagement Accelerator Landing Page
Landing page with links to resources on student engagement

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Student perecption data in the third largest county in Michigan is showing that secondary students are struggling in schools with relevance and belonging. Join this session to collaborate, learn, and consider action around Student Engagement Pillars created by Kent Intermediate School District in Kent County, MI, where we will explore strategies to foster meaningful student participation and commitment to learning. This session brings together educators to examine key pillars of student engagement—including relationships, student-centered learning, school climate, instructional moves, and asset-driven teaching. Then, help to crowd source and share some insights on how science education leans into these accelerators with research-based best practice such as classroom discourse and creating a culture and climate for constructing understanding of core principles in science and engineering. Resources included. Please note this is content area agnostic and 6-12 (I had to add a subject).

TAKEAWAYS:
Through interactive discussions, research-based insights, and real-world examples, participants will: Consider student engagement indicators as a phenomenon, learn what reasearch says about student engagement, and relate it to science education.

SPEAKERS:
Wendi Vogel

Slow Reveal Skeleton

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6


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Engage in an authentic scientific experience that demonstrates how science evolves through evidence-based discovery. As a mystery skeleton is progressively revealed, participants use the ladder of inference—a systems thinking tool—to make their thinking visible as they move from observations to interpretations to conclusions about the animal's identity. Drawing on their knowledge of animal anatomy and adaptations, participants form and revise hypotheses with each new piece of evidence, experiencing firsthand that changing one's mind is the hallmark of good scientific practice. The lesson integrates literacy through the picture book "Boy, Were We Wrong About Dinosaurs!", which extends the learning by showing how paleontological understanding has evolved over time. Participants leave with a complete 5E lesson plan differentiated for PreK-12, ready-to-use templates, and strategies for helping students develop metacognitive awareness about their reasoning processes.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use progressive evidence revelation and the ladder of inference, a systems thinking tool, to help students understand that revising conclusions based on new data is the essence of scientific thinking.

SPEAKERS:
DaNel Hogan

SPARKing Curiosity: Empowering Student Scientists Through Experiential Learning

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Educational Outreach at HudsonAlpha
SPARKing Curiosity contact info.pdf
Contact details for April Reis and Dasi Price

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This session will highlight an innovative approach to middle school science education that combines experiential learning with effective teaching strategies and classroom practices. The HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology SPARK initiative, an after-school program for middle school students supported by funding from the National Science Foundation, will provide a framework for participants to explore how authentic science experiences support rigorous, standards-centered learning while improving students’ STEM identity. HudsonAlpha SPARK provides a replicable model for supporting middle school students in developing 21st‑century scientific practices while fostering curiosity, persistence, and confidence in their identities as scientists. Designed in alignment with the Next Generation Science Standards for middle school, SPARK engages learners as student scientists, encouraging them to conduct experiments, collect data, and connect findings to real-world applications.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with strategies to include similar programs in their teaching, adaptable for both formal & informal learning environments. The session will provide practical resources, illustrative examples of student work, & reflections on challenges & successes from program implementation.

SPEAKERS:
April Reis, Dasi Price

Star Wars & the Science of Suns, Moons, and Planets

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Star Wars Planet Presentation

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From Tatooine’s twin suns to Endor’s forest moon, this Star Wars-themed lesson guides students through Earth-Moon-Sun relationships using familiar planets from a galaxy far, far away. Students compare fantasy and real planetary systems, model eclipses and tides, and build literacy through science-fiction CERs.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will receive a creative unit comparing real space science with Star Wars worlds to build understanding of Earth-Moon-Sun interactions.

SPEAKERS:
Ricardo Padilla

Student Sensemaking to Explore Local Earth Science Topics

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Earth Science NSTA Conference Presentation 2026 .pptx

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In this interactive workshop, a series of middle school Earth Science lessons will be shared to help educators bring local phenomena into their classrooms and engage their learners in sensemaking. Lessons topics include debris flow, wildfire, river velocity, weathering, plate tectonics, and mining of natural resources. These student-centered lessons were developed, peer reviewed, and tested in middle school classrooms as part of multiple National Science Foundation grants. All lessons are aligned with the NGSS and leverage local phenomena to elicit student ideas about the natural world. Participants will have electronic access to all lessons and will experience aspects of the lessons as students in this workshop.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will walk away with multiple NGGS aligned Earth Science lessons to use in their classrooms. Lessons will be shared electronically, teachers will experience aspects of the lessons as students, and time will be spent brainstorming how teachers can use local phenomena to ground the lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Trista McLaughlin, Megan Beckam

The Cosmic Creator Challenge: Engaging Deeper Learning in Science through Student-Created Digital Media Projects

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Cosmic Creator Challenge-NSTA 2026-David Black
This is my session slide show converted to PDF. In this session, I will describe a contest sponsored by Clark Planetarium for Utah sixth-grade students to create their own digital media projects to demonstrate their understanding of the Utah Science with Engineering Education (SEEd) standards.

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Effective science communication is an often overlooked student skill. Clark Planetarium in Salt Lake City presents an annual Cosmic Creator Challenge for all Utah sixth-grade students to learn how to communicate science concepts through creating their own digital media. Students have three dimensions of choice: choice of topic from the Utah space science standards, choice of medium or software type, and choice of approach. They are required to have their project evaluated by at least three peers using a Google Form with the criteria of scientific accuracy, creativity, quality, software proficiency, and communication skills. Students then make revisions before submitting the final project to Clark Planetarium for judging. Participating teachers report high levels of engagement as we see enhanced creativity and deeper science learning in the students' projects while they also learn marketable digital media skills. This session discusses how you can implement your own Creator Challenge.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement student choice in the form of a media design challenge, where students can choose a subject area topic, a media form to use, and their approach and be evaluated by three peers.

SPEAKERS:
David Black

The Power of Collaboration: Advancing SEP Progression Across K-12

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Science Placemat Consensus Activity.pdf
The Power of Collaboration Slides

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Explore how a large, diverse school district tackled the challenge of implementing K–12 Science and Engineering Practice (SEP) progressions to ensure access for all stakeholders. In this interactive session, participants will engage in collaborative sensemaking strategies designed to unpack the SEP progression of Developing and Using Models. Participants will engage in a strategy that can be used in K-12 professional learning and classrooms, making it accessible for all learners through scaffolding and differentiation. Authentic examples will drive participant reflection and planning for their own school communities.

TAKEAWAYS:
The experience provides a professional learning model that can be adapted for multi-functional implementation. Participants will analyze and take action on the SEP progression, leaving with an equity driven strategy that can be applied in professional learning communities and K-12 classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Vikki Romanoski, Noel Wagner, Kenneth LeCompte, Eve Case

The Un-Pee-lievable Power of Analytical Chemistry: Solving Mysteries with Urinalysis

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Chromatography__Urinalysis_Lesson_Plan.docx
Urinalysis&Chromatography Assessments.pdf
Urinalysis&Chromatography.pptx

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This workshop will demonstrate an inquiry-based, hands-on analytical chemistry lesson that fits seamlessly into a high school chemistry curriculum, aligning with the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS 2013). The session will explore how the principles of chromatography, normally taught as a simple separation technique, can be applied to a compelling real-world scenario: a urinalysis case study. We'll show how this problem-based approach moves beyond procedural labs to teach critical thinking and sensemaking. Attendees will see how chromatography can reinforce core concepts like molecular polarity, intermolecular forces, solubility, and adsorption in a hands-on way. We will provide a complete guide to the lesson, including materials, safety considerations, and discussion prompts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use a chromatography-based urinalysis lesson to shift classroom labs from procedural steps to application-based problem-solving, teaching students to think and act like real-world chemists.

SPEAKERS:
Anastasia Davis

What's Up With That Cup? NGSS pedagogical training for formal and informal educators

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
What's Up With That Cup 2026-04-17 NSTA Workshop.pdf
Session Slides. QR code to download resources is on slide 31.

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This interactive workshop introduces a novel model for training all educators in foundational Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) pedagogy. Participants will engage as learners in a short, free curricular unit designed to highlight key NGSS principles. These sensemaking opportunities include phenomenon-based unit design, facilitating student dialogue/questions, and student-as-scientist experimentation. Evaluation methods for measuring training effectiveness will also be presented. Formal and informal educators will deepen their understanding of NGSS teaching methods. Instructional Coaches will also benefit from exploring a research-informed training model that can be adapted for professional learning in diverse educational settings.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a free digital toolkit, including a curriculum, training guide, and support materials for training all educators in foundational NGSS-aligned pedagogy.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Kennedy, Maranda Don, Emily Mathews

Write Like a Scientist: Teaching and Utilizing the CER Format of Writing to Support Student Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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This session will describe the CER model for constructing arguments and explanations, break down the components, and provide resources for classroom integration in alignment with content standards. Educators will learn about evidence-based arguments and their importance to the science classroom, explore the role of arguments in the sense-making process as it is used to teach the disciplinary core ideas of the NGSS, and participate in hands-on examples of practical classroom strategies for integrating the CER framework. The workshop will describe and model a sequential process for introducing, teaching, and strengthening writing skills that can be adapted for all content areas without taking time away from required content standards. Teachers will leave feeling better equipped to support young scientists learning the necessary science skills of writing arguments. We aim to improve domain specific literacy skills and authentic writing opportunities aligned with the NGSS.

TAKEAWAYS:
The CER model for writing is an effective framework for engaging in arguments from evidence and constructing explanations. CER can be taught in a sequential process while supporting students' sensemaking of the content standards using a plethora of editable resources that can be easily adapted.

SPEAKERS:
Chloe Tracy

"Where’s the Chemistry Content?" Maintaining Rigor While Centering Student Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
C.3 Lesson 7 Handout Compare Atomic Models.pdf
How are "traditional" chemistry topics organized in OpenSciEd HS Chem?
Presentation Slides

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Wondering where familiar chemistry topics like naming compounds, stoichiometry, and gas laws fit into OpenSciEd High School Chemistry? In this interactive session, we will unpack how, where, and why these “traditional” topics are thoughtfully woven into the five OpenSciEd chemistry units. Participants will explore examples of how topics such as atomic structure, the Periodic Table, acids and bases, and the mole are incorporated into storylines in ways that build coherence and preserve students’ “aha” moments.    For example, atomic structure is introduced in C.2 as students use the movement of electrons to develop models for ions and polar molecules. They use these models to explain a variety of phenomena including lightning. These ideas are then expanded in C.3 as students construct atomic models and use them to explain bonding.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how "traditional" chemistry topics are incorporated into OpenSciEd High School Chemistry storylines without giving away students' aha moments and still maintaining rigor.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Novak, Nicole Vick, Dan Voss

Academic Vocabulary: Stronger Connections for Greater Impact

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D


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Words are the currency of science instruction, tools teachers use to teach and students use to demonstrate understanding. This session empowers educators to make vocabulary a purposeful part of three-dimensional science learning. Participants will explore a research-based vocabulary selection framework to identify and prioritize key academic terms that anchor lessons in meaningful context. Through hands-on activities, attendees will design age-appropriate, vocabulary-rich experiences that strengthen students’ ability to read, interpret, and produce domain-specific science texts. This vocabulary-driven approach promotes equity, supports standards alignment, and ensures coherent, conceptually focused instruction that deepens students’ sensemaking in science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to use a research-based framework to review science standards and select academic vocabulary, ensuring that word choice, instruction, and assessment align to promote deeper student understanding and three-dimensional sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Julie Jackson

Applying Genetics: Exploring the Spirit Bear Phenomenon

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Applying Genetics: Exploring the Spirit Bear Phenomenon
All Resources from the presentation and to complete the lab attached.
Applying Genetics_ Exploring the Spirit Bear Phenomenon.pdf

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Explore “The Spirit Bear Phenomenon,” an interactive, NGSS-aligned genetics lesson that connects heredity, probability, and data analysis through the real-world mystery of the Kermode bear. Participants will experience how students use Punnett squares to model genetic outcomes, calculate trait frequencies, and represent data with bar graphs. Through hands-on inquiry and sensemaking, learners explore dominant and recessive inheritance patterns while linking abstract genetics concepts to meaningful, observable phenomena.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience how to teach heredity and probability through the real-world mystery of the Kermode bear using NGSS-aligned modeling and data analysis—helping students build sensemaking skills and connect genetics concepts to observable phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Shane E Raggio

Boards, Markers and Minds: Visualizing Inquiry Using White Boarding in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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Using simple materials—dry-erase boards, markers, and curiosity—attendees will engage in modeling tasks, data-sharing discussions, and consensus-building strategies that mirror what students experience in an active science classroom. The session will highlight connections to the NGSS Science and Engineering Practices and demonstrate how whiteboarding supports formative assessment, argumentation, and classroom discourse. Participants will leave with ready-to-use whiteboarding routines, sample prompts, and reflection tools to foster richer inquiry and collaboration in their own classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn practical routines for using white boards to drive student inquiry and discussion. Participants will experence white boarding as a learning and walk away with topics and strategies to implement immediately in the classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Jessica Wagenmaker

Books to Builds: STEM Activities to Complement Your Favorite Read-Alouds

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6


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Integrate STEM seamlessly into read-alouds to boost comprehension and engagement without extra time. Learn to pair beloved stories with simple engineering challenges that bring texts to life while also building STEM skills. Discover new favorite picture books, and walk away ready to enrich your read-alouds with interactive, story-based STEM activities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover three engaging read-alouds and three complimentary STEM activities that encourage curiosity, creativity and critical thinking.

SPEAKERS:
Terra Tarango

Bringing STEM to Rural Schools

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building


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Across the country, rural school districts are typically underfunded and underrepresented. This reality can make it difficult to bring many STEM programs into schools. This session will provide attendees with information and resources on how to incorporate a variety of STEM experiences into your science curriculum, with little or no cost to the school. The presenter will discuss programs that have been successful at a rural school district in Pennsylvania, including both in-school and extra-curricular activities. All the programs and resources discussed in this presentation can be utilized at low- or no-cost in any school across the country!

TAKEAWAYS:
The main takeaway of this session that it is possible to bring quality STEM programming to underfunded schools. A list of resources will be provided to help attendees reach this goal.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Hackney

Building Batteries: Energy Conversion for Chemistry and Physics

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Building Batteries NSTA 2026.pptx
Building Batteries Resources
Session Evaluation Code

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This session will demonstrate a hands-on lesson with extensions that focuses on using science and engineering practices for designing devices to convert energy. Participants will construct and test batteries using various solutions and metals to solve energy storage problems for NGSS Standards (HS-PS3-3, and HS-PS3-4), in addition to enhancing their understanding of electricity, circuit building and chemical reactions in practical application. The Engineering design process will be integrated to make this activity a must in real-world application!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn strategies for teaching students to design and optimize devices that convert energy forms—emphasizing chemical potential energy—and to develop evidence-based solutions to real-world and societal energy challenges, considering criteria, constraints, and impacts.

SPEAKERS:
Britt Rohde, Jacey Hart, April Thompson

Co-Creation in Action: Cross-Curricular Planning with AI and EduProtocols

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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Tired of teaching in silos? This interactive session shows how AI tools and EduProtocols can transform planning into dynamic, cross-curricular learning. Participants will co-create a live science + social studies unit using Curriculum Genie, experiencing how AI accelerates design while keeping standards at the center. Along the way, we’ll embed EduProtocols that spark collaboration and engagement, and close with a Snorkl demo to model instant AI-powered formative feedback. Grounded in backward design, UDL, and cognitive apprenticeship, this session blends innovation with strong pedagogy. Attendees will leave with a replicable framework to break down silos, save planning time, and foster student agency—equipping learners to be effective communicators, tactful collaborators, and lifelong learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with a replicable process for co-creating standards-aligned, cross-curricular units using AI. See how EduProtocols scaffold engagement and how Snorkl delivers instant feedback—giving you practical, ready-to-use strategies to boost student agency and break content silos.

SPEAKERS:
Christina Miramontes

Cooler Communities: 6th graders Transforming their Communities

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building


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This session features a 6th grade unit intentionally designed to connect science learning with students’ lived experiences. Anchored in the urban heat island effect, the storyline invites students to ask: Why are some neighborhoods hotter than others? Participants will engage in selected lesson routines that show how teachers can launch with local maps and data, guide investigations of heat absorption, and support students in building models that explain differences across communities. The design emphasizes strategies to broaden participation and highlight how access to trees, green space, and building materials can shape daily life. The sequence concludes with students proposing community-based solutions, illustrating how careful classroom design can link three-dimensional science learning with meaningful opportunities for action.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use the phenomenon of urban heat islands to engage students in rigorous, three-dimensional science learning while highlighting how environmental conditions vary across communities and exploring local solutions for improvement.

SPEAKERS:
Karen Duenas, Dave Tupper

Discovering the Wonders of Waves

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Discovering the Wonder of Waves Session Materials

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Looking for an engaging way to teach the types of waves and their characteristics? This interactive session will equip you with hands-on investigations, simulations, and tech-based tools to compare amplitude, frequency, and wavelength in transverse and longitudinal waves, including the electromagnetic spectrum. You’ll receive ready-to-use activities and adaptable content to fit your specific grade level. Come ready to learn, participate, and walk away with practical, classroom-ready strategies to excite your students!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will experience physics fun for 6-8 Science as they apply to the NGSS standards. Participants will use slinkies to visually view the components of waves, as well as use hands-on technology to see a graphical model of the types of waves.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Rush, Becky Walker

Enhancing Multilingual Learners’ Language Use for Scientific Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D


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How can we design science learning that allows multilingual learners to shine? This session explores instructional approaches, and teacher moves that create rich opportunities for students to use their full range of meaning-making resources. Through classroom examples—such as building consensus ideas or sharing noticings and wonderings about puzzling phenomena—we’ll examine moments when students make their thinking public, collaborate, and grow as sensemakers.

TAKEAWAYS:
Multilingual learners are brilliant and capable of engaging in rich and rigorous scientific sensemaking when classrooms make space for their ideas. Walk away with practical tools and routines that elevate student thinking and strengthen whole-class science sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Susan Gomez Zwiep

From Classrooms to Communities: Integrating Public Health Roles in Biology

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Career Facts.pdf
Copy of HDW Standalone Lesson modifications.pdf
https://docs.google.com/document/d/19jX9O9D-P6BafGIMMfKksxYM0J-ayNVfeoqmBYS-LeM/edit?usp=sharing

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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health. Research shows that high school is a key time in career awareness and preparation. These materials provide students with an opportunity to expand their understanding of health professions and to consider the roles of community members in promoting public health. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for connecting students to public health roles in their communities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with practical strategies and resources to help students explore public health careers and understand the impact of community roles in promoting health.

SPEAKERS:
Malalai Sayedi, Lena Cosentino

From Curiosity to Consensus: Using MOSAIC to Support Phenomena-Based Science

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 A, North Building


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Phenomena are the starting point for NGSS and Louisiana’s science standards, yet many educators wonder how to guide students from curiosity to deep sensemaking. The MOSAIC Framework: Modeling, Observation, Scaffolding, Assessment, Inquiry, and Collaboration offers a practical, equitable framework for designing lessons that engage all learners. In this 60-minute interactive workshop, participants will experience MOSAIC as learners by investigating a Louisiana swamp fire phenomenon, where fires smolder in wetlands and release harmful smoke for weeks. Teachers will model combustion, analyze data on methane and oxygen, and collaborate to explain how fire persists in a wet environment. Each step will be paired with ready-to-use scaffolds such as diagrams, talk stems, and formative checks.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end, participants will see how MOSAIC supports 3D learning and equitable sensemaking in chemistry and environmental science, leaving with practical strategies and a planning template for teaching local, real-world phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Neotha Williams

From Curiosity to Creation: Using Invention Education and the Engineering Design Process in K-12 Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A



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Presentation- DSEC

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Explore how Invention Education (IE) and the Engineering Design Process (EDP) can be used in the classroom to engage students in hands-on, real-world problem solving while building creativity, collaboration, and essential 21st-century skills. Participants will work through a real-world problem utilizing the Engineering Design Process to invent and create a solution.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will experience how IE and EDP can empower students to become confident problem-solvers and innovative thinkers prepared for a rapidly changing world. Educators will leave with practical/transferrable strategies for implementing invention in invention-based learning in their classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Tom Jenkins, Erika Levrault, Kim Alvin De Lara

From Support to Independence: Fading Scaffolds in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Evaluation QR Code
Thank you for attending my session. Please evaluate the session
Front-end Vocabulary Scaffolds
Goal Setting Conference Handout
How Scaffolding Works Outline Handout
Lesson Scaffolding Plan Handout
Padlet link for session materials
Scaffolding Science Scenario Cards
Slides
This is a PDF of the presentation slides.
Types of Scaffolds Glossary Handout
VIP Scaffolds Handout
Verbal, instructional, procedural scaffolds chart

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Multilingual learners often need extra support to fully engage with science content, but the goal is independence. In this session, elementary teachers will explore strategies for creating scaffolds that provide just the right amount of support, then systematically fade them as students gain knowledge, language skills, and confidence. Through examples, hands-on activities, and discussion, participants will learn how to scaffold science investigations, discussions, and writing so students can move from guided participation to independent problem-solving. Teachers will leave with practical, classroom-ready approaches to support multilingual learners’ language and content growth while fostering independence, curiosity, and a love of science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Develop strategies to fade scaffolds effectively for multilingual learners in science, supporting a transition from guided participation to independent thinking while fostering curiosity and mastery.

SPEAKERS:
Maria Cieslak

Game On! Engaging Station Reviews for Every Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Biology EOY Review Stations (13 Total) plus some additional goodies ;)
Game On - Station Learning NSTA 2026 (3).pdf
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Test Your Luck Game (1).png

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Transform your review sessions into dynamic, student-centered sensemaking experiences with gamified station reviews! In this session, participants will engage with interactive science review stations designed to help students apply science and engineering practices while deepening their understanding of disciplinary core ideas. Using a variety of gamified templates and popular board games, presenters will model how game-style stations promote productive talk, collaboration, and reflection on science ideas. Participants will explore strategies for intentional grouping, differentiation, and scaffolding that keep every learner engaged and challenged. Leave equipped with creative tools and planning frameworks that make reviews purposeful, playful, and thought-provoking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to design gamified station reviews that engage students in sensemaking through collaboration, discourse, and application of science ideas. This session focuses on making review of content both meaningful and fun.

SPEAKERS:
Leah Talbert, Lani Patrick

Growing Outdoor Classrooms Through Technology and Community

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/19Z8A95acWXzcaUcGdW7SZ8igiAD2UlMDAwb_Ih7K-yE/edit?usp=sharing

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n this presentation, you will learn how our students engaged in purposeful collaboration to effectively integrate outdoor learning into the science classroom. The presenters will discuss key design challenges and strategies for transitioning learning environments beyond the traditional classroom setting. Facilitators will showcase diverse approaches that provide students with authentic opportunities to explore and engage with nature. The session will cover practical methods for establishing outdoor gardens, implementing documentation and journaling practices, and enhancing data collection techniques. Attendees will discover how to leverage technology to enrich and bring student learning to life in outdoor settings. Together, we will explore meaningful technological tools—including Micro:bits, podcasting, and iPads—that inspire and deepen outdoor scientific inquiry and creativity.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave the presentation equipped with practical tools and design principles to create outdoor classrooms that not only enhance scientific inquiry through real-world data collection but also support holistic student development.

SPEAKERS:
Jesse Wren, Paula Eschbach

Igniting STEM Thinking Through Inquiry-Based Learning (IBL) in the Math and Science Classroom.

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Igniting STEM Thinking Through IBL – NSTA Anaheim - 2026.pptx

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In this interactive session, participants explore how Inquiry-Based Learning (IBL) transforms math and science instruction into engaging, student-centered STEM experiences. Educators will learn a practical framework for designing lessons where students think, question, and work like scientists and engineers. Using authentic classroom examples, the session highlights IBL-STEM projects that connect mathematical modeling to real-world phenomena, including linear regression (height vs. handspan), exponential decay (ball bounce), quadratic motion (projectiles), and sinusoidal patterns (city temperature data). Participants will see how students generate questions, design investigations, collect and analyze data using tools such as Desmos, Google Sheets, and video analysis, and build models to explain patterns and make predictions.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session empowers educators to create classrooms where students are not just learning math and science—they’re doing STEM. Through IBL, they discover how their learning connects to the world, preparing them to become confident, innovative thinkers ready to solve the challenges of tomorrow.

SPEAKERS:
Marcellin Mutuyimana

Integrating Earth and Environmental Sciences Into Core Science Courses

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Integrating Earth and Environmental Science Into Core Science Courses

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Science teachers play a vital role in inspiring and equipping students to navigate a world that faces ongoing global changes. This responsibility is especially significant in the physical sciences, where students explore how chemistry and physics shape, and are shaped by, Earth’s systems. However, teachers without a formal background in environmental sciences are often left without sufficient resources to embed these topics in their curriculum. Many teachers also may simply struggle to find time to teach environmental concepts alongside the core disciplinary content without feeling like they’re cramming two courses into one. This session explores strategies for designing science units centered around Earth and environmental science phenomena to anchor existing units of study. Participants will examine how local and global phenomena can be leveraged to seamlessly blend Earth and Environmental Sciences into core science courses to create relevant, inquiry-driven integrated units.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore ways to anchor a unit around local and global Earth and environmental science phenomena that can be integrated into Biology, Chemistry, and Physics classes.

SPEAKERS:
Aaron Schwartz

Juicy Nuggets from Mission Maglev: Using Class CrunchLabs Curriculum Supports for Electric & Magnetic Forces

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Electromagnetic fields might be invisible, but the juicy nuggets in this unit are easy to find. This session helps you uncover key features in Mission Maglev that make it easier to plan, teach, and guide students through puzzling ideas like magnetic forces, electric forces, and contactless motion. We will walk through the built-in teacher tools, prompts, and routines that support deep thinking and epic classroom moments. Whether students are experimenting with levitating cardboard or wondering how a 700,000-pound train floats through the air, you will leave with ready-to-use moves that help the learning stick.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to use built-in supports in Mission Maglev to guide students through electric and magnetic forces while making sense of how a train can float and move without touching anything.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Garelli, Spencer Martin

Let's Get Our Game On

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building


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This interactive workshop demonstrates how Gameclass and digital games can transform science classrooms into spaces of active exploration. Participants will experience firsthand how game-based learning engages students in critical thinking, problem solving, and collaboration while reinforcing core science concepts. Using Gameclass, educators can seamlessly integrate standards-aligned games into their lessons, monitor student progress, and foster inquiry-driven learning. The workshop will showcase sample activities where scientific principles—such as ecosystems, forces, or chemical reactions—are taught through dynamic gameplay that mirrors real-world challenges. Attendees will collaborate in small groups to play, reflect, and design their own classroom applications, leaving with concrete strategies for incorporating games to deepen student understanding and motivation. By harnessing the power of play, science education can evolve into an immersive, student-centered experience.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use Gameclass and games to boost engagement, critical thinking, and collaboration in science. They’ll gain strategies for lesson integration, assessment, and equity, plus hands-on experience designing game-based activities.

SPEAKERS:
Tammie Schrader

Managing Materials in the Science Classroom: Designing Systems That Work For You

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Managing Materials in the Classroom.pptx

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So you’ve been trained in the standards, the pedagogy, and classroom management, but what about the stuff? Let’s talk about the volume of materials needed to effectively teach science; where to get stuff, how to maintain it, and how to organize it. Attendees will explore varied and diverse solutions to acquire, build, and maintain organizational systems to meet needs unique to the science education world, including makerspaces, classroom supplies, and lab equipment in both individual classrooms and shared spaces. From how to fill an empty classroom or supply closet, to how to handle seven years of consumables delivered at once, or 50 years of science department cast offs, we’ll find solutions by identifying urgent needs, identifying resources, and designing and maintaining systems that last.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore varied and diverse solutions to acquire, build, and maintain organizational systems to meet needs unique to the science education world, including makerspaces, classroom supplies, and lab equipment in both individual classrooms and shared spaces.

SPEAKERS:
Mary Newell

Micro to Macro: Making the unseen, "seen"

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


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After data collection attendees will use vertical whiteboarding and poster making to create macroscopic particle level diagrams to "see" what is happening on the microscopic level. Conductivity, solubility, pH, and electrochemistry topics will be used for the "eye-opening" session.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will find new ways to help students conceptualize the concepts of microsciences.

SPEAKERS:
Chris Coker

Microplastics in the Arctic: Mega Problem?

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Arctic-MP-Handout-ISB-Anaheim_NSTA_2026.pdf
Combined handout for Arctic Microplastics Module and other SEE Modules overview
Attendees copy of Anaheim 2026 - Microplastics in the Arctic NSTA Presentation

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Explore a free 2-week set of lessons that guides secondary students on an adventure, tracing microplastics from local systems into the Arctic. Students experiment and use models to investigate the potential impacts of microplastics in the Arctic while building optimism as they take action for change. The lesson plans will help you, as their teacher, use storytelling, guided research, experimentation, sensemaking and optimistic student action to explore the paths and impacts of microplastics in the Arctic. This workshop will allow you to explore the lab set ups and access all materials - which have been collaboratively developed by teachers and students working as part of a research project that spans five institutions. You will also explore some of the questions students will grapple with such as: What impact could microplastics have on Arctic ice, climate, and us? Are microplastics in the Arctic a mega-problem? How do we know and what steps can I take now?

TAKEAWAYS:
You can use storytelling, guided research, lab experiments, global models, and sensemaking to help secondary students explore the paths and potential impacts of microplastics in the Arctic. By doing this, students learn standards-based interdisciplinary STEM while finding solutions & taking action.

SPEAKERS:
Barbara Steffens

Model-Based Inquiry in Biology: Three-Dimensional Instructional Units for Grades 9–12

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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We will introduce our NSTA book containing a collection of units and resources to help teachers engage students in three-dimensional learning through model-based inquiry.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about four biology model-based inquiry units for rigorous and equitable instruction. Developed with secondary science teachers, the session guides three-dimensional learning, anchoring phenomena, modeling, and scientific explanations.

SPEAKERS:
Audrey Baird, Ron Gray

Native Fish in the Classroom: A New Model for Authentic Science Learning

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building


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Native fish provide authentic, place-based phenomena that support student sensemaking and NGSS integration. I created the Glass Eel Project with Save Coastal Wildlife to give schools an alternative to Trout in the Classroom, a program that—despite its popularity—often introduces non-native trout and can harm local ecosystems. In this project, students raise glass eels—an iconic migratory species—while practicing observation, data collection, and scientific modeling before releasing them back into the wild. Participants will see how this approach builds NGSS-aligned science practices, cross-curricular connections (art, statistics, coding in Python/R), and environmental stewardship. Most importantly, the model can be adapted with native fish in every state, giving teachers a framework for engaging students with their own local ecosystems.

TAKEAWAYS:
Using native fish as classroom phenomena fosters NGSS-aligned science practices, cross-curricular learning, and environmental stewardship, with adaptable models for every region.

SPEAKERS:
Ashley Taylor, Angela DiPaolo, Stephen Knott

NMLSTA: Woolly Mammoths, a Good Idea? Let's Discuss.

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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This workshop will engage teachers in critical dialogue (Socratic seminar) facilitation techniques to add to their teaching toolbox. A variety of topics will be presented including should we bring back the woolly mammoth. These discussions help students develop their critical thinking, scientific reasoning, and ability to evaluate evidence. They also strengthen communication and active listening skills as students articulate ideas, challenge assumptions, and explore diverse perspectives. By choosing real-world science-based topics, students are engaged and further develop their scientific literacy. These discussions are evidence-based and require student preparation including readings and interpretation of data (graphs/tables) to support their evidence-based thought and discussion. The workshop will include examples of seminars done with both middle and high school students, as well as time to practice the presented facilitation skills with other teachers.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will be introduced to and practice critical dialogue (Socratic seminar) facilitation techniques using science topics which they can then use with their students to strengthen critical thinking, scientific reasoning, and data evaluation skills along with communication and active listening.

SPEAKERS:
Alison Seymour

Redesigning School Lunch: Using Nutrition and Biochemistry to Drive Student Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Presentation Biochemistry of School Lunch.pdf

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How can we redesign a better school lunch to meet the nutritional needs of all students? In this workshop, participants will explore a 7-lesson high school biology unit that engages students in authentic sensemaking by connecting biochemistry, nutrition, anatomy, and engineering design to their own school meals. Built using OpenSciEd design principles, the unit launches with an anchor phenomena routine where students investigate USDA changes to school lunches and create timelines of how meals have evolved. Lessons then examine added sugars, how carbohydrates fuel the body, balancing energy from macronutrients, protein sources, and the impact of cooking on nutrition, culminating in student-designed lunch menus. Participants will engage in key routines, analyze student-generated questions, and take part in a gallery walk of student work, assessments, and redesign projects. All student-facing slides, worksheets, rubrics, and assessments will be shared as open educational resources.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience an OpenSciEd-inspired anchor phenomena routine and leave with a complete, freely available 7-lesson biology unit—featuring 3D assessments, student work, and strategies to adapt length and scaffolds to support all learners.

SPEAKERS:
William Baur

Science Literacy for the 21st Century: Preparing Students to Think Critically About Scientific Information

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 209 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1DsI_T81k0e31MnC3z1267kTED7n97XHQyxD7mXSNnp0/edit?usp=sharing

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In an era of widespread misinformation, cultivating scientific literacy is essential for preparing students to critically evaluate information and make informed decisions. This session explores evidence-based strategies for improving scientific reasoning and critical thinking in both high school and postsecondary science education. We will discuss how to integrate media literacy, primary literature analysis, and science communication into science curricula to equip students with the skills to navigate scientific claims in a digital age. Additionally, we will address common misconceptions, cognitive biases, and how to help students distinguish between credible science and pseudoscience. Participants will leave with practical strategies, assessment tools, and classroom-ready activities that promote science literacy across disciplines, with an emphasis on fostering collaboration between secondary and postsecondary educators to create a more cohesive approach to scientific reasoning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Gain a clear understanding of why scientific literacy is vital in combating misinformation and helping students critically evaluate scientific claims in today’s digital world.

SPEAKERS:
Cheryl Robertson

Science with Structure: Cultivating Collaboration and Positive Learning Environments

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building


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Science with Structure: Cultivating Collaboration and Positive Learning Environments explores how cooperative learning structures can transform science classrooms into spaces where teamwork, respect, and curiosity thrive. Participants will experience practical strategies to integrate engaging science content with positive behavior skills, such as listening, accepting criticism, and working with others, within the laboratory classroom. By weaving positive behavior support into engagement structures—like think-pair-share, reciprocal coaching, and team investigations—teachers will foster both academic success and social growth. This session highlights how structure not only enhances scientific inquiry, but also builds a classroom culture where students feel safe, supported, and empowered to learn together. Session led by 2025-26 LBUSD Teacher of the Year and 2021-22 LAUSD Teacher of the Year.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore methods to sustain student engagement and high academic expectations in classrooms consisting of diverse skill levels, while promoting teamwork and a positive learning culture.

SPEAKERS:
Julie Rodriguez

Sensemaking the Self: Biology, Neuroscience, and Psychology in Action

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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In an age when biology is taught in silos and students face an onslaught of misinformation, The Flow of Information reframes stimulus–response as an interdisciplinary story. This 60-minute workshop makes visible the hidden steps—sensory organs → brain and neurotransmitters → endocrine hormones → DNA regulation → RNA → proteins → response—showing how molecular events scale into behavior. By weaving biology, neuroscience, and psychology, the unit helps students see how perception, signaling, and cellular change interlock to shape actions. Participants will experience model trackers, data-driven labs (reaction time, glucose regulation, stress response), and iterative model revisions that mirror student learning. To ground the session, teachers will also create a sample artifact that parallels student work. They will leave with practical resources, interdisciplinary strategies, and a framework for helping students understand the power of their own minds and the solace science provides.

TAKEAWAYS:
Students leave this unit seeing the hidden steps between stimulus and response, realizing the power of their own minds. By tracing biology through neuroscience and psychology, they gain solace in science and a deeper sense of agency over their thoughts, feelings, and actions.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Hirsch

Strategies to Support Students With Learning Differences in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation
Links to the project are found in the presentation.

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Every science classroom includes students with diverse learning needs, and small instructional shifts can make a big difference in their engagement and success. In this session, we will explore common learning differences and how they may appear in the science classroom. Participants will see a concrete example of a differentiated science project designed to support students with learning differences, and then engage in collaborative discussion to share strategies, ask questions, and brainstorm ways to make science more accessible for all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn practical strategies for recognizing learning differences in the science classroom and designing differentiated projects that help all students thrive.

SPEAKERS:
Joanne Tan

Strengthening Sensemaking: Using Accountable Talk Strategies to Engage ALL Learners

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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How can we ensure every student has a voice in making sense of scientific phenomena? This interactive session explores how accountable talk strategies can transform classroom discussions into powerful opportunities for equitable sensemaking. Participants will experience and analyze routines that support students in listening actively, building on one another’s ideas, and using evidence and reasoning to explain their thinking. We will examine how these strategies not only strengthen conceptual understanding but also foster inclusion, especially for multilingual learners and students who may be less confident contributing to academic dialogue. Participants will leave with practical tools and planning resources to intentionally embed accountable talk into their science instruction, from warm-up routines to sensemaking discussions. This session will help you create a classroom culture where every learner contributes to, and benefits from, the collective construction of scientific understan

TAKEAWAYS:
Accountable talk can transform science discussions into equitable opportunities for all students, especially multilingual learners, to actively engage in sensemaking by listening, reasoning with evidence, and building shared understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Nicole McRee

Synergizing Science and Literacy: Innovative Strategies to bring Science and Literacy Together for Elementary Educators

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://tinyurl.com/synergizescience2026
NSTA Synergizing Science - April 2026 (Anaheim) (1).pdf

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As instructional coaches, we understand the difficulties of trying to “teach it all” and yet deal with time constraints and demands of solely focusing on ELA and math, meeting students' needs and behaviors, and lack of time for planning and preparation. Because science plays a huge role in increasing student engagement and intrigue, provides background knowledge and experiences, and increases vocabulary, we need a way to bring science into the classroom on a consistent basis. The solution is to bridge together the content and strategies of both science and ELA through reading, writing, speaking, and listening. In this session, we will begin with the 5E instructional model and how literacy plays a role in this model. We will then dig into engaging strategies that teachers can use to increase collaboration, discourse, and sensemaking. Finally, we will look at strategies that support English language learners in both science and increasing language.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with engaging strategies and activities that can be used within classrooms to bridge science with literacy, ideas on how to bring literacy into science, and science into ELA.

SPEAKERS:
Eric Corso, Kelli Conner

The Camp Chair Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E


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Join Mary Beth Hatch in hearing how a few inches separate students from learning in a space that truly engages them in all content areas, the outdoors! This session will dive into how the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is utilizing outdoor learning to truly unlock best practices, promote health and well being, and connect to core content areas for students and teachers. Through a structured process, the Education Division of the Commission has created a playbook for schools to truly unlock the power of real world learning through conservation and outdoor recreation experiences that are tied directly to state learning standards.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how educators are implementing outdoor learning into core content and elective courses in partnership with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission as well as student and teacher leadership opportunities in grades PreK-12.

SPEAKERS:
Mary Hatch

Think Local! Three strategies for localizing science instruction

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Think Local! Session materials folder

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Localizing science instruction is a powerful way to boost student engagement, and it’s invigorating for teachers, too! Join the professional learning team from the Lawrence Hall of Science to explore three low-effort, high-impact strategies to localize your science instruction. By diving into an example 3D lesson, you’ll engage with successful teacher-designed localized adaptations that incorporate students' ideas, experiences, and local phenomena to support students to make sense of science ideas. You will come away with a planning tool and a framework for how you can make small changes to phenomena-based storylines that have a big impact on students' connections to science in school.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will take away a planning tool along with ideas for three practical and low-effort ways they can localize their science instruction in K-12 classrooms to support all students in making meaningful and relevant connections in science.

SPEAKERS:
Leslie Stenger, Rebecca Abbott

Tiny Tech Big Futures with Middle School Nanotechnology

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building


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Step into the world of the very small with this interactive workshop on nanotechnology designed for middle school science classrooms. Participants will experience NGSS aligned, hands on labs that reveal how nanoscale science connects to everyday life and emerging technologies. From exploring how nanomaterials are used in medicine, electronics, and clean energy to modeling the unique behaviors of matter at the nanoscale, teachers will leave with classroom ready investigations that spark curiosity and foster sensemaking. The session emphasizes building critical STEM skills such as problem solving, collaboration, and data analysis while highlighting clear workforce pathways that link middle school science to future careers in engineering, medicine, sustainability, and technology. Educators will walk away with lesson plans, career connections, and strategies to inspire students to see themselves as future innovators and problem solvers in the growing field of nanotechnology.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain NGSS aligned, hands on nanotechnology labs and resources that connect middle school science to real world applications, helping students build STEM skills and see clear pathways to future careers.

SPEAKERS:
Marianna O'Brien, Linh Ho

Tools for Building Authentic Learning Experiences: Harnessing Inquiry, Student Discourse, and Phenomena to Cultivate Critical Thinking in Science

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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How can we leverage students’ lived experiences to authentically engage them in phenomenon-driven, student-centered learning? In this session, participants will be introduced to a teacher-designed Planning Tool created to evaluate and refine instructional materials for authentic integration of an anchoring phenomenon, inquiry-driven instructional practices, and student discourse. These elements work together to create engaging learning experiences that build students’ capacity for critical thinking as they work together to “figure something out.” By applying the Planning Tool to interdisciplinary NGSS-aligned curricula, participants will examine strategies used to transform traditional lessons into 3-dimensional learning experiences featuring student-driven discussions and inquiry-based explorations. The transformed lessons build on students’ lived experiences, strengthening their understanding of scientific principles and developing their critical thinking skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave this session with a ready-to-use, teacher-designed Planning Tool and practical experience applying it to evaluate and refine instructional materials to better integrate phenomenon, student-driven inquiry, and discourse into their instructional materials and practices.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Carpe

Using Art as a Tool for Data Visualization

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Using Art to Visualize Environmental Data.pptx

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In this workshop, participants will learn how to incorporate alternative methods for visualizing data into their lessons. Data doesn’t always need to be represented through charts and graphs; when translated into art, it can evoke a more visceral and impactful response. Artistic approaches can be used to represent a wide range of data sets—from personal narratives to environmental and climate data. Example student projects include using fiber arts to illustrate climate change data, and creating pour paintings to visualize historical water quality data from major U.S. waterways, highlighting changes over time and across locations

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain tools to guide students in creating art that tells the story behind data. Through visual art, students explore data from new perspectives. The session includes student examples and hands-on practice using environmental and climate data sets.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Bebell, Melanie Hardy, Eileen Koenig

Using Literature to Instruct Physics and Physical Science Concepts: a Cross-Curricular Instructural Approach

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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The workshop will utilize literature to teach physical science and physics concepts in a cross-curricular approach. Many students often feel that their courses are isolated and not connected to any other class. Participants in this workshop will use a well-known literature piece, The Little Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry in 1943 to investigate science concepts particularly those of physics and physical science. Other literary pieces and associated lessons will be shared.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will receive instruction that will allow them to select a literary piece and integrate that piece into a science lesson. Attendees will receive a list of literary pieces linked to physics and physical science concepts.

SPEAKERS:
Jan Mader, Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck

Welcoming the Whole Student

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building


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Over the last 15 years, the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County has been exploring ways to build trust with students, including policy changes, asset-based, culturally relevant pedagogy, and student-centered program design. As we have learned to more completely welcome school and youth audiences, we have also strived to create an environment that inspires student trust in the museum: as a place that values and respects them and as a safe space to be their whole selves. Now, we are honored to be a place where students can engage and learn, and even become museum interpreters themselves. During this session, we’ll model techniques for supporting student-centered dialogue and learning, and allow participants to share ideas and techniques that have proven successful in their classrooms. We’ll share the resources that have informed our work, and provide information about our own successes and mistakes so that we can all learn from each other.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about informal education approaches such as Visual Thinking Strategies in science and cultural settings that support open and supportive dialogue for all students - and adults too!

SPEAKERS:
Molly Porter

Writing Interdisciplinary Lessons is NOT Easy

Friday, April 17 • 9:20 AM - 10:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 3 and 4


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How do you spark creativity, strengthen problem-solving, and show students why learning matters? Interdisciplinary connections do all three—but creating those lessons isn’t easy! In this interactive session, you’ll explore the power of interdisciplinary teaching and discover practical tips and strategies to design engaging lessons of your own.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with practical tips and the confidence to design your own lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Karen Matsler

"Flattening the Curve" of the Zombie Apocalypse

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 9


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A Zombie Pandemic is raging. It seems as if nobody is safe from its effects. It's time to keep our wits, work together and strike back! Using Zombies as our model, we will scientifically and mathematically analyze the spread of a disease through a population. Along the way, we will learn about humans while having fun with Zombies! By making use of pop culture trends, we can raise the levels of engagement and interest in our STEM-based classrooms. In recent years, very few trends have been as wildly or widely popular as Zombies. In this session, we will use Zombies to model brain anatomy and physiology and then develop a model for the spread of a "Zombie Virus" in a population of humans.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will participate in mathematically and graphically modeling the spread of a disease through a population, using "Zombie-ism" as the condition that is being spread.

SPEAKERS:
Jeffrey Lukens

"Where’s the Biology Content?" Maintaining Rigor While Centering Student Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 C


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"Wondering where familiar biology topics like cell structure, genetics, and photosynthesis fit into OpenSciEd High School Biology? In this interactive session, we will unpack how, where, and why these “traditional” topics are thoughtfully woven into the five OpenSciEd biology units. Participants will explore examples of how concepts such as ecosystems, evolution, human body systems, and molecular biology are incorporated into storylines in ways that build coherence and preserve students’ “aha” moments. Along the way, participants will reflect on how these decisions were made and consider opportunities to adapt the approach to their own local contexts. Educators will leave confident about blending essential content with phenomenon-driven learning in ways that engage students while ensuring the learning of biology foundations."

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how "traditional" biology topics are incorporated into OpenSciEd High School Biology storylines without giving away students' aha moments and still mantaining rigor.

SPEAKERS:
Erika Palys

A Breath of Fresh Air: Sensemaking in your Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
A Breath Of Fresh Air-Lebo-17Apr26.pdf
A presentation of Musical Linguistics STEAM in three countries by Cynthyny (Bo) Lebo to NSTA 17 April 2026

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This interactive session will explore rigorous, relevant teaching tools designed to engage grade 1–8 learners using GLOBE.gov, NGSS-aligned practices, and STEAM integration. The session draws on field research and curricula tested in rural Ohio and urban California/New York classrooms, which were supported by GLOBE. We will demonstrate practical strategies that: -Support sense-making and brain-based learning. -Connect ancient concepts of meaning-making with contemporary classroom challenges. -Provide teachers with ready-to-use tools, rubrics, and resources aligned with federal, state, and local standards. -Address workforce projections and student motivation using data from LMI, BLS, and EDD.gov/ca. This session is designed to inspire and sustain them by offering: -Collaborative tools and curriculum aligned with science standards. -Strategies to build self-confidence, motivation, and resilience in students. -Approaches to community building and funding opportunities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to take an abstract idea and simplify it so that your students are excited to learn it.

SPEAKERS:
Cynthyny Lebo

After-School Programs That Inspire: Building Skills, Confidence, and Curiosity

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 A


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Elevate your after-school STEM programming with high-energy, aviation-inspired learning experiences! This session showcases hands-on engineering challenges, flight and forces investigations, and flexible activity modules that spark curiosity and build real-world STEM skills. Participants will explore strategies for amplifying student voice, strengthening community partnerships, and connecting learners to emerging careers in aviation, aerospace, and engineering. Leave with resources and fresh ideas that will help your STEM program take off!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to implement hands-on, aviation-themed STEM experiences that elevate student voice, build perseverance and teamwork, and connect learners to real-world careers through meaningful community partnerships.

SPEAKERS:
Christina Davis, Jesse Steiner

Engaging Students in Using CER to develop complex concepts: What is the Difference Between Climate and Weather?

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


Show Details

Participants will experience two engaging methods to uncover student misconceptions about this foundational concept in teaching climate change. These tools can be used with any topic as teachers strive to support students in developing their understanding of complex concepts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Understanding misconceptions in this component of climate change is critical prior to teaching the subject. Discover how engaging, open-ended opportunities for students to dive into their ideas and revise them as they share information with others are effective ways of teaching complex topics.

SPEAKERS:
Laura Tucker

Behind the Scenes of the Shell Science Lab Challenge: Secrets to Science Teaching Excellence

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:10 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 209 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
2026 Behind the Scenes of the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge.pdf
26-27 Shell Awards and Competition flyer.pdf
Shell Regional summary flyer.png

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Ever wondered what it takes to stand out in the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge? Join an inspiring panel of Grand Prize winners, and selection committee members as they share what makes a strong application, how they transformed their science labs and instruction with limited resources, and the impact the Challenge has had on their professional journeys. This session offers an insider’s look at one of the most impactful competitions for K–12 science teachers working in under-resourced schools. From practical classroom strategies to tips for highlighting your work effectively, this is your chance to ask questions, hear real success stories, and learn how to take your teaching—and your lab—to the next level. Bonus: Attendees are eligible for exciting door prizes to support their classrooms!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain actionable insights and inspiration to apply for the Shell Science Lab Regional Challenge and elevate their science teaching environments.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Upton

Beyond “Gotcha”: Successful Formative Assessment through Project-Based Learning

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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This 60-minute session explores what formative assessment truly is and how it can be successfully implemented in science classrooms. I will clarify common misconceptions and model effective strategies using a unit example from force and momentum. Through the lens of a project-based learning activity—the car crash safety project—participants will see how assessment can move beyond “gotcha” moments to become a powerful tool for student growth. Teachers will learn how to design formative assessments that allow students to revisit ideas, address misconceptions, and demonstrate mastery while engaging in meaningful, real-world science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Assessment isn’t about “gotcha”—it’s about growth. Through project-based learning, teachers can use formative or summative assessments that give students multiple chances to learn, revisit, and grow as scientists.

SPEAKERS:
Seung Yeon Lee

Building Communities of Hope for Children Through Engaging in Local Phenomena

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 208 B


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In an age where catastrophic damage from environmental-related events circulates through social and print media, it is important to build communities of hope for our elementary students. Placed-Based education is a vehicle for creating hope and building strong, resilient communities where students are empowered to act for themselves and their natural surroundings. Local phenomena can be leveraged to engage elementary students in civic responsibility and science and engineering practices, inspiring students to take action through proposing solutions to community issues.

TAKEAWAYS:
As environmental-related events occur, it is essential to build communities of hope for children. Place-based experiential learning builds resilient communities where children are empowered to act for themselves.

SPEAKERS:
Candace Penrod

But My Kids Can't Read This!

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 C, North Building


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What does the Science of Reading have to do with reading and writing science? Quite a bit, actually! In this session, we will explore some of the reasons students struggle to read, write, and comprehend scientific texts. More importantly, we’ll dive into some strategies you can use to support students in accessing grade-level texts, including doing more hands-on science! Educators will engage in real practice and take away tangible ideas to bring better literacy practice into any type of science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use strategies from the Science of Reading philosophy to help students become better readers, writers, and speakers of science.

SPEAKERS:
Obie Martin

Cards on the Table: Amplifying Card Sorts for Scientific Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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Sorting tasks in science create opportunities for students to engage in science practices as they recognize patterns, categorize, hypothesize, generalize, and make connections through multiple modalities including images, text, symbols, diagrams, tables, and graphs. Yet, often, students simply engage in “silent shuffles” with little opportunities for sensemaking. What could be an opportunity for rich dialogue and meaning making is dominated instead by speed, with cursory explanations offered after the fact. When designed with an intentional purpose and implemented with specific steps that structure both the process and the language for the interaction, however, card sorts create opportunities for all students to fully participate in making sense of science ideas through language. In this interactive session, participants will engage with a variety of sorts and explore how they can be structured and sequenced within a lesson to support sensemaking for multilingual learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Card sorts allow students to explore science concepts in multiple modalities When intentionally structured and sequence in a lesson, these activities both engage and support multilingual learners as they draw on their prior knowledge and co-construct understandings with others.

SPEAKERS:
Tanya Warren

Cardsort Carnival

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


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Attendees will see how using cardsorts have helped students create student centered activites and self discoveries. These activities are used as pre-lessons, reviews, or even data collection activites. From atomic mass to Zeff, come prepared to play cards.

TAKEAWAYS:
Ideas on how to incorporate card sorts into lesson for pre, post and in lesson activites.

SPEAKERS:
Chris Coker

Charting Health: Developing Data Literacy Through Public Health Investigations

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
C McDowell_HDW Ambassador Anaheim Slides.pdf
C_McDowell_Health DataWell Stand Alone Lesson Teaching Slides.pdf
C_McDowell_Revised HDW air pollution 2026 Student Guide.pdf
CDC Data Explorer Activity_Final Version.pdf
HDW Ambassador Anaheim Slides -Jentry Yard
Developing Data Literacy Through Public Health Investigations in the Biotechnology Classroom
Palmer Slide Deck
R.Palmer HDW Ambassador Anaheim Slide Template - Make a Copy.pptx

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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Robert Palmer, Jentry Yard, Crystal McDowell

Closing the gap: Research-Driven Curriculum to Broaden Participation in Physics

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Closing the gap -STEP UP Presentation

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Physics continues to lag behind other sciences in student enrollment, with persistent underrepresentation of women and other marginalized groups. Yet there are ways teachers can help disrupt and change this trend by applying practical, evidence-based strategies in the classroom. This session introduces the STEP UP curriculum—research-based lessons designed to shift classroom culture and inspire students to pursue physics. Participants will engage with two cornerstone lessons: Careers in Physics, which showcases diverse and rewarding career paths with a physics degree, and Women in Physics, which addresses the roots of gender bias while equipping teachers with strategies to counter it. Through interactive activities, attendees will experience the lessons from a student perspective, then reflect on practical approaches for classroom integration. All STEP UP resources are freely available, teacher-friendly, and developed by the American Physical Society in collaboration with educators.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with ready-to-use strategies for STEP UP’s evidence-based lessons, full access to digital resources, and a supportive national teacher network to help you make your physics classroom more welcoming and inclusive, and encourage more students to consider taking physics courses.

SPEAKERS:
Pooja Gupta

Code Meets Curiosity: Using Computational Thinking to Drive STEM Learning

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A


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As STEM learning becomes increasingly data-driven, educators need accessible ways to integrate computational thinking into inquiry-based instruction. This session demonstrates how decomposition, pattern recognition, abstraction, and algorithms can deepen student understanding of STEM concepts. Participants will explore how real-world STEM phenomena can be reframed as computational problems through examples such as population growth, heat transfer, and flood-risk modeling. Using guided, hands-on activities, educators will outline computational solutions and modify simple starter code to observe how variable changes affect outcomes. Emphasis is placed on creativity, sense-making, and student agency rather than step-by-step labs. Designed for grades 6–12 STEM educators, this session highlights low-barrier tools, beginner-friendly scaffolds, and NGSS-aligned strategies that build confidence in integrating computational thinking into STEM instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how computational thinking and coding can deepen STEM inquiry. This interactive session transforms STEM phenomena into computational challenges that promote creativity, modeling, and problem solving. A laptop is strongly recommended for hands-on activities - no prior coding experience required

SPEAKERS:
Carla Neely, Tiffany Jones

Creating Emotionally Safe Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Creating Emotionally Safe Classrooms for Everyone

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This session focuses on creating an emotionally safe and inclusive learning environment where every student can thrive. We will explore practical strategies to help students develop self-awareness, advocate for their needs, and build strong relationships. Key areas include: * Emotional Regulation: Learn to model expression through reflection, art, and discovery. * Communication & Self-Advocacy: The session will introduce activities that build self-confidence and teach students how to identify their needs, understand available resources, and communicate assertively. * Building Connections & Community: We will explore strategies for fostering peer relationships and leadership, including positive reinforcement, group activities, and mentor support. We will also discuss the importance of listening, understanding different perspectives, and ensuring every student feels seen and heard.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn to create a classroom where every student feels seen and heard. This workshop will provide you with skills to listen, understand different perspectives, and build stronger relationships, fostering a sense of belonging for academic and emotional success.

SPEAKERS:
Caitlin Quinn, Amy Couch

Data Science in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H


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NSTA is bringing forth to publication three special issues around data science in the science classroom. Special issues will be in Science & Children, Science Scope, and The Science Teacher. With the special issues coming out in January 2026, the editors believe a special session focusing on the trends on data science in the science classroom is warranted. This special session will bring together authors, editors, and teachers to discuss the ways we can move towards rich data science education across the K-12 science learning community.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will support attendees in integrating data science into their science classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Jonah Firestone

Elevating Academic Vocabulary Learning Through Structured Conversations and Visuals

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5


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In this session, participants will discover how integrating structured conversations around visuals can significantly enhance their students' academic language development. By engaging with thoughtfully designed visuals, educators can foster an environment where students actively participate and articulate their understanding, leading to deeper learning outcomes. Also, attendees will take part in an interactive lesson simulation that models these strategies in action. This hands-on experience will provide insight into how visuals can be effectively paired with discussion to ignite curiosity and promote equitable participation. In addition, participants will also gain access to free, high-quality resources tailored to support classroom implementation. These resources are designed to seamlessly integrate into various subjects and grade levels, empowering teachers to craft language-rich lessons that inspire students and build confidence in their academic language abilities.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session, participants will discover how integrating structured conversations around visuals can significantly enhance their students' academic language development while ensuring equity and active participation.

SPEAKERS:
Isaac Marquez

Empowering Multilingual Learners in the Science Classroom: Vocabulary Strategies Enhanced by Technology

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Empowering MLs in the Science Classroom

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Are you looking for innovative ways to engage multilingual learners in your science classroom? Do you need effective strategies to build academic vocabulary while fostering student voice and participation? Join us for an interactive, hands-on session designed to equip educators with a toolkit of literacy strategies tailored to support multilingual learners in science. Each strategy will be paired with a dynamic tech tool that enhances engagement and deepens content understanding. Participants will experience these strategies from the student perspective, gaining insight into how they can be seamlessly integrated into instruction. During the session, educators will explore research-based vocabulary-building techniques that support reading, writing, and speaking in science, discover tech tools that amplify student voice and scaffold language development, and engage in modeling and collaborative practice to experience the strategies firsthand.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of the session, participants will leave with a ready-to-use collection of strategies and digital tools that promote science literacy, increase classroom engagement, and empower multilingual learners to thrive.

SPEAKERS:
Kenya Miles, Sharon Bicey

Empowering Students to Ask Better Questions: A Guide to the Question Formulation Technique & Driving Question Boards

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Digital Resource Collection
This Digital Resource Collections contains all of the handouts used during the session along with other resources that were shared.

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This hands-on, immersive experience is designed to help educators deepen their understanding of an effective and practical strategy to support students with the Science and Engineering Practice of Asking Questions called the Question Formulation Technique (QFT), a method that teaches students to generate and refine their own questions, fostering critical thinking and enhancing phenomena-based learning. Participants will observe a phenomenon from a OpenSciEd Middle School Lesson, collaborate in a small group utilizing intentional discourse structures, to revise and develop testable questions for the causes of the phenomenon. Resources include an OpenSciEd Lesson, a structured, collaborative questioning form for engaging students with the QFT, guidance and question stems for helping students revise questions, student discourse table structures, and sentence stems for support with developing a whole class Driving Question Board (DQB).

TAKEAWAYS:
In this hands-on experience, educators will discover how to utilize an effective instructional strategy, the Question Formulation Technique (QFT), to customize OpenSciEd lessons and support students with developing testable questions related to a phenomena for a Driving Question Board (DQB).

SPEAKERS:
Sara Torres, Rebecca Garelli

Engaging Every Learner: Equitable Strategies for High School Science Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Engaging Every Learner Resource Folder

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When students are given authentic opportunities to act as scientists, science becomes relevant, engaging, and meaningful. This session explores how phenomena, practices, students, and science ideas can be integrated into lessons and assessments to create equitable opportunities across diverse classrooms. Presenters will share strategies that align with the Framework for K–12 Science Education, Georgia Standards of Excellence, and NGSS Science and Engineering Practices. Lessons will show how small adjustments—such as offering open-ended inquiry or added scaffolding—can make the same activity accessible to gifted, general education, and co-taught classes. Equity will be emphasized through culturally relevant pedagogy, scaffolding, and differentiation so all students have an entry point. Classroom examples from Biology, including Protein Synthesis, Evolution, and Ecology, will anchor the discussion. Participants will leave with adaptable strategies and tools to support all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover strategies to equitably engage gifted, general ed, and inclusive classrooms. See classroom examples of student work and assessments that show learning in action. Leave with tools and frameworks to adapt these strategies for your own teaching.

SPEAKERS:
Madison Shelton, Holly Lewis

Engineering for All: Powerful Ways to Make Engineering Accessible, Meaningful, and Fun!

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D


Show Details

Discover how to make engineering accessible for all students. Learn powerful strategies to integrate engineering into your curriculum without taking extra time, making it fun and relevant. Walk away with practical tools to ensure every student can participate in meaningful engineering experiences!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore the Van Andel Insitute's model of engineering design and learn strategies to make engineering more integrated and accessible to students. Teachers will walk away with lesson ideas and resources to bring engineering concepts (aligned with NGSS) into the classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Dawn McCotter

Extending STEM Learning with Action-Oriented Pedagogies and Xplorlabs Resources

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Workshop Slideshow
PDF version of the complete "Extending STEM Learning with Action-Oriented Pedagogies and Xplorlabs Resources" workshop.
Xplorlabs
Website hosting resources featured during the workshop.

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Facilitate sensemaking and increase content relevance with safety and sustainability problems! Join us as we present (1) Xplorlabs, a free online platform from UL Research Institutes that explores modern-day science phenomena through a safety science lens; and (2) Action-Oriented Pedagogies (AOP; Weinberg et al., 2024), an instructional framework that pairs coursework with community impact, providing meaningful contexts for all students to transform their ideas and learnings into action. During this session, you will engage with Xplorlabs resources from a student perspective, then discuss how they can be combined with AOP to support student use of science and engineering knowledge and practices to address real-world problems. This conversation will be supported by exemplary work from real teachers who position youth as changemakers in their local communities. When you leave, you’ll be ready to support your own students’ action towards safer and more sustainable futures!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will discover resources to support students’ application of knowledge and use of science and engineering skills, as well as ways to leverage Action-Oriented Pedagogies for student action that extends learning beyond the classroom and addresses local safety and sustainability challenges.

SPEAKERS:
Catherine Robinson, Elliot Hall, Ruben Carroll, Sarah Suloff

From Faucet to Classroom: Cross-Curricular Project-Based Learning on Water Quality and Public Health

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 12:10 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 211 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
3CK Slides.pdf
https://www.cleanwaterforuskids.org/en/carolina/curriculum/

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Exposure to lead has lifelong health impacts, especially for children who are most vulnerable. North Carolina’s Clean Classrooms for Carolina Kids™ program provides an authentic context for student learning as schools test water for lead and address environmental health hazards. In this workshop, participants will step into a middle school project-based learning unit where students investigate three real-world case studies of lead exposure, analyze data to uncover causes and impacts, and apply cross-curricular skills in science, math, social studies, and ELA. Acting as scientists and engineers, students engage in sensemaking by leveraging the science and engineering practices in the context of a real-world phenomena culminating with students designing informational materials for various audiences that propose actions for safer communities. Participants will experience portions of the unit from a student perspective and leave with adaptable resources to integrate environmental health into engaging, standards-aligned instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how a cross-curricular PBL unit empowers middle school students to investigate lead exposure, analyze real data, and advocate for safer communities through evidence-based action.

SPEAKERS:
Nicole Mills

Help!  How Do I Support All the Different Students in My Classroom?

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
http://bit.ly/4vzCH39
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1DQ0wDfu2kHkEERHaWU191IlWg8a_SsfXCZWCiP10qtM/edit?usp=sharing

Show Details

Take away strategies and ideas to help reach all students in your classroom. The strategies shared are used in a middle school classroom using a storyline approach with little to no special education support. We will discuss and share how to use manipulatives, video, voice to text, audio, websites, and more to enhance and support all students in your classroom. Walk away with many ideas you could use next week!

TAKEAWAYS:
One main takeaway will be the accommodations and supports that can be created with a little effort that will help most students in your classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Kirsten Smith

How to assess without points

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
EXAMPLE - Feedback Checklist
This is an example of a Summative Assessment Feedback Checklist used with students. It is connected to the Planet Definition Summative Assessment so you can see how the checklist is aligned with the assessment.
EXAMPLE - Summative Assessment
This is the Planet Definition Summative Assessment that is aligned to the example Feedback Checklist.
Feedback Checklist - Generic.docx
This is a blank Summative Assessment Feedback Checklist that can be edited and adapted to any assessment.
Grading Without Points NSTA Conference April 2026.pptx
This is the PowerPoint presentation used during this session. There are a few "hidden" slides at the end with a few extra tips around Learning Progressions and using the 4-point scale. NOTE: Some slides have overlapping images because of animations and are easier to view in presentation mode.
Learning Progression Student Reflection Sheet - connect each level
This is a reflection sheet for students to use after doing corrections on their individual assignment. This version of the reflection sheet has students make connections between each level of the Learning Progression and the concepts in the assignment they have just created.
Learning Progression Student Reflection Sheet - write a sentence
This is a reflection sheet for students to use after doing corrections on their individual assignment. This version of the reflection sheet has students write a sentence explaining something they learned from the assignment, and then use the Learning Progression to determine the level of their sentence.

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How do we get students to focus more on the learning and less on the grade? The traditional points system makes this challenging. In this session, learn how to use Learning Progressions to assess student learning without points, including how to help students self-assess their own learning throughout a unit. This session will provide concrete examples, templates, and organizational systems currently being used in high school Biology & Astronomy classes (though this can be applied to other subject areas as well). Come get ideas for moving away from a points-based, grade-focused system and refocus students on the content and skills they are learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use Learning Progressions to assess student learning without points or percentages.

SPEAKERS:
J. Palmer

Igniting Curiosity NASA HEAT Heliophysics Labs

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building


Show Details

Bring the Sun into your classroom with this interactive session featuring NASA’s Heliophysics Education Activation Team (HEAT) resources. Participants will explore NGSS-aligned, hands on labs covering measurement and estimation, mechanics, light and optics, magnetism, and eclipses. These activities make complex solar science and heliophysics concepts accessible for middle school learners while providing pathways to scale up for high school and college classrooms. The session highlights how students can build critical STEM skills through data collection, modeling, and problem solving, while connecting heliophysics to real world applications such as space weather, energy, and technology. Educators will leave with classroom ready lessons, instructional strategies, and access to free NASA resources that inspire curiosity, foster sensemaking, and prepare students for future STEM opportunities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use NASA HEAT heliophysics resources and hands on labs on mechanics, light, magnetism, and eclipses that can be scaled from middle school to college, building STEM skills and connecting science to real world applications.

SPEAKERS:
Rodrigo Castillo Vasquez, Linh Ho

Instructional Practices for Engaging With Societal Challenges in STEM

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Instructional Practices Resource Folder
Instructional Practices Slides

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Our team has been developing and piloting an integrated STEM unit in which middle school students address the societal challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic. To foster a learning environment where all students critically engage with societal challenges, we have found certain instructional practices particularly effective. In this session, two middle school science teachers of multilingual learners highlight these practices: (a) mind-mapping, (b) fishbowl discussions, and (c) an annotation system for handouts. Each practice is modeled in the context of our integrated STEM unit in which students unpack the disproportionate negative outcomes of COVID-19 on marginalized communities. The teachers describe these practices through classroom examples and provide suggestions for classroom integration.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how instructional practices such as mind-mapping, fishbowl discussions, and annotated handouts foster a learning environment where all students, and especially multilingual learners, critically engage with societal challenges.

SPEAKERS:
Stephen Kos, Alison Haas, Abigail Schwenger

It Takes A Village: Bringing Multicultural Funds of Knowledge into the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3


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This session will present theoretical viewpoints and research, including the federally-funded M2-Si grant, that illuminate the value within funds of knowledge and how those perspectives lead to higher quality science. Researchers will share how their rigorous revision process infused students’ assets and families’ funds of knowledge into formative assessment activities. They will grant access to formative assessments and other materials for the science classroom that bolster students’ assets and involve their families along with preliminary findings. They will walk attendees through strategies that engage students’ voices and experiences, assessment materials and activities that can be shared with families, and resources to support bringing funds of knowledge into the science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about the Multilingual Multimodal Science Inventory (M2-Si) grant and research-backed findings. Researchers will share formative assessment activities, a modified task screener, and a family engagement template. Attendees will also leave with strategies and resources.

SPEAKERS:
Brittany York

Materials at Work: Making Sense of Science through Engineering Design

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4


Show Details

Are your students busy building and designing, but not quite connecting their projects to core scientific concepts? Engineering design is more than hands-on fun; it’s a powerful tool for linking abstract learning to real-world applications. When students work with physical materials, they test ideas, discover new solutions, and deepen their grasp of scientific principles. In this interactive session, you’ll take part in an engineering design challenge that spotlights how different materials shape students’ learning experiences. Discover practical strategies to help your students make sense of science through hands-on designing, problem-solving, and real classroom connections.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will engage in an activity that emphasizes the importance of selecting the right materials to facilitate sensemaking, leaving with ideas on how to incorporate this approach into their own engineering design instruction.

SPEAKERS:
Briana Trager

MFLOW - Coding Sound and Music Compositions for Elementary Students

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6


Show Details

Music and computer science are highly connected. In fact, most of the popular music we hear now has been created with computers. To engage young children (and teachers!) In programming, we have created MFLOW, a web-based computer programming platform that makes it extremely easy to play with sounds and create sound compositions while learning the basics of programming. MFLOW has an associated curriculum created at UCSD, in collaboration with the Chula Vista Elementary School District, and aligned with the Computer Science Standards. It is super engaging and easy to learn by children as young as fourth grade, and by teachers with no previous experience in programming. In this workshop, participants will learn how to code with MFLOW to create sound compositions through chains, loops, and the manipulation of sounds. Additionally, participants will learn how to launch an engineering design challenge with their own students to code sound compositions that represent different emotions for u

TAKEAWAYS:
You will learn how to use MFLOW to sound engineer and code your own sound or music composition. Also, you will learn how to engage your students with coding through engineering design challenges.

SPEAKERS:
Alec Barron

Modelling the Big Bang: Bringing Abstract Ideas Down to Earth

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Modelling the Big Bang Bringing Abstract Ideas Down to Earth

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The Big Bang Theory of universe expansion and the evidence that supports it are among the most abstract concepts that we ask our students to learn, but actively modelling these ideas can make them accessible. In this workshop, we will take you through a basic learning sequence (focused on HS-ESS 1-2 and SEP 2) that explains universe expansion using modelling. The final model will demonstrate the process of universe expansion as well as show supporting evidence for the Big Bang Theory (redshift, CMBR, and H/He ratio), but it will not look anything like the real universe!. The steps involved in making our model are just as important as the end model itself and anyone can use the ideas presented in this workshop to design uniquely active models of abstract ideas in any subject. This learning sequence is written for a freshman stand-alone Earth & Space Science class, but can also be delivered as written to any class of high school students studying the origins of the physical universe.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to bring abstract ideas (such as the Big Bang Theory) down to Earth through modelling. The act of creating our model mimics the basic steps of the Big Bang Theory and our final product demonstrates the Big Bang evidence written in HS-ESS 1-2.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Libke

NARST: STEM for a Just World - Reframing Science Teaching

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 211 A


Show Details

In this session, educators will learn how to connect STEM concepts to real community issues their students care about. The session will explore a sample local issue and introduce activities such as the Justice Scale, Four Corners, and Jigsaw to engage students in exploring the issue by analyzing sources and engaging in evidence-based argumentation. We will share a research-based framework that blends social justice with socioscientific issues and aligns with NGSS practices and make the case that teaching with the goal of understanding and resolving with real-world, community-based issues develops students as critical thinkers, problem-solvers, and responsible citizens. Educators will leave this session ready to use lesson templates, activities, and classroom routines to effectively modify their existing curriculum to integrate local issues into their STEM teaching.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will help educators integrate real-world social justice issues into their STEM teaching. Attendees will leave with ideas to evaluate, plan, and modify existing curricular resources, incorporating pedagogical methods like multiple perspectives, STEM modeling, and scientific skepticism.

SPEAKERS:
Lisa Marco-Bujosa, Becky Mathers

NMLSTA: Using a free graphing tool from AMNH to make sense of weather and climate data

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Documents for Weather/Climate Graphing Tool (NSTA 2026)
This folder contains all the documents distributed at NSTA in Anaheim (2026) for the session Free Weather/Climate Graphing Tool
Using a Web-Based Graphing Tool to: Analyze and Interpret Weather and Climate

Show Details

This session is about learning to analyze and interpret weather and climate data using a custom designed graphing tool that simplifies visualizing and analyzing data. It includes time scales of hours, days and weeks (for weather) to decades and centuries (for climate). A large range of parameters or measurements are available for visual display using the tool, including humidity, wind, temperature, and precipitation. Participants will investigate relationships between variables such as barometric pressure and precipitation, using data from a wide range of geographical stations in the United States. Selected stations represent sites with contrasting latitudes, altitudes, proximity to water bodies, and other elements, in order to best study the effect of these variables on weather and climate. The session will analyze data to look for patterns of change over time and to investigate regional patterns and region-specific effects of climate change.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore weather and climate data through an online graphing tool that simplifies data visualization so students can focus on analysis and interpretation. Local and National data at http://uanyc.science/pwc

SPEAKERS:
Jasmina Nikolov, Rachelle Travis

OSE Teacher Training: Best Practices for Success: Scientist's Circles

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
3-Discussion-Types-OpenSciEd-1.pdf
ANA26_OSE TT_ Scientist's Circle.pdf
Classroom Norms_Blank.pdf
Communicating-in-Scientific-Ways-Poster-August-2020.pdf
Scientist Circle In Action_ Observation Worksheet.pdf
Scientist Circle Planning Form .pdf

Show Details

Discover how to make Scientists Circle a powerful routine for student thinking, discussion, and sensemaking in this session led by an NSTA expert facilitator. Participants will explore the purpose and structure of Scientists Circle, learn best practices for leading productive student talk, and develop strategies for establishing norms and roles that support meaningful participation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave equipped to facilitate Scientists Circle effectively, fostering productive student discussions and meaningful engagement in science sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Ann Guglielmo, Zoe Evans

Phenomenal Science Notebooking: Putting the Interaction into Interactive Notebooks

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Handouts.pdf

Show Details

Make student thinking come to life with notebooks! No more cutting and gluing! Ditch the worksheets and get students owning their work. Increase the rigor of student work—learn new strategies for organizing content and how to use templates for any science class. This is notebooking like you have never seen before! Take home many current NGSS classroom examples to get you started. This session is for 6-12 grade teachers.

TAKEAWAYS:
Notebooking in science should focus on sense-making and creating ownership of the work. Moving away from worksheets and discovering-1.) The how and why of science notebooks; 2.) How to engage ALL students in science; and 3.) Templates scaffold student learning for success.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Weibert

PhET Beyond the Worksheet: Using PhET for Student Inquiry and Discussion

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


Show Details

Are you ready to take PhET Simulations in your classroom to the next level? In this session, PhET Fellow Vanessa Wentzloff will take you through a workshop to explore how to use PhET as a tool for whole-class inquiry and discussion. PhET is used by many educators in a worksheet format for students to learn or practice a topic. But PhET transforms your inquiry-based classroom by utilizing simulations as phenomena to spark student discussion. This is a powerful way for students to get the most out of the simulations. In this session, participants will immerse themselves as students in an inquiry-based classroom and then jump into creating their own whole-class inquiry for their classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will be able to experience and plan a whole-class PhET inquiry activity through guidance and resources.

Playing with Newton's Laws

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Playing with Newton's Laws Digital Files
This is a Google Drive folder containing digital files of all presented materials as well as supplemental or associated materials mentioned during the presentation.

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Bring Jenga, Bounce-off, Ker-Plunk, and other kinetic games into the classroom for use as a phenomena-based assessment of Forces, Energy, or Newton's Laws of Motion (MS-PS2&3). Engaging and rigorous assessment through observing, writing, diagraming, and modeling of moving objects. Lessons and assessment frameworks provide opportunities for student differentiation through the addition of technology to collect data or to demonstrate understanding (video explanations made for class: YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, etc.)

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will receive lesson or assessment frameworks for using a wide-variety of kinetic and dexterity tabletop games to describe relative motion, forces that cause motion, energy transfer, or Newton's Laws. Attendees will also discuss opportunities for differentiation and cross cutting concepts.

SPEAKERS:
Christopher Skinner

Questioning with Purpose: Facilitating Sensemaking Discussions in OpenSciEd

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Landing Page w/ Resources
Session Slide Deck

Show Details

Both students and teachers play a critical role during sensemaking in the science classroom. In this session, we will explore the three types of sensemaking discussions used in the OpenSciEd curriculum. The GEMS-Net project from the University of Rhode Island’s College of Education will guide participants through classroom video analysis and share our experiences supporting the implementation of OpenSciEd in grades 6-8. Join us for this interactive session as we utilize practical tools to enhance our listening and questioning skills. Walk away with ideas you can use right away—whether you’re already using high-quality curriculum materials or preparing to bring them into your classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain a deeper understanding of the three types of sense-making discussions used in OpenSciEd and the critical roles of both students and teachers during these discussions. Participants will explore tools to help teachers strengthen their listening and questioning skills.

SPEAKERS:
Catherine Kocak, Stacy Gale, Zachary Orefice

Re-Engagement Strategies to Enhance Students' Scientific Understanding

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Slides Presentation
See the link for the slides that will be used. Resources etc. are linked within the slides

Show Details

Re-engagement strategies serve the purpose to support students after a formative progress checkpoint. The goal of these strategies is to answer the questions of "How will we respond when students do not learn?" and "How will we extend learning to those who are already proficient?" In this session I will share the types of re-engagement strategies that I have developed over my time as a Disciplinary Literacy TOSA and piloted in my High School Chemistry and Physics classes. These interactive strategies will be showcased within the context of several lessons where I utilize universal supports, administer 3-Dimensional formative assessments, and then re-engage students to deepen their understanding of both the science content and skills. Participants will walk away with a list of instructional routines to use in their own classrooms and a better understanding of how to use these strategies to re-engage students after completing an assessment.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session attendees will learn about the importance of re-engagement strategies and walk away with specific strategies and lessons to fill in missing conceptual understanding, raise cognitive demands, and improve students' scientific literacy.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel Stein Meisner

Rosalind Franklin and DNA - Searching for the Real Story

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Book Review - the Dark Lady of DNA
DH - Essay Homework
Francis Crick Letter to Son
Franklin-Presentation SLides
NATURE article on Franklin
Watson Crick 1953 paper

Show Details

The story of the double helix is standard fare but is usually told in a cursory and superficial way. The actual story, however, can be brought into the classroom in a way that excites students and shows the scientific process, warts and all, in a manner that promotes equity, inclusion, & science. I will describe how clues to DNA’s structure were developed over several decades and how they came together over six remarkable months in 1952 and 1953. I will focus on new research regarding Franklin’s role in the discovery and will examine how the race for the double helix fits into our usual understanding of the scientific process. I will also examine how this remarkable story can be brought into the biology classroom in a way that energizes students and provides them with a more realistic understanding of the human side of scientific discovery.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be presented with a realistic narrative that departs from the usual step-by-step version of the scientific method, addressing what this work and the reaction to it illuminates about the role of women in science and ethical values in research.

SPEAKERS:
Kenneth Miller

Science Note-Taking Strategies that Build Sense-making and Literacy

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building


Show Details

Reimagine science note-taking as a tool for sense-making, not transcription. In this session, participants will explore interactive strategies, including input/Output pages, guided note-taking, visual models, and scaffolded prompts, that deepen students' ownership of learning. Rooted in NGSS and research on literacy practices, these approaches elevate student ideas, support multilingual and neurodiverse learners, and make complex concepts accessible. Educators will analyze classroom note-taking components, practice applying note-taking strategies to content, and design a process applicable to their own lesson sequences that integrates disciplinary core ideas with student voice. Participants will leave with practical tools, templates, and strategies to transform note-taking into a pathway for science literacy and critical thinking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience hands-on science note-taking strategies using Input/Output practices and analyze how note-taking fosters rigor, literacy, and ownership of science ideas.

SPEAKERS:
Henri Shimojyo

Science Studio as a catalyst for instructional transformation

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Student notebook for session.docx

Show Details

Leading educators in Science Studio can act as a catalyst for instructional transformation. Participation in Science Studio can deepen teachers’ understanding of science content and pedagogy while ensuring that all students—regardless of background—can access, engage with, and succeed in rigorous science learning. The features of Science Studio include Collaborative professional learning, Focus on high-quality, standards-aligned instruction, Equity and student access, and Reflection, leadership and capacity building. In this session, participants will engage with a 4-part science studio course that covers how the core practices of developing and using models, summary tables, accountable and productive student talk change how science looks and sounds in the classroom and how a variety of sense-making activities can be used to explore and explain a phenomenon. The course will be shared with participants; it can be adapted to meet their school or district needs.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers learn how a series of four professional development sessions in Science Studio can build deeper science content understanding and pedagogical skills in their classroom and across their school community.

SPEAKERS:
Annette Venegas

Science Versus Engineering: A Symbiotic Approach to STEM Education

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B


Show Details

This interactive workshop will equip teachers with strategies to integrate how scientific discovery fuels engineering innovation and vice-versa. Participants will engage in an engineering task that is aligned to the V-model of system engineering. We will then unpack that task by diving into how to design and assess engineering tasks in the classroom. By fostering a classroom culture that celebrates both inquiry and application, we can empower the next generation of innovators.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk away with the tools to take any student project and turn it into an engineering task that is easy to assess. This method is so simple any project can be turned into an engineering project.

SPEAKERS:
Leah Ward, Becky McKinney

Supporting Multilingual Learners’ Data Literacy: Leveraging Students’ Language Assets during Data Investigations

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 A, North Building


Show Details

Explore how multilingual learners' (MLLs) linguistic and cultural assets can strengthen data literacy instruction. Through hands-on data investigations and pedagogical reflection, participants will learn to design equitable data analysis experiences that leverage MLLs' full multimodal repertoires for scientific sensemaking. Participants will first engage as learners in data-rich activities featuring explicit scaffolds that support MLLs in analyzing, visualizing, and interpreting scientific data. These activities model how translanguaging, visual representations, and collaborative discourse structures can make complex data accessible while honoring students' linguistic diversity. After experiencing these supports firsthand, participants will examine the pedagogical principles behind effective data literacy instruction for MLLs and work collaboratively in small groups to modify existing data analysis tasks to incorporate in their own classrooms with their students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn research-based strategies for supporting MLLs in data analysis and interpretation by leveraging translanguaging, multimodal representations, and collaborative structures that position linguistic diversity as an asset for deeper scientific data literacy and collective sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Nico Janik, Karen Lionberger

Teaching with Modeling: From Daily Practice to Year-End Portfolios

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


Show Details

Modeling is a core practice of science and one of the most powerful tools for student sensemaking and systems thinking. In this interactive workshop, participants will engage in the modeling process as learners: starting with a phenomenon, generating questions, building flowcharts, connecting visuals to real-world systems, and co-creating models that evolve. You'll explore how students use models to make thinking visible, revise ideas through peer feedback, and build understanding across a unit. You’ll also learn how to modify a classroom-ready modeling template, pair it with phenomena of your choice, and use a model tracker across units to help students reflect on and revise their thinking. By the end of the year, students compile a portfolio that celebrates not just mastery, but growth, curiosity, and the evolving nature of scientific thinking. Walk away with practical tools to make modeling meaningful, collaborative, and fun.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to implement and adapt a classroom-ready modeling template, design phenomena-driven lessons, and use model trackers to build student portfolios that showcase sensemaking, systems thinking, and growth throughout the year.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Doran

Thinking About Thinking: Addressing Cognitive Bias in Science Education

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1lM6G_7Pn84GKqJc0tgT_sDnn9rIakXOVu8R_pk7RR6M/edit?usp=sharing

Show Details

Why do students hold on to misconceptions about scientific ideas even after instruction? Research in psychology reveals that cognitive biases—such as confirmation bias, anchoring, and availability bias—shape how people interpret evidence and make decisions. These biases influence not only our students but also us as educators. This interactive session examines how cognitive biases interfere with scientific reasoning and persistence of misconceptions. Participants will engage in activities to uncover their own biases, then explore classroom strategies that guide learners toward evidence-based reasoning. Emphasis will be placed on fostering critical thinking and metacognitive reflection to strengthen students’ ability to evaluate claims, question assumptions, and apply scientific practices with greater accuracy. Educators will leave with practical techniques to help students identify bias, challenge flawed reasoning, and build habits of mind essential for science literacy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Cognitive biases shape how students (and teachers) interpret evidence, often reinforcing misconceptions. By engaging in bias-awareness activities and embedding metacognitive reflection, educators can equip students to think more critically, evaluate claims, and reason scientifically.

SPEAKERS:
Chelsea Robertson, Cheryl Robertson

Using Elementary Students’ Questions to Motivate their Science Learning through Storylines

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides and Handouts

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In the storyline instructional approach, elementary students draw on their questions, interests, and identities to make sense of real-world phenomena and explore solutions to problems. Students see their science work as figuring out questions and problems their classroom has identified rather than learning about something their teacher asks them to learn. In this session, you will experience the process of developing questions from an anchoring phenomenon and explore videos of elementary students making progress through investigation and sensemaking discussions to develop the target science ideas and practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore how to work with students’ ideas and questions through classroom discourse, establishing a meaningful context that provides a reason to figure out science ideas and enables students to connect what they learn to what they and their communities care about.

SPEAKERS:
Brian Reiser, Gail Housman

Writing CERs by Doing ECRs: Empowering Students’ Sensemaking & Building Better Claims from Data

Friday, April 17 • 10:40 AM - 11:40 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Resource Document
Access the shared Resource Document for this and other sessions from NSELA & NSTA 2026 for links to related resources, slides, and other opportunities.

Show Details

Join this interactive workshop to explore classroom-tested strategies that help students construct stronger arguments from data by shifting from Claim–Evidence–Reasoning (CER) to Evidence–Claim–Reasoning (ECR). Research and classroom practice show that starting with evidence fosters deeper data exploration, reduces confirmation bias, and strengthens reasoning. Many students can match evidence to a pre-given claim but struggle to independently generate defensible claims. We’ll practice guiding students in making sense of and constructing explanations from data (SEP4, 6, and 7). We will work with classroom-ready real-world datasets, student work and state testing examples; try out scaffolding techniques for diverse learners; and consider what strategies to use in your classroom. Leave with practical, equity-focused tools to build all students’ confidence in data-driven reasoning, argumentation, and science sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with deeper knowledge of why and how to lead with Evidence, rather than the Claim, when supporting students in data-driven reasoning, argumentation, and science sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Annette Brickley, Kristin Hunter-Thomson

Adapting Curriculum to Support YOUR Students' Sensemaking Opportunities

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 34


Show Details

In this poster session, teachers will learn about a free, publicly available tool (see https://www.nextgenaset.org/ngss/aset-toolkit) that they can use to "beef up" their students' sensemaking opportunities. The poster will provide concrete examples (including student work) of how these tools were used to achieve this goal with a middle school unit on chemical reactions. The tools are differentiated by grade band, so all teachers, K-12 teachers are invited to attend.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session gives K-12 teachers the tools and guidance to engage your students in powerful sensemaking opportunities, even if your curriculum doesn't.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Ricketts

Aminole: An Interactive Word Game for Learning Biochemistry

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 42


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There are limited resources to aid students in learning challenging concepts in higher education. The lack of educational tool development may originate from assumptions that gamification of learning is elementary at this level or does not convey the rigor of the material to be learned. A course critical for the majority of STEM majors is biochemistry, which often lacks engaging learning resources. One of the fundamental concepts in biochemistry is learning the twenty common amino acids. Inspired by the popular New York Times word game, our team has developed an online gamification tool for the purpose of aiding students in learning the twenty amino acids. Using our program, Aminole, students are provided a way to improve their recall of amino acids in an engaging and repetitive way. Currently, the application is being piloted in large lecture introductory biochemistry courses. The long-term goal of this work is to make this tool a widely available resource for college students.

TAKEAWAYS:
We have developed a fun and interactive game to aid students in learning biochemistry concepts through repetition. While this game is specifically designed for biochemistry, the goal is to spark conversations and ideas on development of similar tools for students in higher education.

SPEAKERS:
Janie McDonald, Sydney Kaminsky, Cooper Gill, Heidi Anderson, Davis Katz

Beyond the Beaker: Bringing Fun, Choice, and Ownership to the Chemistry Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 45


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This poster will showcase practical ways to make chemistry more engaging, accessible, and memorable by integrating student choice, gamified learning, and creative activities into daily instruction. The focus is on increasing motivation, conceptual understanding, and classroom community by inviting students to take an active role in shaping their learning experiences. Participants will see examples of how these approaches have been used to boost participation and collaboration in real classrooms with real student feedback (without requiring extensive prep time or expensive materials). Each activity aligns with NGSS science practices and can be easily adapted for a range of high school chemistry courses.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will walk away with ready-to-use ideas and full access to a shared Google Drive folder containing templates, printable game materials, digital activity links, and resources they can immediately bring back to their classrooms to make chemistry learning more engaging.

SPEAKERS:
Cassie Herndon

"Beyond the Lab: How SEL Strategies Fuel Deeper Learning in the Science Classroom"

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 10


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This poster explores the powerful intersection of Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) and science instruction, demonstrating how SEL strategies can deepen student engagement, improve collaboration, and drive meaningful scientific inquiry. By incorporating practices such as goal-setting, self-reflection, peer dialogue, and emotional awareness, science educators can create classrooms where students feel safe to ask questions, take intellectual risks, and persist through challenges. Attendees will discover: Practical examples of SEL-aligned science activities Classroom-tested strategies to foster student agency and resilience How SEL can support scientific practices outlined in the NGSS Evidence of improved academic and social outcomes when SEL is embedded in science instruction This session is ideal for educators, instructional coaches, and curriculum designers looking to create more inclusive, emotionally intelligent science classrooms where all students can thrive.

TAKEAWAYS:
Integrating SEL strategies into science instruction creates a more supportive and engaging learning environment, empowering students to think critically, collaborate effectively, and persist through scientific challenges.

SPEAKERS:
Kelly Mulligan

Beyond the Lab: Partnering Across Disciplines to Create Career-Connected STEM Experiences

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 78


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Traditional science labs build content knowledge but often fail to connect students to real-world STEM opportunities. This poster session shares practical strategies for transforming labs into interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned projects that deepen engagement and build workforce-ready skills. Drawing on a pilot design and multimedia pathway in an urban high school, we’ll showcase how projects rooted in core science ideas and extended through design, technology, and communication helped students apply three-dimensional learning to authentic challenges such as the Tech Challenge. Attendees will explore before-during-after lesson structures, planning tools, and student artifacts that illustrate how science learning can become meaningful, relevant, and empowering. Participants will leave with ready-to-use templates and strategies to redesign labs as collaborative, career-connected STEM experiences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to transform traditional science labs into interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned projects and leave with ready-to-use planning templates, lesson structures, and strategies for connecting science learning to real-world STEM careers.

SPEAKERS:
Maafi Cook

Blatticomposting - Cockroaches are Amazing

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 66



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Blatticomposting 2026 Poster
The following is a link to the presented Cockroach Composting poster.

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The use of noninvasive insects, order Blattodea, is an excellent way to teach life cycles, biomass, food waste composting, and biophilia. Attendees will be shown the comparison between vermicomposting and blatticomposting. Information on six neotropical species currently being researched/used will be shared. Of the 4,500+ species, 30 are found to be USA pests. The four top species are the American cockroach, German cockroach, Oriental cockroach, and the brown-banded cockroach. None of which should be used. Noninvasive roaches are perfect models for phenomena and science ideas in sensemaking. We are working with Green Banana roaches (Panchlora nivea), Death’s Head roaches (Blaberus craniifer), Ivory Head roaches (Eublaberus distanti), Argentinian Wood roaches (Blaptica dubia) and Madagascar Hissing roaches (Gromphadorhina portentosa). Blatticomposting enclosures are placed in school districts, used to create the state’s ITP test questions, and mentored to interested individuals.

TAKEAWAYS:
An IKEA-like plan, and NGSS-aligned lessons, will be shared to recreate hands-on, noninvasive, blatticomposting enclosures currently being used in K-12 educational settings.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Bechtel

Build Middle School Science Skills & Practices and Understanding in Exploratory, Hands-On, and Rigorous Ways through Food & Cooking

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 55


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Students love labs. Students love food. How can we use both to transform students’ ideas about what “doing science” is and can be ? How can we do so while keeping up rigor and preparing students for more advanced science classes? See how to build foundational science skills & practices, connect science to students’ everyday lives, and leverage students’ unique backgrounds & ideas through food-based phenomena. Hear from teachers in different classrooms across the U.S. to get a taste for what using food-based phenomena can look like with a variety of student populations and needs, and get answers to questions like: How can we draw on students' interests and experiences outside the classroom effectively? How can we encourage student curiosity? What does this look like logistically? What does grading look like?

TAKEAWAYS:
Hear from teachers in different classrooms who have used lessons and units centered around food-based phenomena like tea, syrup, popcorn, salt, bread, pancakes, and more. Learn how this has helped student engagement, understanding of science concepts, and students’ ideas about what science is.

SPEAKERS:
Miriam McMillian, Ashley Vandgrift, Shawn Boggs, Kate Strangfeld

Charting Health: Developing Data Literacy Through Public Health Investigations in a Community HS in San Francisco

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 82



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Eric Lewis HDW Anaheim Conference Poster.pdf

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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Eric Lewis

Data Puzzles: Making Authentic Climate Data Accessible for Teaching and Learning

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 87


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Teachers have expressed a desire to incorporate authentic climate data into their curricula, but struggle to find accessible and meaningful datasets that can be easily integrated into modern teaching practices. In response to this problem, climate scientists and instructional specialists from the University of Colorado Boulder have collaborated to create "Data Puzzles", a free resource that utilizes instructional practices as outlined by Ambitious Science Teaching to engage students in data analysis in the context of important scientific research. Data Puzzles challenge students to analyze and interpret climate datasets to construct explanatory models for important questions like, "What is causing the megadrought in the Colorado River Basin?” and "Why might the Arctic be warming faster than. the rest of the world?".

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be introduced with Ambitious Science Teaching practices and authentic climate datasets in the context of the Data Puzzle resources.

SPEAKERS:
Bridget Walsh

Effect of Road Salt Formulation on Lemna minor Toxicity

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 99


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Freshwater salinization has been an increasing issue as the use of road salts has become more abundant. Many studies focus on the impacts of salinization on aquatic invertebrates and neglect the impacts on aquatic plants. Additionally, less is known how the formulation of the road salts impact the growth of the aquatic plants. The objective of the current study was to evaluate road salt formulations on Lemna minor survival and growth. If freshwater salinization from various road salt formulations impacts L. minor survival and growth, it may not only impact the health of this species but also pose a threat to other freshwater species in aquatic ecosystems that rely on aquatic plants.

TAKEAWAYS:
By looking at how road salts impact freshwater plants, this opens the question as to what else the addition of the road salts may do to the environment. This can connect to the high school setting, as students can get hands-on experience while seeing things that directly impact their environment.

SPEAKERS:
Myah Shier

Engaging Middle School Students in Biomedical Inquiry: The Medical Research Education Project

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 77



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA EfEC Presentation 2026.pptx

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There is a critical shortage of professionals in the healthcare industry due, in part, to the significant toll of the pandemic. This has led to increased efforts to attract people to the field at many levels, the most significant of which is the middle school years. These years have been shown to be a time when students can benefit from a process of building self-awareness and learning about careers. This is the underpinning for Indiana University’s Medical Research Education Project. This poster presentation will provide information about the project and how teachers can get involved. The presenters will also highlight a few hands-on exemplar, inquiry-based lessons that have been co-designed and tested by middle-level teachers, biomedical researchers, and education faculty. Alignment to the Next Generation Science Standards, and links to literature will also be emphasized. This project is funded by the National Institute of Health.

TAKEAWAYS:
The Medical Research Education Project at Indiana University is working with middle level teachers to determine the best ways to teach about medical research generally and cancer research specifically in the hopes of creating the next generation of medical and cancer researchers.

SPEAKERS:
Gayle Buck, Adam Scribner

Enhancing Biochemistry Education Through Movement-Based Learning: Investigating the Bohr Effect Using Personal Health Data

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 3


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Undergraduate students often struggle to connect abstract biochemical concepts with dynamic physiological processes. To address this challenge, we developed Cardio Chemistry: The Human Element, a guided-inquiry biochemistry lab activity in which students collected and analyzed their own physiological data during controlled exercise. Implemented in an upper-level laboratory course at a Primarily Undergraduate Institution, the intervention was evaluated using pre/post assessments, surveys, reflective responses, and exam comparisons. Results showed significant gains in conceptual understanding of the Bohr effect, increased familiarity with physiological metrics (p < 0.001), and higher final exam scores among participants. Student reflections emphasized enhanced engagement and clinical relevance, suggesting that integrating wearable sensors and personal health data into biochemistry instruction fosters interdisciplinary learning and improves knowledge transfer to real-world contexts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how using wearable technology and personal health data in undergraduate labs bridges abstract biochemical concepts with real physiology, leading to measurable gains in comprehension, engagement, and applications of oxygen delivery.

SPEAKERS:
Corey Damon

Enhancing Instructional Readiness: The Role of Pre-Teaching STEM topics and Co-Teaching in Developing Effective Educators

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 53


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This presentation explores an innovative instructional model designed to strengthen the preparedness and confidence of apprentice teachers in STEM classrooms through a dual approach: pre-teaching core math and science concepts and intentional co-teaching with experienced educators. Grounded in adult learning theory and cognitive apprenticeship, the model addresses common gaps in pedagogical content knowledge and classroom readiness often observed in teacher preparation programs. By introducing STEM content to apprentice teachers in advance of their instructional responsibilities, and pairing them with skilled mentors in a co-teaching environment, this approach fosters both conceptual understanding and real-time pedagogical refinement. Preliminary outcomes from implementation across multiple school sites suggest that apprentices who engage in this model demonstrate increased instructional clarity, improved student engagement, and stronger classroom management skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Design and implement a structured pre-teaching model that introduces STEM content to apprentice teachers prior to classroom instruction, allowing them to internalize key concepts, anticipate student misconceptions, and enhance content delivery.

SPEAKERS:
Deborah McAllister, Jennifer Lynberg

EXPLORING HOW INQUIRY-DRIVEN CURRICULUM IS ENACTED IN AN UNDERGRADUATE ELECTROMAGNETISM LABORATORY COURSE

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 40


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As teachers, we often wonder what happens in groups when we step away. This poster will take you behind the curtain with 3 different student groups in an undergraduate physics lab as they engage in multiple NGSS SEPs. This research project found that the most important factors for student success in engaging in inquiry-based SEPs are the connections between procedural and conceptual elements through epistemic elements, underpinned by social engagement. Each pairing of a student group with their instructor showed different instructional styles and levels of teacher guidance. This poster will provide specific examples of student groups successfully navigating the lab, less successful groups navigating challenges, and teacher moves that mitigated unproductive struggles. Equitable access to post-secondary physics labs requires that instructors adapt to the needs of their students, which will be shown in this poster.

TAKEAWAYS:
This poster will provide guidance for secondary and post-secondary instructors who want to better support their students during sensemaking. Teachers can adopt an adaptive approach to teaching by evaluating student ideas with the aim of meeting students’ needs throughout the sensemaking process.

SPEAKERS:
Sara Dozier, Brian Wilcox

Fostering STEM Identity Through a Learning Assistant Program

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 31



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Layton, Roth_NSTA.pdf

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Learning Assistant (LA) programs have grown in popularity over the last 20 years as a form of near-peer instructional support, largely due to LAs reducing DFW rates, increasing retention in STEM programs, enhancing teacher recruitment, supporting curricular and pedagogical transformation, and increasing positive attitudes about science. This poster focuses on recurring themes that emerged from student and LA focus groups conducted during the semesters between Fall 2023 and Spring 2025. Some of the key themes that emerged from being involved in the LA program were helping students foster STEM identity, broadening students’ perspectives on who can do STEM, allowing students to feel more comfortable asking questions, and encouraging LAs to consider teaching as a possible career choice. This data will provide insights for how the LA program fosters an inclusive learning environment through student to student interactions, and how these interactions influence the development of STEM.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learning Assistant programs help students foster their STEM identity, broaden students’ perspectives on who can do STEM, allow students to feel more comfortable asking questions, and encourage LAs to consider teaching as a possible career choice.

SPEAKERS:
Aubrey Layton, Elijah Roth

From “I See” to “This Means”: A Structured Routine for Public Health Data Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 83



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Staton - HDW Anaheim Conference Poster Template.pdf

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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Madison Staton

From Barriers to Bridges: Innovative STEM Practices in Urban Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 68



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Barriers to Bridges.png
hand out 2.png
Take away handout
STEM FAir.jpg
STEM Showcase Winners
The dirt on water.jpg
My students won the Camden Citywide STEM Showcase

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Urban school districts are uniquely positioned at the intersection of innovation and inequity. This roundtable invites educators, leaders, and community stakeholders to discuss strategies that increase access, engagement, and achievement in STEM for historically underserved students. Together, participants will examine real-world challenges such as resource gaps, culturally relevant pedagogy, and teacher retention, while sharing solutions like community partnerships, after-school STEM initiatives, and project-based learning. The session will serve as a collaborative space to exchange best practices and inspire actionable steps toward equity in STEM education.

TAKEAWAYS:
Even in resource-limited urban classrooms, innovative and low-cost STEM practices can break barriers, spark curiosity, and open pathways to future success.

SPEAKERS:
Tamia Murphy

From Classrooms to Communities: Integrating Public Health Roles in Biology

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
HDW Student Samples and Student Ready Google doc
- The lesson in a student ready format - 4 real student samples
Health DataWell Poster- Integrating Public Health Roles in Biology (Di Silvio)
Titled "From Classrooms to Communities: Integrating Public Health Roles in Biology and Health Science". This real world case study approached the phenomena (Air pollution and Chronic Lower Respiratory Diseases) with different learning strategies.

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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health. Research shows that high school is a key time in career awareness and preparation. These materials provide students with an opportunity to expand their understanding of health professions and to consider the roles of community members in promoting public health. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for connecting students to public health roles in their communities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with practical strategies and resources to help students explore public health careers and understand the impact of community roles in promoting health.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel Di Silvio

From Distraction to Disruption: Reclaiming the Cell Phone as the Science Tool of the Future

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 19


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Too often banned as distractions, cell phones can be reimagined as powerful science tools for equity and engagement. Grounded in my white paper Reimagining Public School Education: Embracing Innovation for the Future, this workshop explores global models showing how structured integration of mobile devices boosts collaboration, real-time feedback, and personalized learning. Through polling, simulations, and role-play, participants will experience strategies for turning student phones into curriculum-aligned instruments—even without advanced infrastructure. Attendees will leave with blueprints to address privacy, policy, and access while reframing the device in every student’s pocket as a lab of the 21st century.

TAKEAWAYS:
Cell phones, when structured and intentional, shift from distraction to powerful science tools—supporting equity, personalization, and engagement while preparing students for a tech-driven future.

SPEAKERS:
Marvin Reid

Grading Smarter, Not Harder: Streamlining Effective and Impactful Feedback in Canvas

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 36



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Poster

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Grading is one of the most time-consuming tasks we face, often leading to teacher burnout and limited time or capacity to provide meaningful feedback. Regardless of the Learning Management System (LMS) that you use, instructors have access to a variety of built-in tools designed to make grading more efficient--without sacrificing quality. This poster presentation will showcase practical, efficient, research-informed strategies for leveraging tools in LMS platforms such as Canvas to streamline the grading process while maintaining the quality of feedback students receive.

TAKEAWAYS:
Viewers will learn about grading tools such as embedded rubrics, comment libraries, annotation tools, and video feedback to balance grading efficiency with personalized, student-centered feedback.

SPEAKERS:
Tanya MacMartin, Ed.D.

Hands-On, Minds-On: Cultivating Critical Thinkers with the PHOI Strategy

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 28


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This poster presents the Predict, Hypothesis, Observe & Inference (PHOI) strategy, an innovative instructional model designed to enhance science lessons. PHOI addresses the need for effective strategies that empower teachers to foster deep student understanding, develop critical thinking skills, and promote active engagement with scientific phenomena. The strategy centers on student-driven questioning and investigation, making it highly adaptable and easy to integrate into existing curricula, while also supporting the tenets of NGSS. Teachers will learn how PHOI encourages students to explore phenomena, generate testable hypotheses, engage in systematic observation, and interpret data to construct meaningful inferences. The poster will outline the core components of the PHOI strategy and provide practical steps for implementation. Attendees will gain actionable insights and resources to apply the PHOI strategy in their classrooms immediately.

TAKEAWAYS:
The PHOI strategy provides a practical approach for inquiry-based science teaching, enabling educators to foster deeper student engagement and critical thinking through phenomena-driven investigations. By integrating PHOI, teachers can easily enhance their curricula to foster scientific literacy.

SPEAKERS:
Jaclyn Murray

Have Your Students Take on the Role of a Genetic Counselor

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 64



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Genetic Counselor Challenge NSTA Anaheim PDF
Genetic Counselor Challenge NSTA Anahiem - Google Doc

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In the Genetic Counselor Challenge performance assessment, the students will demonstrate they understand genetic terminology, a specific genetic condition, Punnett squares, pedigrees and professional writing skills. Students are allowed a lot of choice which makes them engaged and invested in their final project. They will be creating a report for Claire and Ed to see the likelihood of them having a child with a certain genetic condition. Two possible options will be presented for the genetic condition: cystic fibrosis and hemophilia. However, teachers could use others. Students will create a pedigree using Punnett squares before writing a professional report for Claire and Ed. Students will be able to make the project their own by creating the family structure, which may include variations like twins or same-sex relationships. In addition, students are able to pick their challenge level, which allows some students to take it farther.

TAKEAWAYS:
Through the challenge problem, students will demonstrate their creativity, understanding of genetic terminology, Punnett squares, pedigrees and writing skills. This can be used as a summative, performance assessment. Teachers can make simple alterations to have it fit in with their curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Kaitlyn Johnson

Igniting Curiosity: Transforming 5th Grade Science with OpenSciEd

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 27



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Igniting Curiosity Transforming 5th Grade Science with OpenSciEd.pdf
Poster for Printing Display

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This action research project, “Igniting Curiosity: Transforming 5th Grade Science with OpenSciEd”, explores how implementing hands-on, inquiry-based OpenSciEd units can increase engagement, collaboration, and conceptual understanding in a 5th-grade classroom. The study uses phenomena-driven investigations, structured group roles, and formative assessments to foster equitable participation and deepen students’ use of Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs). By combining student notebooks, reflections, and teacher observations, the project examines how OpenSciEd supports both academic growth and curiosity-driven learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
OpenSciEd empowers students to move beyond memorizing facts—by engaging them in authentic scientific inquiry, it builds curiosity, collaboration, and confidence, ensuring all learners have a voice in making sense of the world.

SPEAKERS:
Marlon Gamit

Insights From Implementing The Engineering Design Process In An Ocean Tech Unit With Elementary Students

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 41


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This poster will share information about the engineering design-process in which we taught from the lens of a practicum-based professional development program in which we implemented the Ocean Tech unit from Explore the Salish Sea, a place-based curriculum that braids together Western and Indigenous Science to engage students in investigating local marine habitats. Through this unit, students learned about ways that our Indigenous neighbors interact with engineering, as well as learning about how engineering and technology can be used to answer questions about their local marine environments. Students designed and built remotely-operated vehicles (ROVs) and explored the different ways they could alter their designs to continue improvement. We will discuss our takeaways and experiences from implementing this culturally responsive elementary science teaching.

TAKEAWAYS:
People who visit our poster will learn about the way that we implemented the engineering design process. Through conversation with the presenters, visitors will gain insight into their personal experience interacting with this design process and curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Corin Yates, Grace Blanning, Kelsey Gonzalez Serna, Kat Shoemaker

K-5 STEM Teacher Leadership: Ideas for Innovative Classroom Practice

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 2



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA poster 2026.pdf

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18 Master Teacher Fellows participating in a 5-year NSF-funded Robert Noyce Teachers Fellows project are engaging in extensive professional learning about K-5 STEM teacher leadership focusing on sustainable and inclusive teaching practices. This poster will showcase profiles of teachers' development and enactment of STEM teacher leadership within their classrooms and schools.

TAKEAWAYS:
Visitors to this poster will have a chance to view the many ways in which STEM teacher leadership is enacted in K-5 environments. Visitors will learn clear strategies for serving in leadership roles after viewing this poster.

SPEAKERS:
Helen Corveleyn, Lauren Madden

Make It Make Sense: Supporting Black Students’ Sensemaking in STEM

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 33


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The goal of this session is to prepare educators to use teaching strategies grounded in the four pillars of sensemaking (phenomena, science and engineering practices, student ideas and science ideas) into their practice to enhance engagement and STEM identity among Black students. This session provides opportunity to examine approaches to practices backed by research that foster meaningful student understanding, belonging, and agency in STEM learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with practical approaches to enhance STEM engagement and learning outcomes, particularly for Black students who are underrepresented in STEM, aligned to current research on sensemaking and best practices for STEM instruction.

SPEAKERS:
Brittany Jones

Making Data Meaningful: Engaging Middle School Students with Public Health Data

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 84


Show Details

Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Rebekah Hall

Making Science Vocabulary Stick: Hands-On, Small Group Strategies for Emergent Bilingual Students

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 51



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Science Graphic Organizers
Here are a few science graphic organizers that you can use to increase understanding and small-group or whole-group activities.
Science Pictionary Template
Use this Pictionary template as a game while practicing vocabulary or conceptual knowledge!

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Scientific vocabulary is often a major barrier for emergent bilingual students, as the terms are highly content-specific and rarely used in everyday conversation. Without direct vocabulary support, students may struggle to access key scientific concepts. This poster session, presented by a veteran teacher with a doctoral degree in Curriculum and Instruction, highlights small group strategies such as pictionary, word pop, and graphic organizers that create intentional opportunities for emergent bilingual students to identify, classify, manipulate, and apply scientific vocabulary in meaningful ways. Emphasis will be placed on hands-on experiences, visual supports, and language scaffolds that promote active engagement. Participants will explore how leveraging small group settings can foster deeper comprehension, confidence, and long-term retention of science vocabulary, ensuring that emergent bilingual learners can access rigorous science learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with practical strategies for using small group instruction to foster deeper comprehension, build confidence, and support long-term retention of science vocabulary, ensuring that emergent bilingual learners can access and thrive in rigorous science learning.

SPEAKERS:
Suzelene Pooler

My NASA Data Resources

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 52


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The My NASA Data website provides educators and students with curated NASA Earth science datasets to support phenomena-based instruction and data-driven inquiry. Organized by Earth system spheres and related phenomena, it connects real-world events such as hurricanes, heat waves, and vegetation change to authentic NASA observations. Aligned with NGSS, the site offers student mini lessons, interactive story maps, and teacher lesson plans that integrate science and engineering practices, crosscutting concepts, and disciplinary core ideas. The Earth System Data Explorer enables visualization of mapped data, time-series plots, and dataset downloads for analysis. Tools like the Data Literacy Cubes help students interpret maps, graphs, and tables to construct evidence-based explanations. My NASA Data empowers teachers to design data-rich, phenomena-driven learning experiences that strengthen students’ skills in scientific reasoning, data interpretation, and systems thinking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how My NASA Data supports phenomena-based instruction through authentic NASA datasets, interactive tools, and data literacy resources that guide student-driven inquiry.

SPEAKERS:
Natalie Macke

NARST: Historically Relevant Science Pedagogy

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 62


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This paper introduces a theoretical contribution, Historically Relevant Science Pedagogy, to the science teaching and learning community and education field broadly. Historically Relevant Science Pedagogy is a by-product of (1) these Sista Circles, (2) a continuation of social justice oriented teaching in science teaching and learning and (3) the amalgamation of three previously established pedagogical frameworks: Culturally Relevant Pedagogy (Ladson-Billings, 1994), Liberatory Pedagogy (hooks, 1994), and Culturally and Historically Responsive Education (Muhammad, 2020; 2023). This framework is positioned within the history of science teaching and learning as a way to demonstrate the need for future approaches of teaching that center critical consciousness. Historically Relevant Science Pedagogy is a K-12 pedagogical approach that displays how Black women science teachers discuss their anti-racist teaching and showcases several phenomena that center anti-oppression and liberation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Curriculum maps and NGSS-aligned phenomena that centers critical consciousness will be provided. In this space we will consider the examples and discuss how this might inform our praxis in the K-12 classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Alexis Riley

NSTA Kids Author Session: Using Seashells to Introduce the Nature of Science, Genetic Variation, and Data Analysis

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 21



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Bilateral Symmetry.pdf
Internal Structures of Mollusks.pdf
My Seashell-Inspired Hat.pdf
Potato Chip Strength.pdf
Seashell Analysis.pdf
Seashell Coloring Page.pdf
Seashell Observations.pdf
Seashell Questions and Ideas.pdf
Seek and Find Page.pdf
Shell Seeker Grade 1 Lesson Plan.pdf
Shell Seeker Grade 2 Lesson Plan.pdf
Shell Seeker Grade 3 Lesson Plan.pdf
Shell Seeker Grade 4 Lesson Plan.pdf

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With their natural beauty, tactile interest, and observable wide intraspecies variation, seashells offer wonderful opportunities to teach various key science themes to elementary learners. In this session, I will present a hands-on data analysis lesson that I conduct at my local science center and libraries for early elementary learners. The lesson is based on my upcoming book, a story about a blind seashell scientist. The activities are directly inspired by the main subject’s research and even draw upon some of his authentic data. The book enhances the lesson but is not required to carry it out. The audience will leave understanding why it is important to teach variations in traits within a species to build a foundation for understanding natural selection. They will also learn practical strategies for teaching nature of science themes, including observation, inquiry, data analysis, and constructing explanations. Free copies of the lesson plan will be available.

TAKEAWAYS:
Audience members will receive concrete strategies for using seashells to teach variation in traits, tactile observation, inquiry, data analysis, and relevant common core math skills, as well as a copy of the full lesson plan.

SPEAKERS:
Suzanne Sherman

Project STEMinAR: Utilizing Augmented Reality in Physical Science Courses

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 69



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://www.usf.edu/education/faculty-staff/rosengrant-virtual-stem-laboratory/index.aspx
Virtual STEM lab where you can find app download links for iOS and Android, cube printout, app tutorial videos, app descriptions, and free curricula materials
STEMinAR flyer.pdf

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We developed an augmented reality (AR) app called Project STEMinAR for teaching physical science content, including Thermodynamics, Rotational Motion, Optics, Force/Motion, Newton’s Laws, Lenses, and Electromagnetics. In these interactive simulations, students manipulate variables and see how different representations of that concept are affected in real time. The free app and a printout cube are needed to use the simulations. Free curricular materials are also available. The simulations are aligned with introductory undergraduate physics courses, high school physics, the Florida Standards for physical science, and NGSS Science and Engineering Practices 1 and 2. We are currently implementing the simulations in undergraduate physics labs to explore the effects on student learning gains, engagement, and interest in physics. We will demonstrate the simulations, share curricula, and discuss findings from implementation. This work is supported by an NSF IUSE grant (Project #2121273).

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use the free Project STEMinAR physics simulations and curricular materials in both lecture and lab settings. Resources will be provided that can be implemented in classrooms immediately.

SPEAKERS:
David Rosengrant, KELLY NAVAS, Rachel Cacace

Rural High School STEM Teachers’ Experience with Micro-Credential-Based Professional Development: A Collective Case Study

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 6


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This study investigated the impact of micro-credential-based professional development on rural Appalachian teachers’ beliefs, knowledge, and skills. Using a collective case study methodology, data were gathered through surveys and a series of semi-structured interviews conducted across one academic year. Participants were asked to complete three curated STEM-focused micro-credentials hosted on a national micro-credential platform and were supported in their professional development by instructional coaches who guided evidence collection and resubmissions. Findings showed that the micro-credential program had a differential impact on teachers depending on their capacity to engage in self-directed learning. Those teachers who had the motivation and time to commit to self-directed professional development benefited more than their peers who had struggles with motivation, as well as time and work demand challenges.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how STEM-focused micro-credentials can enhance knowledge and skills, and how factors like motivation, time, and self-directed learning capacity shape the effectiveness of this professional development.

SPEAKERS:
M. Gail Jones, Madeline Stallard

Science of Reading

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 58


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The Science of Reading is a comprehensive skill that is the understanding how humans learn to read and how reading should be taught effectively. It is not only from literacy and linguistics but also from neuroscience, psychology, and cognitive science. Far from being limited to early literacy, the Science of Reading applies across all content areas, supporting reading comprehension and academic success in every subject including STEM subjects.

TAKEAWAYS:
A main takeaway is that reading is not natural and it must be taught explicitly and directly! It needs to be taught from multiple diciplines like neuroscience, psychology, and lingustics.

SPEAKERS:
Lydia Chapman

Sense of Belonging in a Physics classroom

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 9



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Sense of Belonging Research Poster (2).png

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Explore research findings on sense of belonging in middle and high school physics classrooms. This poster shares practical strategies, backed by student data, that demonstrate how intentional classroom design, collaborative structures, and inclusive practices enhance student comfort, engagement, and self-efficacy. Discover how fostering a sense of belonging directly impacts participation and retention in physics.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn data-supported, practical strategies to intentionally design physics classrooms that significantly increase students' sense of belonging, leading to higher engagement, participation, and self-efficacy.

SPEAKERS:
Shayna Goldstein

Student Learning Gains in a Novel Physiology Lab on the Effects of Hyponatremia.

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 38


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Students in physiology encounter different ways that homeostasis can be affected in the body. One interesting example is hyponatremia. Understanding homeostasis is an essential part of a physiology course, and finding ways to make this concept more accessible and engaging for students is important to instructors. This project uses hyponatremia to demonstrate a disruption to homeostasis in the body. A combination of pre-/post- multiple-choice quizzes and a free response question to evaluate students’ learning gains through novel exercises associated with hyponatremia using water beads to simulate human cells. This poster focuses on the methods used to collect and analyze data from various classes from the 2021-2025 school years, as well as initial findings for student learning gains. This data will inform our understanding of what students learn from these activities and how to refine future iterations of the activities that support learning about homeostasis in physiology courses.

TAKEAWAYS:
By using these novel experiments, students demonstrated statistically significant educational gains in understanding the topic of hyponatremia.

SPEAKERS:
Jason Meza, Ryan Somers

Teach Engineering: Free, Standards-Aligned, Classroom-Tested K–12 STEM Resources

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 5



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
TE EDP Flyer - NSTA 2026
TE Info Flyer - NSTA 2026
TE Poster - NSTA 2026

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Teach Engineering is a free digital library that democratizes access to engineering education. With over 1,900 classroom-tested, standards-aligned lessons and activities, it employs engineering design and design thinking to make engineering, science, and math come alive through hands-on, open-ended learning. Resources are peer-reviewed, ready-to-use, and aligned to NGSS, Common Core, ITEEA, and state standards, supporting educators in creating dynamic STEM experiences. Teach Engineering puts the “E” in STEM, helping teachers transform science and math instruction into real-world problem-solving opportunities, with professional development, instructional videos, and tools to enhance student curiosity, sensemaking, and engagement.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will discover Teach Engineering as a free, comprehensive collection of high-quality STEM resources—classroom-tested, peer-reviewed, and ready to use—to bring engineering and science to life through hands-on learning and sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Ellen Sukovich

The Cosmic Creator Challenge: Engaging Deeper Learning in Science through Student-Created Digital Media Projects

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 15



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Cosmic Creator Challenge flyer-David Black
This flyer is an overview of the Cosmic Creator Challenge, a contest for Utah sixth-grade students sponsored by Clark Planetarium. Student create their own digital media projects to demonstrate their understanding of the Utah Science with Engineering Education (SEEd) standards.

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Effective science communication is an often overlooked student skill. Clark Planetarium in Salt Lake City presents an annual Cosmic Creator Challenge for all Utah sixth-grade students to learn how to communicate science concepts through creating their own digital media. Students have three dimensions of choice: choice of topic from the Utah space science standards, choice of medium or software type, and choice of approach. They are required to have their project evaluated by at least three peers using a Google Form with the criteria of scientific accuracy, creativity, quality, software proficiency, and communication skills. Students then make revisions before submitting the final project to Clark Planetarium for judging. Participating teachers report high levels of engagement as we see enhanced creativity and deeper science learning in the students' projects while they also learn marketable digital media skills. This poster discusses how you can implement your own Creator Challenge.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement their own Creator Challenge to enhance student creativity, engagement, and deeper learning through student-created digital media projects and specific tips for peer evaluation and revision to improve project quality.

SPEAKERS:
David Black

The Effects of Targeted Instructional Interventions on Student Understanding of the Nature of Science in an Introductory Biology Lab

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 18


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Students begin introductory biology labs with their own conceptions about science constructed over years of learning scientific models in other classes, life experiences, family origins, and the company they keep (Smith, 1998). Their conceptions can represent an inaccurate reflection of the nature of science. When students view science as absolute facts or a set of fabricated data instead of tentative models and believe that close following of the scientific method will yield these facts, they are misunderstanding the nature of science. Our college introductory majors biology lab aims to challenge these misconceptions. In Fall 2025, we added simple targeted interventions to a DNA extraction lab exercise to help students see science as a process of developing and refining models. This poster shows the results of these interventions on student understanding of the nature of science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Simple targeted instructional interventions designed to illustrate science as a process of developing and refining models were added to a college introductory biology DNA extraction lab exercise. This poster shows the results of these interventions on student understanding of the nature of science.

SPEAKERS:
Erin McNally-Goward, Jennifer Cymbola

Tiny Larvae, Big Clues: Unlocking Cancer Mysteries

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 14


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Drosophila Melanogaster, a well-established genetic model organism, provides powerful tools for studying cancer biology. I plan to explore how tumor-like growth can be induced and observed in Drosophila larvae, offering insights into cell proliferation, migration, and tissue invasion. The simplicity of the larval system, combined with the fruit fly’s conserved genetic pathways, makes it an accessible and cost-effective model for investigating mechanisms underlying cancer progression. By examining parallels between fly tumor biology and human cancers, everyone can gain an appreciation for how this model organism continues to advance biomedical research as well as education. My presentation will highlight the importance of model systems in bridging basic research with translational insights into human health.

TAKEAWAYS:
Studying cancer cells in Drosophila larvae reveals certain mechanisms of tumor growth and offers an accessible model for understanding human cancer biology.

SPEAKERS:
Emery Breitbarth

Unlocking the Power of STEM Identity in K-12 Education

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 32


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Participants will explore the importance of building a positive STEM identity and integrating it into the K–12 curriculum. This poster will highlight strategies for fostering an environment that promotes competence, curiosity, and confidence in students as they pursue STEM learning. Attendees will discover ways to leverage students’ existing “working knowledge” to deepen engagement and connection to STEM concepts. Resources and examples will be provided to help educators support students in developing a strong and lasting STEM identity. This session is ideal for educators seeking to empower their students in STEM, regardless of background or experience. Participants will leave inspired and equipped to make a meaningful impact on their students’ STEM identity.

TAKEAWAYS:
Unlock students' STEM IDENTITY with hands-on strategies that inspire confidence, curiosity, and STEM skills. Learn how aviation and aeronautics can promote a growth mindset and create real-life engineering scenarios and career connections. Get free resources and actionable steps at this session.

SPEAKERS:
Jesse Steiner, Christina Davis

Using Inquiry-Based Curriculum in Secondary and Postsecondary Biology Labs

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 25


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This poster showcases the use of inquiry-based learning in biology labs to allow students to learn about core concepts through research and experimentation while promoting student engagement. For a cell biology lab, Argument-Driven Inquiry (ADI) was utilized to let the students actively conduct research on the effects of caffeine on HeLa cells and then report their research to their peers. Although this study found no significant differences in terms of quantitative data, the qualitative data showed students were more engaged in the classroom activities and material. Pulling from this study, inquiry-based learning will be applied to a human physiology postsecondary lab. By utilizing inquiry-based activities that would simulate real-world experiences, it is predicted that students will be more engaged in class material leading to greater conceptual understanding over time than students not in an inquiry-based lab.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover ways to implement inquiry-based learning into biology labs to help promote student learning and engagement. This approach emphasizes collaboration, research, and real-world applications to better equip students for life after graduation.

SPEAKERS:
Allison Grieshop

Using NotebookLM to Analyze Public Health Data

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 81


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Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Shanna Bohrer

When Data Breathes: Charting Health Through Chemistry and Public Health Investigations

Friday, April 17 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - Exhibit Hall, Poster Session Aisle, Table 85



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IPJQVjJxhxpnDmNkaXaIw7bEwz25h9sN?usp=sharing

Show Details

Discover the Health DataWell instructional materials, co-developed by HESI and NSTA, to address the lack of materials focused on public health and data literacy. The materials provide opportunities for students to build data literacy by analyzing complex public health data, using statistics and computational models, and comparing sources to develop evidence-based explanations and solutions. In this session, you will hear from teachers who implemented the materials (Health Data Well Ambassadors) and gain practical strategies for utilizing complex public health data analysis tools with your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials, focusing on using real-world data and data analysis tools to identify disparities in health outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Davis

Accessible Drones: Making Forces, Motion, and Energy Take Flight

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Drones Reinvented, Forces & Motion in Fligh

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Drones may seem like tools reserved for AP Physics or college engineering courses, but with simple, low-cost builds they can give middle school students authentic opportunities to explore forces, motion, and energy through hands-on investigations. This session shows how the DIY Mini-Drone Project from Science Buddies can be adapted into classroom labs. Each stage connects to science ideas: balancing the frame highlights unbalanced forces, spinning propellers demonstrate Newton’s 3rd Law, and the battery shows energy transfer to motion. Test flights become mini-labs where students see how net force and mass affect motion or how payloads change acceleration. Student journals, sketchnotes, and reflections illustrate how drones provide equitable entry points for multilingual learners, neurodiverse students, and others who thrive with hands-on science. Participants leave with strategies to make drones affordable, rigorous, and centered on sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how low-cost drones can transform forces, motion, and energy into accessible, high-rigor classroom investigations, with student examples and strategies that keep the science, not just building, at the center of learning.

SPEAKERS:
Reyna Rivera

Authentic Data, Student-Created Digital Media, and Student Choice to Enhance Creativity, Engagement, and Learning in Science

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Authentic Data-NSTA 2026-David Black
This is my slide show turned into a PDF file for easy sharing and download. In this session, I will present ideas and procedures for finding, downloading, and using authentic data, including collecting your own. I will also discuss how sutdent-created digital media projects can work with authentic data.

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Over many years of teaching science, my students have completed projects that involve collecting and analyzing authentic data, then using digital media skills to communicate the results. For these projects, they are given three dimensions of creative choice: choice of topic, choice of medium, and choice of approach. For this session, I will share examples of their projects including presenting a professional-level poster analyzing infrared data on K-giant stars consuming their own planets for the American Astronomical Society conference, the correlation of lead contamination in waste rock dumps in a nearby mining district, a 3D model of the nearby stars using correct coordinates, a poster on their school-wide Mars exploration projects at the Lunar and Planetary Science conference, 3D animations on the features and formation of Earth's moon, a newsletter on astronomy topics, and more.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain ideas for how to integrate student choice, digital media creation, and the analysis of authentic data into student projects to enhance creativity, engagement, and deeper learning in science.

SPEAKERS:
David Black

Classroom Discussions: Supporting Students to Share and Discuss Ideas

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D


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Engage in an elementary unit and see how classroom discussions can support ALL students’ in using their ideas, experiences, and evidence for collective sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn about how to engage elementary students in classroom discussion to share initial ideas, build understanding and come to consensus about the phenomenon they are trying to collectively figure out.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Belcastro, Guy Ollison

Communicate, Connect, and Code: Strategies for Language Learner Success

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Strategies for Language Learner Success-ACOE Expanded Learning

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This interactive workshop equips educators with strategies to support multilingual learners in science by making abstract concepts accessible and engaging. Participants will engage in exploration and discussion activities that build vocabulary, confidence, and collaboration while practicing sequencing and problem-solving. Strategies highlight the power of multimodal instruction to break complex ideas into digestible steps and foster language growth across listening, speaking, reading, and writing. The session highlights how strategies used in informal learning can enrich classroom instruction, advancing equity by making science and technology accessible to all students and supporting them as confident, capable learners and innovators.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with practical strategies to support Multilingual Learners as confident science learners, breaking complex concepts into manageable steps and using hands-on, multimodal approaches to create equitable, engaging experiences for all students.

SPEAKERS:
Lorena Morales-Ellis, Monica Dennis

Co-Teaching Strategies in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E


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Are you new to co-teaching or wanting to learn about it? If so, please join us to explore specific, practical strategies that you can use immediately to begin your co-teaching journey in the science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
How to apply various strategies for co-teaching, such as identifying co-teaching roles, implementing different models of co-teaching, and how to practically plan given limited time.

SPEAKERS:
Harper De Mey, Sydnie Chouery

Cross Curricular Project Based Learning for Equitable STEM Instruction

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4


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All students deserve access to meaningful science inquiry that connects to their lives and communities. This workshop helps educators design accessible, engaging learning through project-based learning (PBL) and Universal Design for Learning (UDL) strategies so students of all abilities can succeed. Participants will explore “low floor, high ceiling” cross-curricular projects integrating ELA, math, NGSS-aligned inquiry, computational modeling, and engineering design, using examples of student work. We will discuss strategies to support English Learners, students with disabilities (SWD), and marginalized learners through inclusive, culturally relevant design. Participants will use a modular planning approach to build their own NGSS-based projects, integrating chosen disciplines and standards. Educators will leave with a roadmap for designing projects that promote equity, student choice, and authentic assessment.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a road map to plan an engaging project that incorporates student choice, community relevance and different ways that students can demonstrate their learning.

SPEAKERS:
Ortavia Manning-Dixon, Leilani O'Dell

Daily questions in the 8th grade science classroom

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Daily science questions in the MS classroom

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In this session, participants will explore how daily questions can serve a dual purpose in the 8th grade science classroom: as formative assessments that provide quick insight into student understanding, and as social-emotional check-ins that open lines of communication and build stronger classroom connections. This session will highlight how a simple routine can foster both learning and belonging in the science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn practical strategies for designing daily questions that not only track academic growth but also support student well-being.

SPEAKERS:
Julianna Lipson

Data Analysis Made Easy: Connecting Math and Science

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest


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The workshop will offer ideas to move from the typical teacher-led classroom to one that focuses on problem-solving, data analysis and exploratory learning. Learn how to combine graphing calculators with handheld sensors to maximize class time and provide opportunities for engaging inquiry and discussion. We will illustrate how you can utilize science tasks to support your 3-D initiative and the goals outlined in the NGSS, while at the same time reinforcing and seamlessly integrating CCSS for Mathematics. You can use one sensor at a time or multiple sensors simultaneously for lab-based or in-the-field data collection to quickly collect and analyze data. Several sensors will be available to explore this integrated solution. Hands-on science using this integrated technology gets students excited about science and math and deepens their understanding of seemingly complex concepts. It will free up class time for student engagement in the analysis, synthesis, and evaluation of real data.

TAKEAWAYS:
Use real data to develop mathematical models and learn how to test your hypothesis by performing an experiment and analyze your results, combining graphing calculators or tablets with handheld sensors to maximize class time.

SPEAKERS:
Karlheinz Haas

Do Real-World and Relevant Still Matter? A Chonky Bear Example

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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This presentation revisits what counts as real-world and relevant in the science classroom. The ubiquitous terms are often used to describe instruction that is both meaningful and leads to content learning outcomes. Yet, the chosen examples do not always resonate with students as intended. Attendees will consider factors that make learning relevant and how to situate real-world examples. We will start by asking whether Fat Bear Week in Alaska is relevant to students in any classroom. This example might not reach all students if they are neither interested in bears or geographically nearby. Planning strategies that peak the curiosity of students with varied interests and experiences to make real-world examples more relevant and meaningful for students will be shared. One strategy is to identify anchoring questions that connect at the local and personal level. Attendees will leave with tools to be intentional when selecting real-world examples to support student learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn factors that make learning relevant and leverage tools like anchoring questions to help connect real-world examples in personally impactful ways for students. Small lesson planning moves can make learning more meaningful and lead to deeper content understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Takumi Sato, PhD

Engaging Reluctant Learners

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1W4pnj9gyqwyk_WSMOoKc1IhSawpRH8-O8MVkATIFBGM/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p

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Many students, including those labeled at-risk, struggle to engage in the science classroom. The presenter will share proven strategies to engage these learners. These are applicable in any secondary science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn easy to implement strategies that will engage reluctant learners in the science classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Nadene Klein

Exploring the Multiwavelength Universe With NSF NOIRLab

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom J / K


Show Details

Join NSF NOIRLab and explore the universe from radio waves through gamma rays with high-quality, all-sky images and educational activities using NOIRLab’s Multiwavelength Universe project. The workshop will provide data from a variety of sources to encourage student exploration of astronomical objects and the processes that produce radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum. In this interactive workshop, participants will journey through the Universe as we model the nature of light and build an understanding of wave properties. Data from the Multiwavelength Universe project will be used to demonstrate how each part of the spectrum helps astronomers uncover the structure, composition, and hidden phenomena of the cosmos. We will share inclusive strategies, such as multiple modes of data representation (sonification for example), to ensure all learners can access and engage with space science concepts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to access images of astronomical objects from across the electromagnetic spectrum and explore how astronomers learn about the physical properties of different types of astronomical objects using the various types of electromagnetic radiation they emit.

SPEAKERS:
Robert Sparks

FILTERED: Introduce Bioinformatics with Puzzle Games

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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Learn more about this game-based method to introduce computational biology concepts in your life science classes. The comic book-style FILTERED puzzle games help students grasp the function of programs used to analyze DNA. Get your FREE teacher account and be ready to save the world!

TAKEAWAYS:
FILTERED: a story-driven digital learning platform for bioinformatics is an online module that introduces students to the biological concepts and logical thinking skills used in the field of bioinformatics and DNA analysis.

SPEAKERS:
Madelene Loftin

From Digital Screens to Science Scenes: Bringing Ideas to Life with Science Notebooking

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Notebooking Presentation

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Today’s techbook trend has educators balancing the power of digital tools with the need for hands-on meaningful learning while embedding literacy. Led by a K–8 science specialist supporting over 35,000 students on this journey, participants will explore how science notebooking transforms digital curriculum into meaningful, student driven, hands-on sensemaking. Grounded in the NRC Framework and NGSS, the workshop will highlight structures such as sketchnoting, graphic organizers, and vocabulary strategies to help students make sense of ideas, build models, and use evidence to explain thinking. Real classroom examples will showcase sentence starters, scaffolds, and student handouts that make science talk and writing accessible for all learners. Attendees will leave with ready-to-use templates, formative assessment strategies, and practical ways to turn digital resources into active, literacy rich science learning, addressing both technology integration and hands-on science engagement.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with practices and templates showing how science notebooking transforms digital resources into meaningful, hands-on sensemaking experiences that strengthen literacy, support equity, and foster engagement for all learners.

SPEAKERS:
Kayla Boykin

From Practices to Professions: Building Workforce Skills Through Science and Engineering

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
4. ANA26_From Practices to Professions_ Building Workforce Skills Through SEPs.pdf
Co-Planning Handout.docx (1).pdf

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The Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs) of the Next Generation Science Standards already mirror many of the skills employers value most: problem-solving, collaboration, communication, and iterative design. This session explores how intentionally pairing the SEPs with Career Readiness Competencies can help students build transferable workforce skills while engaging in authentic science learning. Participants will examine classroom examples and instructional strategies that make these connections explicit, allowing students to practice thinking and working like scientists and engineers while developing skills essential for college, careers, and the modern workforce.

TAKEAWAYS:
When the Science and Engineering Practices are intentionally aligned with Career Readiness Competencies, everyday science instruction becomes a powerful way for students to develop real, transferable workforce skills without adding “one more thing” to the curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Kristin Rademaker

Interactive Notebooks as Engines of Sense-making: Fostering Science Literacy, Equity, and Student Ownership

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


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Discover how notebooking practices transform classrooms into spaces of authentic sense-making, equity, and student agency. Rooted in NGSS, this approach engages students in documenting claims, evidence, and reasoning while connecting phenomena to science ideas. Participants will explore strategies for notebook setup (Table of Contents, Anchor Charts, Resource Sheets), Input/Output structures, and 4-Quadrant inquiry cycles. Using student work samples and classroom models, attendees will experience how notebooking builds critical thinking, supports multilingual and diverse learners, and fosters a lifelong passion for science

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience notebooking as a sense-making tool through hands-on activities, as well as to analyze strategies that foster rigor, equity, and ownership (Input/Output, 4-Quadrant Inquiry, student cooperative practices).

SPEAKERS:
Henri Shimojyo

Juicy Nuggets from Operation Space Jump: Using Class CrunchLabs Curriculum Supports for Gravitational Forces

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Gravitational forces might be invisible, but the supports in this unit are easy to spot. This session helps you uncover key features in Operation Space Jump that make it easier to plan, teach, and guide students through puzzling ideas like mass, motion, and gravity. We will walk through the built-in teacher tools, prompts, and routines that support deep thinking and epic classroom moments. Whether students are jumping on the moon or just trying to wrap their heads around why heavier things do not always fall faster, you will leave with ready-to-use moves that help the learning stick.

TAKEAWAYS:
Uncover how to use supports in Operation Space Jump to help students explore mass, motion, and gravity—especially why bigger does not always mean faster when jumping from planet to planet.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Garelli, DeAnna Lee Rivers, Spencer Martin

Kinesthetic activities in physical and Earth sciences

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast


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Animate your students, literally. Scientific processes come alive when students use their bodies to play the role of molecules, rocks, Earthquake waves, air masses, or even the entire planet as it takes laps around the Sun. This is MORE than a hands-on lesson -- you'll engage your whole body! We'll look at the science behind why kinsethetic activities work, how they fit into the modeling practice of the NGSS, explore half a dozen examples that require zero materials, and then have you work in small groups to create a new kinesthetic activity to teach a topic you care about.

TAKEAWAYS:
Kinesthetic activities (where students model science processes with their whole bodies) are an excellent tool for teachers and students to engage in the science practice of modeling. They turn abstract, multi-step phenomena into intuitive, memorable experiences.

SPEAKERS:
Virginia (Gini) Oberholzer Vandergon

Making Thinking Visible: How Student Models Develop Over Time

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slide Deck

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Models are more than pictures, they are powerful tools for making student thinking visible. In the classroom, models can be used as sensemaking tools that evolve as students’ understanding of scientific concepts deepen. Using examples from Earth-science integrated physics and biology curricula, participants step into the role of students to experience creating, revising, and refining models to gain deeper insight into how modeling supports sensemaking, reveals misconceptions, and highlights shifts in students’ understanding. Integration of student discourse and scaffolded writing strategies offer participants additional opportunities to support students in creating more robust models and using those models to communicate their understanding of complex everyday phenomena. Through experiential understanding, participants will leave with a clear vision for designing lessons that empower learners to engage in authentic modeling practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will engage in modeling from a student perspective and reflect as teachers through collaborative discussion—sharing experiences and gaining practical strategies to support authentic modeling that makes student thinking and sensemaking visible in the science classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Carpe, Nina Groseclose

Model-Based Inquiry in Chemistry: Three-Dimensional Instructional Units for Grades 9–12

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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We will introduce our NSTA book containing a collection of units and resources to help teachers engage students in three-dimensional learning through model-based inquiry.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about four chemistry model-based inquiry units for rigorous and equitable instruction. Developed with secondary science teachers, the session guides three-dimensional learning, anchoring phenomena, modeling, and scientific explanations.

SPEAKERS:
Audrey Baird, Jennifer Askew, Ron Gray

NARST: Translanguaging and Justice in Science

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 211 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Translanguaging in Science Classrooms
Presentation slides.

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Description * How can learning about race, migration, and social justice issues occur within science curricula? This interactive workshop seeks to reimagine science instruction beyond rote-memorization and English-only practices. Justice means repositioning science as multilingual and multicultural, welcoming the diverse ways of knowing, doing, and speaking. Participants will engage with a model lesson that recognizes and challenges science’s history of exclusion, while fostering multilingual engagement and drawing on student funds of knowledge. Through discussions, we will reflect on curriculum while re-imagining ways we can integrate culturally and linguistically just practices that reflect and empowers all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Science teaching can be reimagined as a multilingual and multicultural while aligning to the NGSS. Educators can integrate students’ diverse ways of knowing and speaking making learning more equitable and empowering all science learners.

SPEAKERS:
Diana Bonilla, Karina Hernandez

NGSS/STEELS Notebooking 101

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 C, North Building


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Discover how NGSS/STEELS-aligned science notebooks can transform student learning in grades K–8. In this interactive session, participants will explore research-based strategies for using notebooks as tools for inquiry, sensemaking, and formative assessment. See real examples from 6th grade classrooms and learn how notebooks support student voice, differentiation, and literacy while mirroring the practices of scientists. Designed for educators new to notebooking, this session offers practical tips, classroom-ready ideas, and opportunities for Q&A.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how to use NGSS/STEELS-aligned science notebooks to boost inquiry, sensemaking, and assessment. See classroom examples, gain practical strategies, and learn how notebooks support student voice, literacy, and authentic scientific practices.

SPEAKERS:
Natalie Hafer

NMLSTA: Make Time for Time Management in your Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building


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As a middle level science teacher, I know that getting labs and activities completed within a class period and tracking science fair projects can be a challenge. Executive functioning (EF) skills are skills that are needed to “execute” or complete a task. EF research is based in neuroscience and cognitive learning. By incorporating several simple EF strategies into your science teaching practice, you can help all students develop these skills allowing more time for labs, instruction, projects, etc. and for learning science concepts. This session will look at time management regarding task initiation, pacing and tracking time. Techniques will be presented to practice with students on how to estimate how long each task will take (mental dress rehearsals), how to visualize the passage of the time available (nonverbal), and how to track progress for both short and long-term projects.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn about time management techniques for planning and using time, as well as a discussion of how to help students track their own time focused on activities in science classrooms such as laboratory, hands-on activities.

SPEAKERS:
Alison Seymour

OSE Teacher Training: Best Practices for Success: Student Notebooks and Progress Trackers

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
ANA26_OSE TT_ Student Notebooks & Progress Trackers.pdf
Progress Tracker Template.pdf
Shifts in Writing_Drawing for Sensemaking.pdf

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Led by an NSTA expert facilitator, this session shows how to use OpenSciEd student notebooks and progress trackers to support sensemaking, reflection, and growth. Participants will learn strategies for introducing, structuring, and managing notebooks, leverage progress trackers for both students and teachers, and see real classroom examples. Leave with ready-to-use templates, routines, and tips to implement immediately.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave equipped to use student notebooks and progress trackers intentionally to make thinking visible, support reflection, and track learning growth over time

SPEAKERS:
Ann Guglielmo

Part 2: Scaffolding Science for Multilingual Learners: Applying AI to Strengthen Science and Engineering Practices

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Interactive Webinar for Part 1: Scaffolding Science for Multilingual Le
Webinar featuring key foundational learning about language supports for MLL science learners.
Scaffolding Science for Multilingual Learners: Applying AI to Strengthen Science
Link to all session materials and resources.

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How can educators use AI to help multilingual learners engage more fully in science and engineering practices like constructing explanations and engaging in argument from evidence? Building on Part 1, this session introduces an interactive AI bot that provides targeted scaffolds for language and reasoning in science tasks. Participants will explore how AI can translate assignments, offer real-time feedback, and support students in using evidence to communicate scientific ideas. Through a hands-on investigation, attendees will experience how tools like adaptive prompts can lower language barriers while enhancing sensemaking. Leave with ready-to-use examples, AI prompts, and classroom applications that make the practices of science accessible, equitable, and authentic for all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience strategies for designing phenomenon-based science lessons where multilingual learners thrive. Learn how AI can scaffold language, personalize tasks, and support equitable access to three-dimensional sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Drenth

Participation in Sporting Activities as a Mechanism for Enhancing Science Instruction

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building


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The results of a sensemaking research study shall be presented addressing how teaching without attention to relevance results in decreased motivation for learning and negative attitudes toward science in a high school classroom. Modeling of selected activities from study will engage participants in an instructional method incorporating physical, sport-related activities as used for the study's initial phenomena to develop relevance and therefore enhance achievement in science as compared to typical/traditional instructional methods that was a follow up to integrate science and engineering practices. This experimental method consisted of Relevance Integration for Teaching Science using Sports Exploration (RITSSE) involving novel data sets of kinesthetic data sets through sports experiences as a means to enhance the Nature of Science and the frameworks of NGSS. For students and teachers not interested in the modelled sports, alternatives will be discussed for increased equitability.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will take the role of students and participate in selected research studies activities using sport as a mechanism for the introduction of science concepts. Participants will also discuss adaptations to RITSSE curriculum design to accommodate their preferences of relevance connection.

SPEAKERS:
Erin Roades

Phone Physics: Free-Fall

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Phone Physics (Gravity)
The slide deck for the workshop detailing how to use your own phone to measure the acceleration due to gravity.

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Smartphones have revolutionized communication and access to information. With 5 years of experience using them in the classroom, I know the sensors in them can equally revolutionize experimentation. You’ve all probably dropped objects at different heights and timed the fall with timers. How about timing it by analyzing the response of the 3-axis accelerometer in a smartphone to free-fall conditions? With it, each student has the power to collect their own data on free-fall at much higher precision and draw their own conclusions with a lab so easy they can do it at home, allowing class time to be used for data analysis, rather than data collection. Come see how to leverage these powerful tools to facilitate learning for everyone with an investigation that can be as simple as plotting data with step-by-step calculation instructions, or as advanced as asking students to linearize the data themselves, and even bring in discussions of general relativity!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will come away with ready to apply information, tools, and ideas to use immediately in their classroom whether they teach introductory/conceptual physics or AP. They will participate in an investigation activity themselves and see how easy it is to increase the complexity as needed.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Tobler

Playing with Science: Material Properties

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8


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Led by members of NSTA Early Childhood-Elementary Committee, participants with practice incorporating playing with common materials to explore science concepts. Participants will also discuss the relationship of play to inquiry, as well as how to pull formative and summative assessments while playing with science

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will experience different ways of playing with materials in a science classroom, generate ideas for using play to teach science concepts, and see how to assess the learning constructed by such play.

SPEAKERS:
Rina Zampieron, Katie Morrison, Anne Lowry

Preparing Science Teachers to Engage Multilingual Learners in Science Practices through Translanguaging Pedagogy

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H


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How can science teacher educators and mentors prepare science teachers to deeply engage multilingual learners in science practices? This presentation models and discusses tools, research, and lessons learned from a federally funded project to answer this question through translanguaging pedagogy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Translanguaging pedagogy involves teaching moves that go beyond giving multilingual learners access to the content and instead helps them mobilize their full linguistic repertoire to engage in science practices.

SPEAKERS:
Jonah Firestone

Promoting Science Explanations with the ExplanaJam

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
ExplanaJam2026 website

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In an effort to promote explanations of science phenomena in science classes, California State University Northridge holds an annual contest to see who can record the best explanation. The ExplanaJam contest is held at the end of the school year where teachers run a video contest in their class and submit the top videos to the university for judging. The contest provides a low stakes positive forum that reinforces best practices for constructing explanations and helps connect students to a larger community of science learners. For the last five years we have reviewed hundreds of videos and picked winner at different grade levels and awarded special prizes. We will discuss the advantages of this approach and recommendation for how people can run their own contest.

TAKEAWAYS:
The ExplanaJam contest provides prizes for explaining science that reinforces best practices and provides outstanding examples of what students can do.

SPEAKERS:
Brian Foley

Representation in Action: Hands-On Strategies to Cultivate Belonging and Self-Efficacy in STEM

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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How do we create STEM learning spaces where all students see themselves as capable and belonging? This interactive workshop models hands-on strategies rooted in culturally relevant pedagogy to help educators disrupt stereotypes and expand representation in their classrooms. Participants will engage in activities such as identity reflection through journaling, analyzing and redesigning representation in science and technology, and coding creative projects that link computational thinking with storytelling. These activities are framed around Social Identity Theory and the principle that students’ sense of belonging is strengthened when they see their identities reflected in STEM spaces. While the session draws inspiration from a study on girls in gaming, the strategies are designed to be broadly adaptable for diverse learners and classroom contexts. Educators will leave with practical tools, adaptable activity templates, and a framework for integrating representation and identity work.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn adaptable, culturally relevant STEM teaching strategies that integrate identity reflection, representation, and creative hands-on activities to increase students’ sense of belonging and self-efficacy.

SPEAKERS:
Kiy Benton

Rural Secondary Educators’ Perceptions About Integrating Music into Physical Science Courses

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Dissertation Study Speed Sharing Presentation_1
Sound Wave Project
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 1
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 2

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Developing a future-focus for science education with emphasis of music and arts. Bridging out for cross-curriculum among various disciplines, however, focus upon STEM education. Utilizing the ODE State Science Standards, along with state standards from various content, as well as the connections to the Next Generation Science Standards. My proposal is for the audience of 6-12 general science educators. Educators from outside of the 6-12 parameter are always welcome to attend the proposed session. The information provided for the proposed session presentation is to help all STEM educators with the integration of music and arts into the STEM education and curriculum (STEAM). Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to achieve the talented and gifted students who may not be advanced in science, but advanced in arts and music.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. There are digital programs the educators can utilize without costs to improve the connections of arts and music with STEM. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to STEAM TAG kids.

SPEAKERS:
John Davis III

Scaling OpenSciEd for All Learners: Lessons from Multi-District PD Rollouts

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building


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Discover how multiple districts—urban, suburban, and rural—implemented OpenSciEd across grade bands and socioeconomic contexts through robust professional development and assessment-driven decision making. Case studies reveal practical strategies, challenges, and equity-focused solutions that build teacher capacity for three-dimensional instruction. Participants will be in student hat to explore how formative assessment practices—such as student work protocols, transfer performance tasks, and data-informed instructional shifts—were embedded into PD cycles. Learn how assessment evidence was used to monitor fidelity, guide reteaching, and track equitable outcomes across subgroups. The session also highlights adaptations and assessments for multilingual learners and students with disabilities. Attendees will leave with research-informed tools for PD design, leadership, and classroom assessment that promote access, agency, and success for all learners implementing OpenSciEd.

TAKEAWAYS:
Intentional, assessment-driven professional development empowers educators to implement OpenSciEd with fidelity and equity—ensuring all students, including multilingual learners and those with disabilities, can engage meaningfully in three-dimensional science learning.

SPEAKERS:
Edward Cohen

Science in Action: Strategies to Make Every Student a Sensemaker

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F


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How can science classrooms - whether general, honors, or co-taught-become spaces where every student sees themselves as a scientist and engages in authentic sensemaking? This interactive session will showcase teaching strategies and classroom practices that transform high school science instruction into accessible, student-centered learning experiences across disciplines, including Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Forensic Science, and IB Sports Science. Using the four pillars of sensemaking-participants will explore how intentional lesson design fosters deeper understanding, motivation, and equity in science learning. Presenters will model approaches to integrate real-world phenomena (integrate real-world phenomena with student-driven inquiry and collaboration. These examples will include adaptations for co-taught classrooms, highlighting how strategies can support diverse learners, including students with IEPs, English Learners, and those needing enrichment.

TAKEAWAYS:
The main takeaway from this session is that every high school science classroom-whether general, honors, or co-taught-can be a space where students learn science by doing science. Participants will leave with ready-to-implement strategies that balance rigor and accessibility.

SPEAKERS:
Ramon Reeves, Shannon Harris, Tracy Joyner, Dana Peeples

Science You Can Taste: Using Food to Fuel Scientific Inquiry

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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Join Pilot Light Chefs to discover simple, high-impact strategies for connecting food education to science learning using Pilot Light’s newly revised Food Education Standards. Attendees will explore how food-based phenomena—like the chemical reactions behind baking bread or the physics of emulsions in salad dressing—can make NGSS concepts tangible and relevant. The Standards provide an easy-to-implement tool that engages students’ senses and curiosity while deepening understanding of scientific inquiry, sustainability, and real-world systems. Perfect for educators seeking a fresh, classroom-ready way to make science meaningful through the everyday lens of food.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a practical, ready-to-use strategy for connecting food experiences to core science concepts, helping students explore NGSS-aligned inquiry, chemical reactions, and systems thinking in an engaging, hands-on way.

SPEAKERS:
Megan Gottlieb

Secrets of the Sea: Awe Inspiring Ocean Phenomena and Activitiesfor your Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Secrets of the Sea Handout
Secrets of the Sea PowerPoint
Western Blue Bird Lesson Plan
Western Blue Bird Slide Deck

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Dive into the ocean and discover awe inspiring phenomena that will inspire your students. In our hour session we’ll explore shark teeth and shark buoyancy, whaleometry, plankton design, island ecology, wave science, and physical oceanography. The ocean connects your science subject matter to real-life contexts and provides learning experiences to engage student interest and supports their motivation. The ocean is not merely water - it is a cradle and a crucible where life dreams, where storms rage, and where horizons tease us with the ability to bring our science instruction to life.

TAKEAWAYS:
Good phenomena can make or break science instruction. Attendees will learn how to use ocean based phenomena to enhance Next Generation Science units. In addition, activities and labs will be presented on marine life and physical oceanography that are engaging to students and easy for teachers.

SPEAKERS:
William Brooks

Slingshot Science: A Hands-On Way to Teach Potential Energy and the Engineering Design Process

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Slingshot Science Materials
A Google Folder of all materials referenced!

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Attendees will engage in a middle school science lesson that connects the engineering design process to potential energy by using rubber bands and popsicle sticks to construct slingshots. Aligned with Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) MS-PS3-2: Potential Energy and MS-ETS1-4: Redesigning and Retesting, attendees will design, test, and redesign slingshots while collecting data on launch distance and the effectiveness of their design. Before the lesson, we will complete pre-lab questions to recall prior knowledge of potential energy and engineering design. During the lesson, attendees will apply this understanding to create and test their models. After the lesson, attendees will reflect through post-lab questions, peer review using an NGSS-aligned rubric, and design revisions based on peer feedback. Attendees will receive student worksheets, rubrics, and data collection templates to support their own classroom implementation of hands-on, NGSS aligned practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Engage in a middle school science lesson that explores potential energy through an NGSS aligned engineering design challenge of building slingshots. Gain ready-to-use digital materials that guide hands-on learning in designing, testing, analyzing data, reflecting, and redesigning slingshots.

SPEAKERS:
Margarita Jimenez-Silva, Caitlyn Ishaq

Soil Chemistry in Action: Water, Pollutants, and Natural Hazards

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 212 A


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Why do some burned hillsides suddenly flood or slide after a storm? This session uses phenomena-based instruction to explore how soil chemistry and structure regulate water movement, nutrient transport, and pollutant filtration. Participants will engage in hands-on activities that model how soils can absorb or repel water, store and release nutrients, and contribute to hazards such as flooding, landslides, and fire-altered soils that become water-repellent. Investigating soil data and maps, educators will uncover how soil processes connect to essential Earth and environmental science concepts. Participants will leave with freely available resources, professional development opportunities, and strategies for guiding students to explain natural hazards and ecosystem functions through the lens of soil science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Why do burned slopes flood or slide? Engage your students in hands-on soil investigations to uncover how structure and chemistry regulate water flow, stability, and susceptibility to hazards and take home free resources to spark phenomena-based learning in your classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Natalie Macke

STEM Girls: Ways to Motivate the Next Generation of Women in STEM

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3


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Imagine a classroom where every girl feels confident exploring science, technology, engineering, and math—and sees herself as an innovator with the power to change the world. This session dives into the latest research on girls in STEM and why it matters for today’s educators. Together, we’ll uncover the challenges that contribute to underrepresentation and explore small but powerful classroom shifts that spark curiosity, build confidence, and connect learning to real-world possibilities. With insights from female scientists and ready-to-use strategies, you’ll leave inspired and equipped to create classrooms where girls thrive as problem-solvers and leaders in STEM.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover the recent research on females in STEM and learn how to take intentionally small but powerful steps in your classroom to ensure that our future female problem-solvers have the confidence, encouragement, and motivation to change the world, one STEM field at a time!

SPEAKERS:
Dawn McCotter

Structuring Student Discussions to Increase Participation and Deepen Collaborative Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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Join us for an interactive session that will empower you to bring the rich, student-centered learning experiences called for by the NGSS into your own classroom. In this workshop, you'll engage in collaborative, small-group activities designed to deepen your understanding of how to use meaningful tasks to spark productive and inclusive student conversations. You'll walk away with practical strategies for designing lessons that foster active sense-making through talk, as well as routines and norms that ensure every student has a voice in the discussion. Here’s what you can expect: • The Power of Talk in Learning (10 min): Why meaningful conversations are essential for student growth. • Hands-On Experience (30 min): Engage in two examples of tasks that encourage inclusive, collaborative student discussions. • Designing for Engagement (10 min): Learn key principles for structuring discussions that increases participation and sensemaking. • Next Steps (5 min): Resources you can use

TAKEAWAYS:
The establishment of routines and norms and the use of meaningful tasks are critical for increasing productive participation in small group and whole class discussions.

SPEAKERS:
Victor Sampson

Supporting Sensemaking: Strategies to Strengthen Science Retention

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Supporting Sensemaking
Strategies to Strengthen Science Retention

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Practical, research-based strategies to help middle school students retain and apply science content knowledge. Participants will explore effective learning techniques adapted for NGSS-aligned classrooms. These approaches move students beyond memorization by fostering active sensemaking and deeper connections between concepts. Classroom-ready examples will highlight how formative checks, low-stakes quizzes, and collaborative discussions can build long-term retention and engagement. Grounded in equitable practices, these strategies ensure all learners have multiple entry points and opportunities to succeed. Attendees will leave with ready-to-use ideas that support middle school instruction while strengthening lifelong learning skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will take away ready-to-use strategies that move middle school learners beyond memorization, helping them make sense of science ideas and strengthen long-term learning.

SPEAKERS:
Karre Nevarez

Tech Hacks for Teachers: Work Smarter, Not Harder

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Tech Hacks for Teachers: Work Smarter not Harder

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Tired of spending hours grading or scrambling to provide accommodations for diverse learners? This session will show you how to make technology work for you. Discover self-grading spreadsheets that give instant feedback, interactive Google Docs for collaborative learning, and digital features that make modifications and accommodations simple to implement. These tools save time, increase efficiency, and ensure all students get the support they need—without adding to your workload. Walk away with ready-to-use templates, classroom-tested tips, and strategies that can be applied in any content area to boost productivity and student success.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn to use practical tech tools—like self-grading spreadsheets, interactive Google Docs, and built-in supports—to save time, streamline grading, and easily provide accommodations and modifications for all learners across any content area.

SPEAKERS:
Kyla Glasser

The Science Liars Game

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
The LIARS game

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Help students become savvy media consumers by inviting them to design and diagnose their own disinformation. Teams select an incredible science news story and pair it with two other bogus discoveries -- the class (and teacher!) try to guess which is real. Discussion after the game highlights the concrete ways we can be easily misled by plausible arguments, fake evidence, persuasive methods, and deceptive tactics. Optional extension: find real examples of science disinformation online or in social media that illustrate those strategies.

TAKEAWAYS:
Using a game format, students learn about deceptive and disinformation strategies in the science media.

SPEAKERS:
DOUGLAS ALLCHIN

Translanguaging in Science: Welcoming All Students' Repertorios Lingüísticos for Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Translanguaging in Science Slides 2026.pdf
Sci-Lingual Education Website
Translanguaging Google Folder
Translanguaging Hand-Out Translanguaging Quick Guide

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What is translanguaging? How can we leverage it to support all students’ science learning and language development? Join us for a hands-on experience, discussion of translanguaging principles, and exploration of strategies that break down language and cultural "barriers" in 3D science teaching and learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be able to design and implement translanguaging strategies that promote inclusion and enrich science learning by drawing upon students' full linguistic and cultural repertoires for sense-making.

SPEAKERS:
Claudio Vargas, Diana Velez

Use Games & Role Playing to help Students Understand how Communities can respond to Sea Level Rise.

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Use Games Role Playing to help Students Understand Sea Level Rise
Attendees experienced a role-playing simulation from NOAA, Beat the Uncertainty, that asks students to choose strategies that can help coastal communities to be more resilient with one of the most dangerous climate impacts of our time, sea level rise. The simulation is appropriate for upper elementary through adult ages. The results of the simulation provide opportunities for discussion on how coastal communities can be prepared in the face of sea level rise and severe weather.

Show Details

Over the long history of our planet sea levels have always been changing. After the last ice age, sea level rose about 120 meters or about 4 feet per century. We have real time data records about sea level rising the past 150 years ago and the impacts of sea level rise are being felt along the coastlines of the United States and its territories. Attendees will learn about where to find information about the causes of sea level rise and local information about the amount of rise for a coastal locality. Attendees will then experience a role-playing simulation from NOAA, Beat the Uncertainty, that asks students to choose strategies that can help coastal communities to be more resilient with one of the most dangerous climate impacts of our time, sea level rise. The simulation is appropriate for upper elementary through adult ages. The results of the simulation provide opportunities for discussion on how coastal communities can be prepared in the face of sea level rise and severe weather.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will learn how to set up and run the simulation in their own classroom and how to find resources that relate to sea level rise and community resilience strategies.

SPEAKERS:
Margaret Holzer, Peggy Steffen

Using Structured Peer Critique to Model Thermal Energy Transfer

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


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The Model-Based Argument Critique Tool is an inclusive learning strategy that promotes deep student engagement by giving all students a structured, low-stakes entry point into scientific argumentation and evaluating student-created scientific models. We will use it to focus on the second law of thermodynamics (HS-PS3-4) in this workshop. The tool requires students to critique peers' claims, evidence from investigations, and visual representations of unseen processes like energy transfer and particle movement in a scientific model. Critiquing varied representations helps students evaluate diverse modeling approaches and meet the Systems and System Models requirement. In this workshop, we will review student work related to a phenomenon (e.g., a cooling coffee mug) and discuss how the tool's structure supports equitable classroom practices and values diverse student thinking for science success.

TAKEAWAYS:
Model-Based Argument Critique Tool is an inclusive and equitable strategy for teaching complex concepts like the second law of thermodynamics (HS-PS3-4), giving all students a low-stakes, structured entry point into scientific argumentation and model evaluation.

SPEAKERS:
Alex St. Louis, Jaclyn Murray

Using the Paleobiology Database to Engage Students in Three-Dimensional Learning

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slide Deck
The presentation slide deck includes links to the Paleobiology Database and videos used in the presentation.

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TThe Paleobiology Database (PBD) is a public research database of paleontological data that is freely available to anyone. Students can use the PBD to gather data about fossils including locations and organismal ecology. The PBD Navigator can also be used to visualize fossil locations, create fossil maps and analyze patterns in the fossil record. These activities can be aligned with and support the science and engineering practices (SEP) including Analyzing and Interpreting Data, Constructing Explanation and Engaging in Argument from Evidence. Students can view the data through the lens of Cross Cutting Concepts (CCC’s) such as Patterns or Scale, Proportion and Quantity. An example in which the PBD was used as part of an Earth Sciences PBL (project based learning) will be presented and resources will be highlighted and shared.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about the Paleobiology Database (PBD) and how they can incorporate it into their science curriculum to support three-dimensional learning.

SPEAKERS:
Renee JiJi

Utilizing Game Construction to Provide Differentiation in Computer Science Classes

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1eLWtAA1Ech0pV0FUGewipVeI6-Ut-kFq4coevNHMOb4/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p

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The purpose of this session is to illustrate how game design can be used to provide a scaffold for differentiation in computer science projects. Participants will see how having students build games like tic-tac-toe or a night at the casino can provide multiple different levels of challenge for students. These games can create authentic opportunities for collaboration between students and peer-led coaching. The simplicity of these games and their innate fun factor will draw students in and provide a clear feedback loop that helps students understand how close they are to completion and foster higher motivation for completion. This session seeks to help attendees foster student success for students at various levels while also providing students with rigor and challenge at all levels.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use game design as a way to provide differentiation in computer science projects.

SPEAKERS:
Maurice Telesford

What If Science Led the Way? Integrated Learning for Elementary Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 1:20 PM - 2:20 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Centering Science Landing Page
On this landing page you can find the session slides along with a template interdisciplinary unit planner and two unit planner examples (one 1st grade and one 5th grade).

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In many elementary classrooms, science instruction often takes a back seat to reading and math. But what if science became the driver of rich, interdisciplinary learning instead? This session will demonstrate how phenomenon-based instruction can anchor entire units, strengthening students’ literacy and numeracy skills while building coherence across subjects. Participants will explore sample units where students investigate compelling science phenomena through sensemaking practices. Connected lessons in reading, writing, math, and art support the investigation and build essential academic skills across disciplines. These units clearly show how science-centered instruction can meet NGSS, ELA, and math standards while boosting engagement and deepening understanding. Attendees will leave with a framework and practical tools to design integrated units where science guides instruction, empowering teachers to confidently center science and curiosity in their classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will discover how to design integrated, phenomenon-based units where science anchors instruction, strengthens literacy and math skills, and promotes student curiosity and coherence across all subjects.

SPEAKERS:
Shelby Dillman

“What Does My Outfit Have to do with Engineering?!?” The Impact of STEM in Our Daily Lives

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom J / K


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Help students see the link between textiles in their lives and science and engineering, through hands-on experience, language development, and a virtual lab visit! We will investigate textiles and sample an open source video for classroom use. In addition, we will share language-rich card games, linked to the video content. This session connects classroom learning to outside research and answers the question, “How does this lesson connect to the real world?” These resources were developed through a research collaboration among the Colleges of Education & Engineering at URI and the School of Engineering at UCONN through an Office of Naval Research grant addressing STEM workforce development needs. The resources expose elementary students to careers in STEM fields, and offer an invitation for future work in STEM. We will address opportunities for localized learning and connecting with industry partners, including maritime careers. Leave with materials to implement the next day!

TAKEAWAYS:
Through exploring open source resources, you will see the impact of textile engineering on our daily lives and how to translate this into your classroom. Leave with a deeper understanding of how to link engineering and future STEM careers to existing early childhood lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Rachele Limberakis, Charlene Tuttle

Advancing Equitable Science Teaching Through Lesson Study: Insights from STEM4Real, VCU, and MSU Collaborations

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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In this session, STEM4real will share how our partnership with Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), Michigan State University (MSU), and Richmond Public Schools is helping teachers bring equity to life in science classrooms. Together we used lesson study to support teachers as they planned, taught, and reflected on NGSS-aligned lessons that center student voice, culturally relevant phenomena, and equitable access. Through this work, teachers were able to adapt high-quality materials to meet the needs of their own students while strengthening their practice. We will share professional development and classroom examples from Virginia, including climate and ecosystem storylines, that show how students engaged in real sensemaking. Participants will also get to try out one of the discourse protocols we used during lesson study and walk through a mini-cycle of collaborative reflection.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators and teachers will gain knowledge on how lesson study strengthens collaboration and supports equitable, discourse in science teaching.

SPEAKERS:
Neotha Williams

Bringing Public Health Phenomena into the Biology Classroom using the Health DataWell Instructional Materials

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 B


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Discover the Health DataWell public health instructional materials, co-developed by NSTA and HESI Global. The materials provide opportunities for students to investigate public health phenomena using real-world data. In doing so, students gain an understanding of the complex factors that influence public health, and the roles that community members and public health experts play in promoting community health. The session will focus on a lesson in which students use disciplinary core ideas about structure and function and variation of traits to answer questions about the relationship between air pollution exposure and chronic lower respiratory diseases. Participants will experience the phenomenon and hear from the 2025-2026 Health DataWell Ambassadors about their experiences implementing the materials.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies for implementing the Health DataWell instructional materials in their classrooms, enabling them to effectively engage students in investigating public health phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Patrice Scinta

Building Sensemakers: Integrating QFT and Writing Strategies in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building


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This session explores how the Question Formulation Technique (QFT) and research-based writing strategies can be combined to deepen student sensemaking in science. Participants will see how QFT engages students in generating their own questions around phenomena, fostering ownership and authentic connections to content. We will also highlight literacy strategies—such as Because–But–So, subordinating conjunctions, and sentence expansion—to strengthen student questioning and written explanations. Connections to Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs) and Crosscutting Concepts (CCCs) will be made explicit. Examples across grade levels will demonstrate how QFT and literacy scaffolds can work together to support three-dimensional assessment and instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to blend QFT with research-based writing strategies to help students ask better questions, write to show their thinking, and make sense of phenomena through SEPs and CCCs. Ready-to-use classroom resources and modeled examples will be provided.

SPEAKERS:
Lynn DiAndrea, Dr. Kristen Cummings

Climate Change Teaching Resources for All

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://subjecttoclimate.org/

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Climate change is one of the most important scientific topics of our time—and students are eager to learn about it. SubjectToClimate is an innovative and free online platform that provides teachers with a suite of engaging and interactive climate change teaching resources and lesson plans that are aligned to NGSS standards. In this 10-minute presentation, our presenter will introduce SubjectToClimate's science resources and demonstrate how they can be used to enhance climate change education. We will walk through the platform's features, including lesson plans by teachers, news for students, teaching guides, and more. Attendees will leave this presentation suite of free resources they can immediately access to effectively teach climate change, no matter their grade level or subject. Join us to learn how SubjectToClimate can help you educate and inspire the next generation of climate leaders.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave this presentation suite of free resources they can immediately access to effectively teach climate change, no matter their grade level or subject.

SPEAKERS:
Benjamin Charles

Collecting Data that COUNTS!

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Data.pdf
https://docs.google.com/videos/d/1AW_NxvkwuYTqwh9tkKzvFxKWGP-CCffM1mfXI0Z5cy0/edit?usp=sharing

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In this session, we will demonstrate how to incorporate outdoor data collection into your curriculum to both enhance student engagement and understanding of the phenomena. Using the local ecosystem as a guide, we will demonstrate how to design a placed based unit that engages students in asking questions that can be answered by investigating in your own back yard. Assessment can be integrated through portfolios showcasing their work, peer evaluations, and reflective journals. For example, teaching students how scientist gather information using quadrats, transects, and other simple measuring techniques can teach data recording and analysis skills while meeting science standards.

TAKEAWAYS:
Place based learning activities can be more than just a fun outdoor activity. Facilitating opportunities where students will investigate the ecosystem right outside their back door. A clear template for engaging students organizing and analyzing their own data to make sense of local phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Karen Marshall

Countdown to Summer! Science Strategies to Finish Strong and Have Fun

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Anaheim 2026 - Strategies to Finish the New School Year.pptx

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As the end-of-year whirlwind begins, how can we keep students engaged, curious, and learning? This dynamic session inspires, empowers, and equips educators with practical, classroom-tested strategies to finish the school year strong through meaningful, low-prep science activities. Explore ways to maintain curiosity, exploration, and inquiry while reinforcing clear expectations and standards. Participants will discover adaptable lessons and reflective wrap-up activities that make science memorable - even in the final weeks! Leave with fresh ideas to celebrate student learning, sustain momentum, and end the year with wonder!

TAKEAWAYS:
Engage in discussions and hands-on activities to support 3D learning and inspire students to keep wondering, exploring, and asking questions, even as end-of-year disruptions try to derail your lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Sara Tolman

Deepening Relationships by Co-Developing with Educational Partners

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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In this session, we will share how we transitioned from a transactional to collaborative relationship with a local elementary school. Science Discovery is an outreach arm of the University of Colorado which serves communities across Colorado with STEM programming in many different educational contexts. As an organization, we strive to create relationships with the schools we serve. One such school initially requested programming that was developed for a broad audience. Through a sustained effort on both sides, this blossomed into an extremely rewarding collaborative relationship where Science Discovery and teachers met regularly to co-design and facilitate lessons and curriculum that can then be shared in broader contexts throughout the state of Colorado.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk away with action steps for deepening relationships with educational partners. In addition to seeing an example of this strategy succeed, they will leave with concrete examples of how to co-develop curricula to meet the needs of different educational shareholders.

SPEAKERS:
Scott Sieke

Designing Your Inclusive Classroom Community

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building


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The physical spaces we use for teaching science play an important role in student learning experiences. While not every teacher has complete control over their physical classroom, it is important to consider possible systems to better address the students' needs. In this session, participants will analyze sample images and videos of classrooms through the lens of creating a welcoming, inclusive and accessible space for all students. Participants will reflect on their own spaces and discuss what they notice about the sample classrooms. After discussing different structures and strategies used for learning science, participants will share possible changes they can make to their own spaces. Teachers of all levels and amounts of experience are encouraged to come to this interactive discussion. The images and videos shared in these sessions are collected from science teachers from various settings (e.g, public, private, urban, rural, etc) across the nation.

TAKEAWAYS:
By considering student needs and inclusive practice, teachers can arrange their science classrooms to promote student independence and strengthen class community. Building students’ science confidence and motivation can have a positive impact on their later education and futures.

SPEAKERS:
Bree Barnett Dreyfuss

Embracing Multicultural Wisdom in Science Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building


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Join a first-year educator as he shares his experience rooting his science teaching in culturally sustaining pedagogy. More than ever, in an anti-science world, marginalized students deserve access to educational spaces where they can learn while feeling safe, seen, and embraced. Every student possesses wisdom which extends beyond the classroom, yet they are given limited opportunities to demonstrate their unique funds of knowledge. Through reflecting upon anecdotal evidence, examining student work, and dissecting concrete examples of culturally sustaining pedagogy, learn how multiple levels of students’ culture can be embraced to increase student engagement, discourse, and mastery learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will have an introductory understanding of culturally sustaining pedagogy and the opportunities it can create in STEM learning environments.

SPEAKERS:
Bryant Rivera Cortez

Engaging High School Students in the Scientific Process through the CREATE Method of Reading Primary Science Literature

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast


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Primary scientific literature is difficult for non-specialists to understand. One method of reading scientific literature, the CREATE (Consider, Read, Elucidate the hypotheses, Analyze the figures, Think of the next Experiment) method, has had success in college classrooms. In this workshop, you will learn how the CREATE method can be adapted to a high school audience. Students are provided with assignments for each step of the method, culminating with a mini grant panel where they propose experiments and evaluate each other’s work. You will read a paper on CRISPR methods as if you were the student in the classroom, completing the activities in real time. You will leave the workshop with easily adaptable resources to use with any primary science article of your choosing. We will also discuss and share strategies and resources for identifying and choosing primary science articles to include in your curriculum.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how the CREATE method can be adapted to the high school classroom, providing a clear and systematic approach to reading primary science literature.

SPEAKERS:
Shelby Montague

Engaging Science Educators in Data-Rich Pedagogy Professional Learning to Support Engagement and Data Skills in Learneres

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slides 4-17-26
Engaging Science Educators in Data-Rich Pedagogy Professional Learning to Support Engagement and Data Skills in Learners

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As data science becomes increasingly important in the twenty-first century, educators continue to develop instructional strategies to incorporate data into their classrooms effectively. The Data Ecosystem Project is a research initiative focused on two main aspects of K-12 science education: data-rich pedagogy (DRP) and the connection between data-driven strategies that support science content learning and the development of data skills in learners. Throughout the school year, five middle school science educators received both group and individual professional learning support for DRP. End-of-the-year interviews revealed that educators acknowledged the significance of DRP in fostering critical thinking and real-world problem-solving. However, they faced challenges in implementing DRP due to curriculum limitations. Educators evaluated their DRP and positioned themselves on a continuum at the project's beginning and end. All educators enhanced their use and understanding of DRP.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will incorporate examples of data-rich pedagogy for middle school science educators through group professional learning sessions and one-on-one support.

SPEAKERS:
Tracy Ostrom

Flipped Classroom and Literacy in Life Science Education

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Flipped Classroom 2.0 Presentation
Canva Slides

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his presentation will explore how implementing a Flipped Classroom model can enhance student-centered learning in Middle and Upper School Life Sciences courses. By shifting direct instruction outside of class through videos and readings, students engage more deeply in hands-on, inquiry-based activities during class time. The session will also highlight how literacy integration, lab investigations, and Visible Thinking Routines enrich student understanding and promote critical thinking. Drawing from five years of classroom data, I will share evidence of improved student engagement, conceptual mastery, and collaboration through this model. Participants will leave with practical strategies, digital tools, and ready-to-use resources for designing and implementing their own Flipped Classroom lessons in Life Sciences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how the Flipped Classroom model boosts engagement and deeper learning in Life Sciences. Attendees will be able to learn how to plan a flipped classroom lesson and feel motivated to begin using this method. I will be sharing examples and resources to utilize in the classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Fernando Azcona

From Field to Classroom - Farming Agricultural Phenomena

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Phenomena Handout.pdf
NSTA Anaheim Phenom Checklist.pdf
NSTA CA Resource Links.pdf
NSTA Phenom Match Full Set.pdf
NSTA_Anaheim_FarmingAgriculturalPhenom.pdf
Phenom Farm QR Code.pdf

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This session introduces educators to the process of identifying agricultural phenomena and connecting them to NGSS science concepts. Participants will engage in hands-on activities including a “Phenomenon Sort” and “Phenomena Match Game” to evaluate and align agricultural examples with science standards. Teachers will brainstorm local phenomena and leave with tools like the Phenomena Farming Checklist and a ready-to-use list of ag phenomena across disciplines. The session emphasizes how to make science instruction more relevant by integrating agriculture as a lens for exploration and inquiry.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers leave with tools to identify and use agricultural phenomena that are observable, puzzling, and connected to NGSS three dimensions.

SPEAKERS:
Angela Gulotta

How to Energize your Energy Lessons

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 A


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Phenomena—ranging from wireless charging and melting ice to earthquakes and plant growth—occur whenever energy is transferred. Yet many students view energy as discipline-specific, assuming that “energy in physics” is different from “energy in biology.” This makes it difficult for them to recognize energy as a crosscutting concept when exploring systems. Our research shows that students explain phenomena more effectively and better understand energy conservation when they track energy transfers within and between systems. In this workshop, you will learn how the energy transfer approach (ETA) and energy transfer diagrams (ETDs) can support students’ understanding of NGSS-aligned learning goals. You will construct ETDs and explore how they help learners visualize the energy flows driving phenomena. Although the workshop activities align with physical science NGSS Performance Expectations, the ETD approach can be readily adapted for biology, and Earth and space science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers learn the energy transfer approach (ETA) and how to construct energy transfer diagrams (ETDs) to help students track energy flow within and between systems. ETDs offer a clear, consistent method for representing the energy flows that drive real-world phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Weiwei He, Erin Lewis

Ideas in Action: Using TEDx to Bring the Four Pillars of Sensemaking Alive

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2


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What happens when a classroom becomes a stage for sensemaking? In this session, participants will discover how a student-led TEDx conference can serve as a powerful vehicle for integrating phenomena, science and engineering practices, student ideas, and science ideas into daily instruction. Attendees will learn practical strategies for guiding students as they identify real-world phenomena, design questions, and conduct research that bridges STEM and humanities. Students then transform their findings into authentic TEDx talks, blending science literacy, engineering design, and communication skills. This approach highlights how educators can cultivate curiosity, amplify student voices, and connect learning to the broader community. From scaffolding research and refining arguments to integrating media production and presentation, this session offers a replicable framework for engaging students in authentic, idea-driven science learning that deepens understanding and builds confidence.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn strategies for using student-led TEDx talks to integrate the four pillars of sensemaking (phenomena, practices, student ideas, and science ideas) into classroom practice, empowering learners to research, reason, and present authentic, real-world solutions.

SPEAKERS:
Lisa Robinson, Katie Musick, Jesse Wren

Influence of Learning Assistants on Students' Sense of STEM-Identity

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
KNEE_NSTA 2026.pdf

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Learning Assistant (LA) programs are a type of near-peer instructional support that has been implemented in many schools throughout the US. Research has shown that LAs decrease DFW rates, increase retention in STEM programs, and engage faculty in evidence-based pedagogies and educational research opportunities. This presentation focuses on qualitative analyses of the LA program at Azusa Pacific University (APU). The results include data from student focus groups and LA focus groups. Initial evidence suggests that the LA program helped students feel more comfortable in their STEM classes and increased general interest in STEM. There is also evidence that, for the LA, it is important there is a relationship of trust between themselves and their faculty, and themselves and the students. Further analysis will help to provide insights for how an LA program can be used to support an inclusive learning environment and influence the development of STEM identity in students across cultures

TAKEAWAYS:
According to Hazari's model for STEM-identity, a Learning Assistant program appears to increase the STEM identity of the Learning Assistants themselves, as well as for some of the students enrolled in the course using the LA.

SPEAKERS:
Karstin Knee, Elijah Roth

Introducing Biotechnology Through Biofuels: Integrating Microcontrollers and Real-Time Data in Grades 6–12

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA DSEC Biotechnology Conference Presentation.pptx

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Biotechnology offers powerful, real-world connections for engaging students in science, engineering, and sustainability, yet many educators are unsure how to introduce it meaningfully across grade levels. This interactive session supports middle and high school teachers (grades 6–12) in integrating foundational and advanced biotechnology concepts through the lens of biofuels and environmental monitoring, while embedding technology and data science into STEM instruction. Participants will explore classroom-ready biotechnology activities focused on biofuel production and carbon cycling using microcontrollers such as Databots and micro:bit platforms equipped with CO₂ and temperature sensors. Teachers will learn how students can collect, analyze, and interpret real-time environmental data to investigate fermentation, biomass conversion, and biofuel efficiency—connecting biological processes to climate science and engineering design. The session emphasizes hands-on learning, cross-curricu

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will gain practical, classroom-ready strategies for integrating biotechnology, biofuels, and real-time environmental data collection using sensors and microcontrollers to connect biology, engineering, and climate science in engaging, scalable STEM lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Darci Kimball, Amber Struthers

Learning in Place: Place-based outdoor learning for all students (a COESEE session)

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10


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Learning in Places (LiP) provides a comprehensive set of instructional materials that provides a detailed sequence of outdoor learning engagements. LiP development is funded by the NSF. In LiP young learners explore outdoors, becoming familiar with their place, make noticing and wonderings, and ask Should We questions. Through this sequence learners begin to establish the background for cycle(s) of inquiry toward change making. LiP focuses on supporting young learners as they become a part of their place and implement change making activities from this stance. In this session, we will provide an overview of Learning in Places and engage educators in selected portions of the materials. Educators will feel confident in the background and implementation goals of Learning in Places, be able to access the freely available materials, online, and will be familiar with the sequence of the LiP storyline.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session, educators will become familiar with and more interested in Learning in Places and the goals of science-based transdisciplinary learning.

SPEAKERS:
Mary Starr

Let's Do This! How To Teach Hands-On Classroom Challenges Designed by the CrunchLabs Toy Engineers

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Get ready to channel your inner builder. In this session, you will learn how to teach the hands-on classroom challenges created by the CrunchLabs toy engineers, the same crew behind some of Mark Rober’s most memorable builds. These challenges are more than just fun. They power deeper science understanding and give students the chance to design, test, and think like engineers. We will walk through how to launch a challenge, organize your space, support student testing, and help learners reflect on what they discovered. You will leave with practical strategies to keep the mess under control, the ideas flowing, and the energy high.

TAKEAWAYS:
Get practical strategies for setting up and running CrunchLabs classroom challenges. These hands-on experiences build student confidence, creativity, and sensemaking skills.

SPEAKERS:
Tommy Clayton, Arash Jamshidi, Spencer Martin

Making Waves with Deep Sea Phenomena: Culturally Responsive Strategies, Sensemaking, and Confidence in the Science Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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The deep sea represents almost 95% of Earth’s livable habitat! Without photosynthesis, how do animals survive in the deep? Participants will explore whalefall ecosystems like scientists, discovering, studying, and collaborating to make sense of this vital ecosystem. With storytelling, peer-to-peer learning, authentic science data, and collaborative hands-on activities they’ll build and refine models, examine mouthparts, and discuss feeding strategies. Leverage prior knowledge of terrestrial communities to support sensemaking of core science concepts (Hammond, 2025) and this unique ecosystem and its connection to global systems via the 5E instructional model. We’ll highlight culturally responsive teaching practices for a learning environment that is inclusive of multilingual and neurodiverse learners and fosters collaboration through science-focused discourse. Participants leave with tools to refine existing lessons or design new, meaningful ones that support students-as-scientists.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn the critical role dynamic whalefall ecosystems play in global nutrient cycling in a place where the sun doesn't shine. Use storytelling grounded in real world phenomena to illuminate student ideas with simple sensemaking practices that build confidence and understanding of real-world science.

SPEAKERS:
Kulia Blick, Lisette Khaoone

Math as a Tool for Science Sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D


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Discover how mathematics becomes a powerful tool for science sensemaking in elementary classrooms through the lens of OpenSciEd Elementary units. In this session, participants will experience how elementary age learners engage with mathematics and computational thinking and data—measurements, observations, sketches, photos, and recordings—to make sense of real-world phenomena featured in OpenSciEd investigations. We’ll explore how children notice and describe variability, create visual displays to organize their ideas, and analyze and interpret patterns to answer questions and spark new inquiries. Through an immersive experience grounded in OpenSciEd materials, participants will experience how integrating mathematics and computational thinking and data science practices into elementary science instruction deepens reasoning, supports a range of learners, and empowers children to think critically about the data they encounter every day.

TAKEAWAYS:
OpenSciEd K-5 units create rich opportunities to use math as a tool for sensemaking by exploring variability, creating data displays, and analyzing and interpreting patterns—strengthening their mathematics and computational thinking and data literacy while supporting grade-level standards.

SPEAKERS:
Guy Ollison, Amy Belcastro

NARST: Integrating computational modeling into high school

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 211 A


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Want to incorporate computational thinking into your high school science curriculum? In this interactive workshop, you’ll dive into DC Models–a research-based curriculum that combines computational modeling and programming with phenomena-driven investigations in biology, chemistry, and physics. Co-written with teachers, this research-backed curriculum supports students to build models, run experiments, and analyze data while exploring real world phenomena through a computational model. You will step into the roles of both teacher and student as you explore engaging, ready-to-use lessons designed to support NGSS 3D learning. Perfect for high school science teachers looking to add computational thinking and scientific modeling to their existing curriculum–no coding experience required!

TAKEAWAYS:
By injecting programming into core science courses, every student can graduate with a vital 21st century skill. DC Models lessons offer a low floor entry to computational modeling with a high ceiling for phenomena exploration. Participants will explore DC Models and leave with ready-to-use lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Margaret Harrison, J. Elisabeth Kasner

Open-Ended Labs

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qTTogx4dY7jINpCoN9-RF0gnZTpMh8yGNaaj7FWOARA/edit?usp=sharing

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Students become more engaged when they are given agency over their own learning. Allowing students to plan their own lab experiments is one such strategy. With guidance and parameters, teachers can support students through this process and they can learn standards, sensemaking, and the scientific method.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be given strategies and documents to support students in planning their own experiments.

SPEAKERS:
Nadene Klein

Opening STEM Doors for All Learners: Using the OWL Method to Transform Competition Clubs

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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This is a model that starts from the basics of the OWL (observe, wonder, learn) large-group discussion strategy then moves onto new experiences that serve as the jumping off point for student-generated questions and investigations such as how to use in a competition like Science Olympiad, SECME, ExploraVision, etc. I first discovered the OWL chart at a NSTA conference presentation Picture Perfect Science in 2012. The authors demonstrated how three-column chart was used as a whole-group anchor chart throughout an inquiry lesson. The O represents what the student has Observed, the W what the student has Wondered, and the L what the student has Learned. This technique is a great process for finding and addressing misconceptions and holes in student learning to prepare them for the competition teams. The OWL model takes the place of the more traditional KWL strategy as it focuses on science and engineering practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
I’ll walk through how we scaffold the learning process, guide from curiosity to specialization, and foster a culture of collaboration and discovery. Whether you're starting a club or looking to revitalize one, this session will offer strategies to make STEM competitions for every learner to thrive.

SPEAKERS:
Stephanie Coy

OSE Teacher Training: Best Practices for Success: Making Participation Inclusive During Discussions

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
ANA26_OSE TT_ Making Participation Inclusive.pdf
Blank Norms.pdf
Classroom Transcript.pdf
Discussion Prompts.pdf
Discussion Supports.pdf
OSE 3 Discussion types.pdf
OSE Discussion Planning Tool .pdf
OSE Norms.pdf
Productive talk_Goals and Moves.pdf
Scientific Communication.pdf
Whiteboarding Strategies -2.pdf

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Led by an NSTA expert facilitator, this interactive session explores how to make class discussions meaningful and inclusive. Participants will learn the different types of OpenSciEd discussions, discover strategies to support participation from all students, and see real classroom examples. Leave with practical resources, routines, and tools to create a classroom culture where every student’s thinking is valued.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave ready to facilitate inclusive, meaningful OpenSciEd class discussions that engage all students and support deep sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Ann Guglielmo

Physical Science Investigations Using Underwater Sound

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building


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This workshop will incorporate the phenomena of underwater sound into physical and biological science activities and investigations. Online resources such as an audio gallery of underwater sounds produced by animals, people, and the natural world and activities challenging students to produce spectrograms and explore the science of sound.

TAKEAWAYS:
Using the topic of underwater sound can be an engaging vehicle for students to explore physical science concepts and connect these fundamental principles with the undersea environment and science of sound.

SPEAKERS:
Liesl Hotaling

Physics for Life Sciences: Hands-On Investigations using Mobile Technology

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1UbsalxCyTyrQ6Sdd2FHjIzFhuyVwBfPh/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=116284258410174717691&rtpof=true&sd=true

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Mobile technologies, including smartphones and smartwatches, are creating new opportunities to connect classroom learning with real-world biomedical applications. In this hands-on workshop, participants will transform their own smartphones into portable laboratories by using built-in sensors—accelerometers, gyroscopes, and cameras—to make biomedical-related measurements. Activities will include analyzing the cardiac cycle with photoplethysmography and seismocardiography, measuring physiological tremors, and investigating gait dynamics. Along the way, participants will see how foundational concepts in mechanics and electromagnetic waves can be directly linked to human health and biology.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with ready-to-use, low-cost labs that connect physics principles to biomedical applications such as heart rate, tremor, and gait. They will experience these activities as students, gaining strategies to engage learners through interdisciplinary, real-world investigations.

SPEAKERS:
Helene McLaughlin, David Rakestraw

Place-Based Data Literacy: Using NASA Data to Connect to Local Phenomenon

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5


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Discover how NASA data can meaningfully connect global data with locally relevant phenomenon investigations (e.g, wildfires, drought, sea-level rise). This hands-on workshop demonstrates how educators can leverage place-based learning principles to design lessons with NASA data and supporting resources to help catalyze students’ data literacy. Participants will experience data-driven investigations that connect their local environment to global Earth systems using NASA's resources. Through place-based inquiry, we'll explore how to guide students in analyzing multiple data types (categorical, numeric, geospatial, temporal) and representations (graphs, maps, tables) to investigate locally relevant phenomena in their own communities. Participants will work in small groups to critically examine and plan for implementation of pedagogical strategies for place-based data investigations that honor students' lived experiences while building data literacy skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to design place-based investigations that increase data literacy skills for students as they use NASA data alongside local observations to more deeply investigate locally relevant phenomena impacting their communities (e.g., wildfires, drought, sea-level rise).

SPEAKERS:
Sara Salisbury, Karen Lionberger

Playful Pathways: Engineering and Coding for Our Youngest Scientists

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation

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Come and see how play-based learning, engineering design, and coding can blend in PreK–2 settings. Participants will rotate through mini-stations (e.g., designing with blocks, simple robotics, unplugged coding games) to see how inquiry, problem-solving, and creativity can build a foundation for later STEM success.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with classroom management strategies for hands-on STEM with young learners, resources for affordable tools and activities, and station ideas adaptable for different grade levels.

SPEAKERS:
Ch'Loris Clemons

Scenario-Based Tasks: A Formative Assessment Approach

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://www.solu4edu.com/2026

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Participants will be exposed to a variety of performance-based assessment in science (OECD TFS, AP items, etc.) to explore how multiple standards, learning targets, desired outcomes, and spread of rigor can be elicited from one scenario (e.g. phenomenon) that might anchor engagement and formative assessment towards mastery. Time will be spent with each participant's state standards and NGSS considerations in a selected course/subject with workshop tasks designed for group development towards an actionable scenario set that can be used immediately.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave this workshop with new skills and a targeted task for their students that is relevant, aligned to standards, rigor-appropriate, and designed to facilitate mastery.

SPEAKERS:
IV Bray

Science as a Literacy Gateway: Supporting Secondary Students in Reading

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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We’ll begin by examining reading data to highlight the reality that all science teachers are also literacy teachers. Participants will be introduced to the Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope, with a focus on the strands most applicable to science instruction. Throughout the session, the importance of oral language will be emphasized, and all strategies will be framed through the lens of teachers as adult learners exploring the topic of neutron stars. Explicit strategies will be modeled, including vocabulary routines and morphology instruction, to show how these practices support comprehension of complex texts. Teachers will engage in a hands-on activity to build background knowledge, and they will practice a vocabulary routine designed to support reading a complex science text.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session connects the Science of Reading to secondary science teaching, with strategies grounded in Scarborough’s Reading Rope. Learn vocabulary routines and collaborative structures support comprehension for all students, especially MLLs. Leave with practical tools for immediate classroom use.

SPEAKERS:
Sarah Bricker

Science at the Center: Leveraging STEM Partnerships to Drive Interdisciplinary Learning in Urban Classrooms

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building


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Science educators can lead transformative, interdisciplinary learning by building strategic partnerships that expand STEM opportunities for students. This session shares a practical framework for initiating collaborations with CTE programs, design pathways, and community or industry partners to create NGSS-aligned projects that connect science learning to real-world applications. Drawing from a pilot in an urban high school, we’ll explore how science teachers launched collaborative projects that integrated engineering, design, and technology while remaining grounded in core science ideas and three-dimensional learning. These partnerships engaged students in authentic problem-solving and revealed pathways into STEM careers — from technical roles to leadership positions. Attendees will leave with a simple, actionable partnership planning tool and steps to initiate science-centered collaboration in their own schools.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn a practical framework for initiating science-centered partnerships with CTE, design, and community organizations and leave with actionable tools to launch interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned projects that expand STEM opportunities for students.

SPEAKERS:
Maafi Cook

Science for All! Diversifying Science Instruction Using the Principles UDL and Differentiated Learning

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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During this session, participants will have an opportunity to delve into the central, silent pillar of the Sensemaking Framework: Equity! We will focus on exploring and utilizing a suite of strategies that meet a variety of student needs and provide ALL learners with an opportunity to access real-world, authentic science. We will learn how to leverage the principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and Differentiated Instruction (DI) to create powerful and engaging lessons/diverse experiences that are aligned to the NGSS expectations and entrenched in the ideals of Sensemaking in science. Participants will also experience a phenomena-based 3D lesson designed for a variety of science learners that can be easily transferred into their own diverse contexts and classrooms. Join us on the journey of making science make sense! #ScienceForAll!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a set of viable strategies for engaging a variety of learners in authentic science experiences, which will allow for access to high quality science instruction and the opportunity for students to deepen their understanding of scientific principles.

SPEAKERS:
Marissa Murdock

Science Talk: From Teacher Monologues to Student Dialogues

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
TeacherStudent Science Talk
NSTA presentation on why kids don't talk science to each other.

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Are your science lessons dominated by teacher talk? Ready to ignite lively student-to-student conversations that deepen understanding and boost engagement? In this session, you’ll explore practical strategies to get students talking—both verbally and in writing—about science concepts. Learn how to facilitate meaningful peer discussions that promote sense-making and critical thinking, while discovering simple yet effective ways to formatively assess student talk in real time. Say goodbye to being the “talking textbook” and hello to becoming the facilitator of dynamic student exchanges that lead to richer science learning. Walk away with tools to: Encourage authentic student-to-student communication Use question prompts and discussion protocols that spark curiosity Integrate written dialogue for deeper reflection Assess understanding through student talk without interrupting flow

TAKEAWAYS:
Get students talking, thinking, and making sense of science—together. Explore easy-to-use strategies to spark peer talk, promote reasoning, support reflection, and assess learning on the spot. Shift from lecturer to facilitator and let student voices lead the learning.

SPEAKERS:
Bridget Burke

Spotlight on Science & Literacy: Using NSTA Kids Press to Teach the Science & Engineering Practices

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8


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Discover how NSTA Kids Press books can move from page to practice in your classroom. Presenters will share encore favorites and premiere new titles, highlighting how these books support the Science and Engineering Practices (SEPs). Participants will see practical ways to launch inquiry projects, connect to other curricular areas, and integrate literacy into science instruction. Each featured book will include classroom-ready ideas, from hands-on activities to assessment strategies, plus suggestions for extending learning with related texts. Whether you are looking to spark curiosity, strengthen student understanding, or make cross-curricular connections, you will leave with new ideas for teaching science and engineering practices through engaging stories.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use NSTA Kids Press books to engage students in the Science and Engineering Practices through inquiry projects, cross-curricular connections, and hands-on activities that bring science learning to life.

SPEAKERS:
Melissa Parks, Simone Nance, Jennifer Williams

Success Skills in Action: Realizing PBL and IBL in Every Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E


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How do we design classrooms where curiosity sparks learning, collaboration drives progress, and critical thinking is second nature? This session explores how project-based and inquiry-based learning empower students to build essential success skills such as communication, creativity, and perseverance. Drawing on original research across multiple student cohorts, we’ll share data-driven insights and classroom-tested strategies to make PBL and IBL practical and sustainable in any context. Whether you’re guiding district-wide initiatives or working directly with students, you’ll leave with concrete tools to foster a culture of inquiry and ensure deeper learning for all.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how project- and inquiry-based learning can foster essential success skills like curiosity, collaboration, and critical thinking—and explore practical strategies to make this kind of learning a reality in every classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Dawn McCotter

Teach Engineering: Enhance K-12 STEM education through hands-on learning, design thinking and sensemaking

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
TE EDP Flyer - NSTA 2026
TE Info Flyer - NSTA 2026

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Teach Engineering is a free, online collection of K–12 curricular STEM resources focused on integrating engineering into science learning. The collection includes more than 1,900 original lessons and activities created by educators, classroom-tested nationwide, and aligned with NGSS, Common Core, State Standards, and ITEEA. These resources use engineering to connect science and math through inquiry-based, real-world activities relevant to today’s youth. Freely available at TeachEngineering.org, the collection also features instructional “how-to” videos and professional development tools for teachers. In this session, we will present the Teach Engineering digital collection, highlight its unique features, and demonstrate how educators can easily integrate these resources into their classrooms to spark student engagement and deepen STEM learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will discover Teach Engineering as a free, comprehensive collection of high-quality STEM resources—classroom-tested, peer-reviewed, and ready to use—to bring engineering and science to life through hands-on learning and sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Ellen Sukovich

The Art of the Scientist Circle: Facilitating Student-Led Discussions

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Final Art of SCIENTIST CIRCLES.pptx

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Experience the "a-ha" moments firsthand. In this immersive session where we'll explore scientist circles, a classroom approach that puts students in the driver's seat of their own learning and discovery. We will analyze video case studies of my 6th-grade classroom, where we will witness students actively grappling with complex phenomena, negotiating ideas, and collaboratively building consensus as they reach a learning target! Attendees will see the tangible benefits of a phenomena-based, student-driven approach to science and will also learn the teaching strategies that make it all happen. We'll cover best practices for facilitating sensemaking, fostering critical thinking, and ensuring every student's voice is heard. Attendees will leave with a toolbox of tips and tricks to bring the magic of scientist circles back to your own classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will leave the session feeling empowered, inspired, and prepared to bring scientist circles to their classrooms!

SPEAKERS:
Jed Graboys

The Curiosity Cycle: A Practical Framework for Wonder-Driven Science Instruction

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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How do we keep wonder alive in elementary science instruction? This session introduces the Curiosity Cycle, a simple yet powerful four-phase framework that supports inquiry-based, student-centered learning aligned with NGSS. Built around the phases of Provocation, Questioning, Exploration, and Reflection, the Curiosity Cycle offers concrete strategies and tech tools—such as digital Wonder Walls, visual modeling apps, and journaling platforms—that can be immediately used in the classroom. This approach is designed to deepen conceptual understanding, boost student engagement, and foster inclusive participation across diverse learning environments. Attendees will walk away with a digital infographic, sample prompts, and tips for integrating the cycle into both pre-service and in-service teaching contexts. Let curiosity lead the way in your science instruction!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement the Curiosity Cycle to spark student-driven inquiry in science classrooms using four clear phases and tech-integrated strategies that support equity, engagement, and conceptual growth.

SPEAKERS:
Gurupriya Ramanathan, Anne Tapp Jaksa

The Elementary Educator's Secret Weapon for Teaching Three-dimensional STEM: Non-Formal Educators in Local Industries and Public Agencies

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 4:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Grade Level Brainstorm.docx
NSTA 2026 Prezi Sharon.pdf
Water Pollution Solution Slides
NSTA Presentation Paula.pdf
Western Water Education Slides

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A growing body of research suggests that partnering formal education with non-formal education has significant potential for improving student outcomes, particularly in STEM topics. Benefits of such partnerships include: Increased accessibility and inclusion, which works to close the opportunity gap, contextual learning through authentic experiential activities leading to deeper understanding of Disciplinary Core Ideas, connecting students to real-world career correlations that increase learner's connection to their communities. These a few of many ways non-formal education can support Three-Dimensional Learning in STEM Education. This session will take non-formal education beyond the traditional field trip and bring it directly into the classroom both virtually and in-person. With 20 years of combined experience in non-formal education spaces, presenters will show participants how, why and with whom they should make contact to receive STEM support for their classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session participants will develop their own curated list of potential industry partners based on their teaching location, participate in innovative STEM lessons , with materials provided, and walk away with useful strategies for engaging non-formal educators in their STEM teaching.

SPEAKERS:
Damaris Velez, Sharon Gutierrez

Unpacking the Crosscutting Concepts with a new NSTA Quick-Reference Guide to the Three Dimensions

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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The NGSS and other standards based on the Framework of K-12 Education are quite complicated and often tricky to interpret. What teachers need is an easy-to-use reference guide to the standards, and since its’ release in 2014, the NSTA Quick-Reference Guide has become a perennial best-seller and an essential tool for many educators across the country. This session will be hosted by Ted Willard, the editor of the Quick-Reference Guide and formerly the in-house standards expert at NSTA. Ted will review the features listed above and how educators can use the Quick-Reference Guide to unpack the standards in their work developing curriculum, instruction, and assessment. Specifically, we will spend time exploring the crosscutting concepts in the standards using the tools and other resources in the Quick-Reference Guide.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to unpack the three dimensions using the tools and resources in the Quick-Reference Guide and will gain insights into the meaning of the crosscutting concepts.

SPEAKERS:
Ted Willard

Vertically Integrated Modeling Instruction for English Learners

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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Modeling Instruction has been demonstrated to produce superior learning outcomes for English Learners due to the structure of the pedagogy itself. (Malone, 2017) Instead of starting new conceptual units with a demonstration or a lecture, Modeling Instruction begins with a hands on laboratory activity. Students construct their own understanding of major scientific learning through project based learning. After these introductory labs, students construct multimodal representations (Models) to represent their thinking: graphs, equations, diagrams, and written descriptions. By exploring concepts in non-linguistic ways before introducing the language of a concept, E.L.s are given an opportunity to have a basis on which the language of science and scientific reasoning is constructed. In this talk, I will briefly cover the structure of Modeling Instruction, the history of Modeling Instruction, the research that suggests that it produces superior outcomes for E.L.s, and resources.

TAKEAWAYS:
Modeling Instruction works well for all audiences in teaching introductory scientific concepts; this effect is even more pronounced for English learning populations who are often underserved in the science classroom. This should be a top concern for educators with significant E.L. populations.

SPEAKERS:
Caden Biggs, Cynthia Chan, Eric Robinson

What’s in Your Toolbox? Equipping Preservice Teachers for Inquiry-Based Science Instruction

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 1


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How can we help preservice teachers grow confident in facilitating inquiry-based, integrated science instruction? In this session, I present a “Teacher Toolbox” framework rooted in metaphor, reflective practice, and literacy integration. Designed for early childhood and elementary science methods courses, this approach helps preservice teachers identify, name, and apply instructional “tools” — such as questioning strategies, picture books, sensemaking routines, and science/literacy connections — while building their science teacher identity. Participants will explore sample toolbox templates, student work, picture book pairings, and reflection prompts that support 3D learning, NGSS-aligned integration, and the development of teacher agency. Leave with resources and ideas to implement the toolbox metaphor in your own methods courses or professional learning sessions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain an understanding of how metaphor can shape teacher identity and confidence. They will also explore a customizable "Teacher Toolbox" framework and take away sample tools, reflection strategies and literature-based science integration ideas.

SPEAKERS:
Kelley Spahr

Youth As Climate and Environmental Scientists: Collecting, Analyzing, and Reporting on Local Community Climate and Environmental Justice Data

Friday, April 17 • 2:40 PM - 3:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
S8: Youth As Climate and Environmental Scientists: Collecting, Analyzing, and Re

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Without local data it is impossible to fully understand community environmental and climate problems and their effects on different groups. Attendees will explore different environmental and climate data sets and learn how to use these with students to create well-informed solutions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participatory methods for collecting and acting upon environmental and climate data is more important now than ever. Yet students are not taught about this data or how to use it. Resources and examples for supporting youth in collecting and using data to create real community change will be shared.

SPEAKERS:
Deb Morrison, Kelsie Fowler, Kathryn Boyd

“Mapping Minds: Blending Cartography, Science, and Art in STEAM Education”

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides
This is setup to require you to make a force copy of the slides

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This session explores the intersection of cartography, science, and art within a STEAM framework. Participants will discover how maps can be used beyond simple data representation. Mapping can be an expressive art form used to foster deeper understanding and personal connection. Educators will gain strategies to engage students in spatial thinking and data visualization through creative mapping practices that blend scientific accuracy with artistic interpretation. By incorporating student-collected data, learners will engage in inquiry to transform raw data into mixed media maps. This hands-on approach cultivates skills in data analysis, spatial reasoning, and creative expression. Ultimately empowering students to visualize and communicate complex information in meaningful, personalized ways.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with practical methods for integrating cartography-based STEAM projects that connect classroom learning to student experiences with data, science, and beyond.

SPEAKERS:
Ashley Rattanawan, Jessica Sadler

A new way to teach states of matter, temperature, & foundational lab skills: Making & Brewing Tea [Exploring science through food & cooking]

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building


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In this session, we will engage in parts of a lesson that center around the phenomenon of tea. Participants will engage in an easy and simple lab that is used as an entry point to explore foundational concepts like particle models, states of matter, energy, and temperature. Participants will also explore how different cultures around the world make tea with different natural resources. Activities heavily emphasize NGSS standards and science practices. In a broader sense, participants can see how to use food in safe, low-cost, and accessible ways to make science more engaging and to empower students to make sense of things they see in their everyday lives and design their own investigations. Learn how different teachers use this as an introductory lesson in a larger series of lessons that encourage students to make connections between science, cooking, and their lives. Participants will engage in supported classroom routines that emphasize collaboration, observations, & lab skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to teach foundational science concepts like states of matter and particle models in fun and investigative ways using tea. Participants will engage in a simple lab, explore how different teas are made and see ways to empower student-led investigations in supported and scaffolded ways.

SPEAKERS:
Miriam McMillian, Ashley Vandgrift, Shawn Boggs, Kate Strangfeld

Building the Future Beneath the Surface: Hands-On SeaPerch Underwater Robotics for Middle School STEM

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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This 60-minute hands-on workshop dives into how our team uses underwater robotics as a gateway to teach core naval science, engineering, and technical trades to middle school students. Using the SeaPerch platform, students explore principles of buoyancy, propulsion, and circuitry while building teamwork and problem-solving skills. The session will demonstrate how these activities can be implemented across different learning environments—classrooms, after-school programs, and summer camps—and how near-peer mentors and dedicated staff support sustained engagement. Participants will also learn strategies for partnering with local industry and academic institutions to align these experiences with real-world career pathways and regional workforce needs. By integrating hands-on design and naval technology concepts, this approach connects curiosity-driven learning with tangible STEM skills.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement hands-on underwater robotics projects that connect middle school learners to naval science, core trades, and career pathways through adaptable, partnership-based models.

SPEAKERS:
Kevin Logue, Zeynep Akdemir-Beveridge

Classroom Procedures to Support Interactive Notebooks

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Classroom Procedures to Support Science Notebooks.pptx

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Believe it or not, there’s still a place for paper in the modern classroom! Interactive notebooks have long been crucial in developing student knowledge, accountability, and ownership of learning, yet they remain a logistical struggle for many teachers. Don’t let glue or scissors get in the way of a great learning tool. In this session, attendees will explore multiple solutions to common notebooking concerns while deepening or developing their classroom notebook systems to meet their unique needs as educators as well as those of their students. Topics covered will include assessment, parent communication, classroom management, and organization. Integration of digital assignments with paper notebooks and printed workbooks will also be explored. Not specializing in one grade or science subject, this presentation will span multiple grade and cognitive levels and present solutions from diverse classrooms while identifying a range of needs, then designing solutions that work for you.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore multiple solutions to common notebooking concerns while developing or deepening their classroom notebook systems to meet the unique needs of their students. Topics covered will include assessment, parent communication, classroom management, and materials organization.

SPEAKERS:
Mary Newell

Cleared for Takeoff: Soaring into Engineering Design!

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building


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Inspire your students to think like scientists and engineers with this hands-on STEM design challenge! Participants will explore flight through a creative twist on straw rockets—building, testing, and refining straw planes while investigating four key variables that affect flight performance. Through experimentation, participants will make predictions, analyze data, and apply research-based strategies to improve their designs. This interactive session demonstrates how to teach measurement and data collection skills across grade levels, from basic measurement in early elementary to significant figures in high school. The session culminates in an engineering challenge to design the ultimate straw plane for distance and precision. As a bonus, participants will engage in a reverse-engineering activity to evaluate and improve existing designs. Leave with ready-to-use resources and fresh ideas to elevate STEM learning in your classroom!

TAKEAWAYS:
Gain hands-on strategies to teach measurement, data collection, and analysis through engineering design. Discover simple ways to tailor lessons for any grade level and leave with resources ready to use in your STEM classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Jesse Steiner, Christina Davis

Coupling data moves with digital literacy: Using CODAP for place-based citizen science inquiry

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building


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Presenters from a researcher-practitioner partnership will describe a regional citizen science network of K-12 researchers from 30 Sonoran Desert schools. Students on each campus build, plant, collect and analyze data about garden micro-environments and plant growth under two conditions: one with and one without solar panels. Students and teachers build relationships across campuses and with other stakeholders to generate regional knowledge while creating value for their local communities. Students share their data and lab reports through a virtual platform and during online and in-person conferences. Attendees will explore strategies for using CODAP to perform data moves, conduct analysis, generate visualizations, and make sense of data on a large student-produced dataset from one of the participating schools. Attendees will reflect on various ways to couple data moves with digital literacy skills to support students in place-based science inquiry.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how K–12 teachers and students build data science literacy while promoting sustainability through solar-powered school gardens. Using CODAP, a free web-based analysis tool, attendees will perform data moves on student-generated datasets drawn from solar-enhanced garden projects.

SPEAKERS:
Michelle Jordan, Brianne Loya, Carlos Meza-Torres

Do you start your chemistry lessons with a lab? You should!

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 A, North Building


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What comes first in your chemistry classroom, explanations or lab? Traditionally, chemistry is “taught” and then followed with a highly structured lab to reinforce the learning. However, the 5E Instructional Model flips this order upside down! Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, and Evaluate make up the 5Es, with Exploration right up front. But what does an exploration-based chemistry lab look like? How do you take a more traditional lab and convert it to an authentic opportunity for student discovery before they read a single sentence from a textbook? We’ll tackle these questions and show you how to facilitate discovery that will provide a truly 3D experience of chemistry in alignment with the NGSS. We will also explore the chemistry-specific research on why "lab first" improves students' views about science, and why "lab last," the old way, strengthens students' naive views about science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to redesign traditional labs into exploration-first experiences that spark curiosity, align with NGSS, and shift student views of science from rote memorization to authentic discovery.

SPEAKERS:
Christopher Moore

Every Student, Every Time: High-Yield, Research-Supported Strategies that Empower All Learners

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 B


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At my Title I middle school, students often enter performing well below grade level, yet consistently achieve some of the highest learning gains in the district. In this session, I will share the high yield, brain based strategies behind that growth. Participants will see how I use distributive summarizing with whiteboard routines that check responses in real time and questioning cycles that strengthen understanding and long term learning. These high impact strategies help all learners process information in small chunks and make their thinking visible. Classroom examples will show how reflection stems and questioning sequences guide higher order thinking. I will share student work and assessment practices that demonstrate the impact on engagement and achievement. Attendees will receive ready to use templates and strategies that can be implemented immediately and adapted for any grade level or content area to help students take ownership of learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience how research based strategies such as retrieval practice, distributed summarizing, and “no opt out” questioning can raise engagement and deepen learning. Leave with practical, high yield tools that make every student visible, confident, and successful in every lesson.

SPEAKERS:
Barbara Rebeor

Explore the Ocean, Weather, Climate Connections with Teek & Tom

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Explore the Ocean, Atmosphere, Weather connections with Teek and Tom
"Teek and Tom Explore Planet Earth", investigates the relationship between the ocean, weather and climate on global to local scales. This workshop introduces ten hands-on activities for upper ES and MS students to reinforce Earth science concepts related to oceanography, meteorology and climate. The short videos provide a spark of interest and briefly introduce the main focus of further investigation.

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"Teek and Tom Explore Planet Earth", investigates the relationship between the ocean, weather and climate on global to local scales. This workshop introduces ten hands-on activities for upper ES and MS students to reinforce Earth science concepts related to oceanography, meteorology and climate. The short videos provide a spark of interest and briefly introduce the main focus of further investigation. They are intended to be used with classroom activities that provide learning strategies to translate complex earth science interactions into a format that is understandable to upper elementary and middle school students. The educator guides focus on up-to-date graphs, visualizations, hands-on labs and data that will help students understand the concepts and to engage in sense-making through-out the lessons. The main focus of each lesson was developed by a teacher team who provided guidance and advice on the best ways to help student understanding of Earth, atmosphere, and ocean systems.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will sample the range of activities that incorporate graphing, data analysis, visualizations and sense-making to introduce Earth/atmosphere/climate connections on local and global scales.

SPEAKERS:
Peggy Steffen

Fact or Faux? Inquiry Lessons in Misinformation & Media Literacy

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
"Targeting Misinformation" website
Prepared inquiry lessons and teacher resources.

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Anti-vaxxers, climate change naysayers, COVID myths, wonder diets & greenwashing by industry -- all challenge our students. Help them develop skills in assessing scientific claims in the media. || NSTA’s The Science Teacher has featured a special column on media litereacy for past two years. This workshop brings these short “Fact-or-Faux?” essays to life and demonstrates how to lead lessons that develop skills in the NGSS SEP#8, “Obtaining, evaluating and communicating information.” In particular, you’ll see how to adapt the familiar inquiry approach from scientific practices to science media practices. Help students navigate the concepts of expertise, credibility, consensus, and recognition of deceptive tactics.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to lead an inquiry oriented to science media literacy practices (and underlying concepts), experiencing a few examples and exploring an online library of others.

SPEAKERS:
DOUGLAS ALLCHIN

Geoscience in Action: Integrating sustainability into your science classroom

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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Connecting sustainability to classroom instruction helps students see how science relates to real-world challenges and opportunities in their communities. This workshop will share classroom resources that use the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals to give context and relevance to Earth Science concepts, while aligning with NGSS. Resources will include case studies from the UNESCO and American Geophysical Union Geoscience in Action report, related hands-on activities and online data, and a facilitator guide. During the session educators will also engage with American Geosciences Institute’s Sustainability Interactive, conduct some of the hands-on activities, and see examples of teacher-created projects that integrate sustainability themes across disciplines. Participants will leave with strategies, free resources, and inspiration to bring sustainability into their teaching in ways that strengthen instruction and deepen student engagement.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to integrate sustainability and the UN Sustainable Development Goals into NGSS-aligned instruction through interactive activities, case studies, and free resources that make science concepts relevant and engaging for students.

SPEAKERS:
Lindsay Mossa, Lauren Brase

Grading & Assessment Strategies by Teachers for Teachers

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Link to Session Slides

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Grading & Assessment Strategies will examine ways we teachers can streamline and enhance our approaches to measuring and reporting science learning. Classroom samples will be used to help navigate the many demands on teachers from standardized testing to 3-dimensional assessment to communicating results. To address the NGSS goal of elevating science practices, we will consider ways to pair extended learning tasks with short-form test questions to achieve balance in grade books while keeping students consistently engaged in phenomenon-driven sensemaking. Research from Understanding by Design, CHAMPS, and Joe Feldman will be used to determine how to ensure learners with a variety of needs are served by our assessment systems. Time-saving examples of how to adapt assessments to the rise of standards-based grading will be emphasized. Open resources from OpenSciEd, state testing banks, and NSTA will be used to share examples and work through how to implement the strategies presented.

TAKEAWAYS:
Middle and high school teachers will leave with multiple time-saving techniques to elevate their grade books. We will examine how going deeper with less assessments can reduce student and teacher fatigue while holding everyone accountable to the goals of NGSS.

SPEAKERS:
Sean Collins

Igniting the Climate Spark: Guiding Students Through Meaningful Mini- Research

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Igniting the Climate Spark Guiding Students Through Meaningful Mini-Research
Research Design Worksheet

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This session uses a human-centered lens to help students find their research spark and outline a project that is relevant to the students’ community and that they are personally concerned about. Hands-on activity and resources will be shared with attendees to boost their in-class mini-research activity.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk-through a mini-research project on the topic of climate education. During this session, we will discuss a flowchart of science practices, strategies to address student connection with real world problems related to climate science., and how to embrace a human-centered research

SPEAKERS:
Josephine Mesina, Brianne Loya, Nicole Rosen

Integrating STEM Through Storytelling: Hands-On Strategies for Young Learners

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8


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Short on STEM time? We’ve got you covered! Discover how Picture-Perfect STEM lessons turn everyday literacy blocks into powerful science learning experiences. In this hands-on session, you’ll explore ready-to-teach activities built on the 5E model, using beloved children’s picture books as the spark for investigation and problem-solving.

TAKEAWAYS:
Walk away with practical strategies, real-world connections, and easy-to-implement kits that make STEM integration effortless. Perfect for engaging your youngest learners in sensemaking and three-dimensional learning—all aligned to your state standards!

SPEAKERS:
Kristen Crawford

It's Elementary Modeling My Dear

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest


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How do we take the mystery out of abstract ideas for our kids? It’s elementary my dear, models are the answer! We will give you tools that will enable your kids to master the curriculum. We solve the mysteries so you can go back and use these ideas!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will walk away with resources and lesson ideas that they can implement the next day they are in class. Not only will they have access to the resources shown, but they will also be able to get ideas where these resources can fit into their current curriculum for the year.

SPEAKERS:
Krystal Poloka

Mark Rober As Co-Pilot: How To Launch Storylines, Teach with Video, and Smash Watermelons (Added Bonus!) in Class CrunchLabs

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Ever wish Mark Rober could co-teach your class? This session shows how Class CrunchLabs uses video, voice, and story to spark curiosity and launch rigorous learning. We will break down how to introduce a storyline, use Mark’s videos as authentic investigation starters, and weave hands-on challenges through episodes of science and engineering. You will also get a peek behind the scenes at how the team builds each unit to help students explain ‘the how’ after experiencing ‘the wow.’ Optional bonus: watermelon smashing included.

TAKEAWAYS:
See how NGSS storylines, teacher supports, and Mark Rober’s videos work together to launch engaging science units that get students asking questions and thinking like scientists from day one.

SPEAKERS:
DeAnna Lee Rivers

Marvel Chemistry: Superhero Science & the Periodic Table

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Marvel Chemistry Presentation

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Unleash student engagement using Marvel superheroes and villains to teach physical vs. chemical changes, elements, and the periodic table. Students use comic-book characters to explore real chemical reactions, CERs, and hands-on Marvel-themed labs like “Captain Combustion,” “Acid vs. Base Battle,” and “Villainous Variables.” Ideal for NGSS-aligned middle school science teachers looking to integrate pop culture into student-centered inquiry and culturally responsive pedagogy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk away with ready-to-use Marvel-themed chemistry lessons that integrate NGSS practices and engage diverse learners through superheroes.

SPEAKERS:
Ricardo Padilla

Middle School Science Fair: Tips and Tricks

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
MS Science Fair Resource Website
Presentation Slideshow

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Launching a middle school science fair can be a daunting task -- young adolescents often lack the social and academic skills to follow through with long-term independent projects, now more than ever! Yet when middle schoolers are given a scaffolded opportunity to conduct experiments of their own design, analyze their data, and present their findings, we have seen them grow into self-confident young scientists year after year. Whether you’re just getting a science fair started or you’re at the fine-tuning stage, you will leave this workshop with practical plans to improve the way you guide students in their own authentic scientific research. Participants will walk away with structures and organizers to support students in authentic investigation, an understanding of how to vertically-align skills across all three grades of middle school, ideas for age-appropriate projects, resources for conducting science fair in-person, and well-tested timelines and logistics.

TAKEAWAYS:
Middle school science fair promotes collaboration and autonomy while providing critical experience with authentic long-term investigations. With the right structures in place, early adolescents can consistently and equitably conduct and present their own scientific research.

SPEAKERS:
James Salazar, Alison Cohen

Model-Based Inquiry in Earth and Space Sciences: Three-Dimensional Instructional Units for Grades 9–12

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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We will introduce our upcoming NSTA book containing a collection of units and resources to help teachers engage students in three-dimensional learning through model-based inquiry.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about four earth and space science model-based inquiry units for rigorous and equitable instruction. Developed with secondary science teachers, the session guides three-dimensional learning, anchoring phenomena, modeling, and scientific explanations.

SPEAKERS:
Audrey Baird, Ron Gray

One skill, lifelong learning: Developing future scientists with the skill of question formulation

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides

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“The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existence.” As Einstein expressed, questioning is a meaningful habit that, when practiced continually, can lead to lifelong learning. How can we support students to hone this essential skill for science learning in the classroom and beyond? Discover the Question Formulation Technique, an effective, easy-to-use strategy that teaches students to formulate, refine, and use their own questions to investigate phenomena, design labs, conduct science research and more. The session will first explore research on the importance of questions for learning. Next, participants will actively experience the QFT for themselves, just as it would be facilitated with students. Third, participants will examine diverse classroom examples from secondary science teachers. Participants will leave ready to immediately apply the strategy in their own settings to support science objectives and build students' agency as learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Fuel students’ passion to become future scientists with the Question Formulation Technique. Actively experience this simple yet effective tool for teaching students to formulate and refine their own questions for use in student-driven labs, research, and phenomena-based learning.

SPEAKERS:
Katy Connolly, Claire Sampson

OSE Teacher Training: Best Practices for Success: The Putting the Pieces Together Routine

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Discussion-Types-OpenSciEd-1.pdf
OpenSciEd Discussion Planning Tool .pdf
Planning Tool for Discussion-.pdf
Putting the Pieces Together.pdf

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Led by an NSTA expert facilitator, this hands-on session shows how to use the Putting the Pieces Together routine to help students reflect, synthesize, and connect learning across lessons. Participants will explore discussion strategies, practical tools, and classroom examples, leaving with ready-to-use resources to implement this OpenSciEd routine with confidence.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave ready to use the Putting the Pieces Together routine to help students connect learning across lessons, deepen understanding, and make sense of scientific phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Ann Guglielmo, Zoe Evans

Physics Modeling Instruction for Increased Student Engagement

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building


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A Physics Modeling Instruction workshop introduces participants to a structured inquiry approach to high school physics teaching that incorporates technology, Socratic questioning, and insights from physics education research. Throughout the duration of the modeling workshop, participants are involved in designing and conducting investigations, collecting, analyzing, and graphing results, and discussing these results with the other groups. These discussions are an important part of the “group sense-making” of the phenomena being investigated. Attendees of this NSTA session will be introduced to modeling with a brief description/discussion and then will engage in a hands-on physics activity that allows them to experience all of the aspects of a modeling paradigm lab and related components.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees at this session will be introduced to the modeling approach via a hands-on physics activity that is engaging and is representative of a typical modeling paradigm lab.

SPEAKERS:
Chance Hoellwarth, Jon Anderson

Reducing Language Anxiety to Elevate Multilingual Engagement in Science

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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Multilingual learners bring valuable linguistic and cultural assets to the science classroom, yet many experience foreign language anxiety that limits their participation and achievement. Research shows that language anxiety can restrict students’ willingness to engage in scientific discourse and hinder their conceptual understanding of science (Taibu & Ferrari-Bridgers, 2020; Downing et al., 2020). By intentionally addressing language anxiety, science teachers can lower the affective filter, increase student confidence, and create more equitable opportunities for sense-making and argumentation. In this session, teachers will learn practical strategies to help multilingual learners manage language anxiety. Presenters will share examples from their own science classes, along with data from student surveys and classroom observations demonstrating how these approaches improved student discourse and confidence.

TAKEAWAYS:
Reducing language anxiety in science classes lowers the affective filter, boosts multilingual students’ confidence, and promotes fuller participation in scientific discourse and sense-making.

SPEAKERS:
Katherine Knudtsen, Melissa Kovar

Science Through Storytelling: Using Narrative to Inspire Curious Students

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2


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Stories spark imagination—and science is full of them. In this interactive session, participants will learn how to use storytelling as a tool to introduce and reinforce elementary science concepts. Through modeled examples, they will see how stories transform abstract ideas into concrete, relatable experiences—for example, a water droplet’s journey to explain the water cycle or a “brave germ” to explore the immune system. Attendees will co-create short narratives and practice integrating them with hands-on activities aligned to NGSS. We’ll discuss scaffolding strategies, such as using visual supports, anchor charts, and student illustrations, to make narratives accessible to all learners. By blending storytelling with inquiry, participants will discover how to build engagement and comprehension while connecting science to literacy skills. They will leave with adaptable narrative frameworks, sample lessons, and ideas for student-created science stories.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to use storytelling as a practical strategy to make abstract science concepts concrete, engaging, and accessible for elementary students.

SPEAKERS:
Cory Kavanagh

Solving Environmental and Health Issues Through Civic and Invention Education

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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Attendees will explore tools to help students see themselves as engaged citizens who can address environmental and health issues in their communities. We will use primary sources from key moments in U.S. history to learn how scientists, researchers and members of the public made a difference in an environment- or health-related issue. Examples will be taken from high-quality, trusted organizations like PBS, Library of Congress and National Archives. We will split participants into groups so they can examine these documents as part of a warm-up activity. We will then use civic-based tools in which participants can learn to problem-solve and invent solutions to health and environmental issues they care about.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to examine primary sources to identify environmental and health issues where they live and the role of civic and invention education in creating and sharing solutions.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth Osborn, Victoria Pasquantonio

St. Jude STEMM Infectious Diseases Learning Module

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H


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St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital collaborated with teachers, scientists, and educational researchers to co-create an inquiry-driven Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Medicine (STEMM) learning module that explores the concept of infectious diseases in primary grades. Students’ inquiry is sparked by the anchor text, Llama Llama Home With Mama by Anna Dewdney. Through the lens of using STEMM as a tool for transformation and for care, students assume the roles of microbiologists to create an investigation identifying germs in their learning environment. In this inquiry-based investigation, students develop class norms to establish healthy social habits that they and others can follow. This workshop will examine the STEMM curriculum’s impact on students’ perception of science and include information on how to register for access to the free learning module.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will engage in an inquiry-driven learning module to identify how to use the curriculum in their learning environment. Participants will examine the scientific practices evident in the learning module through workshop collaboration. Participants will identify the mission and vision of St

SPEAKERS:
Anika Britton, Krisderlawn Motley, Hailey Wolfe

Stats for a Penny - The Chemistry and Statistics of the U.S. penny

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


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How can we assess the quality of sampling and variability of the data to help us in decision-making? The various metals and alloys used in the minting of the penny over the years will provide for rich explorations. We will highlight some important cross-disciplinary aspects, linking the science content (mass/chemical composition) to the mathematical models to show how to use it to simulate systems and interactions. Through hands-on activities and the use of technology, we will explore with you a variety of data sets and use them to better understand and use statistics to make accurate and fair arguments related to everyday topics and explore how the sample mean varies from sample to sample to get a better understanding of quality control.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will use real data to develop mathematical models and learn how to test your hypothesis by performing an experiment and analyzing the results, combining chemical analysis with statistical sampling for a cross-curricular approach.

SPEAKERS:
Karlheinz Haas

Teach Forces with 3D Paper Arches: Bring Bridge Engineering to Your Classroom

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building


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Build a 3D paper arch with a keystone and conduct a hands-on experiment demonstrating Newton’s 3rd Law. Explore independent and dependent variables, investigate forces in bridges, and learn how to teach these concepts clearly to middle school students. Leave with a ready-to-use model and activity to bring into your classroom next week. This session blends creativity, engineering, and physics in a simple yet powerful way to help students visualize abstract concepts through concrete experience.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn to build a 3D paper arch with a keystone, conduct a hands-on experiment demonstrating Newton’s 3rd Law, identify variables, explore forces in bridges, and leave with a ready-to-use classroom activity for middle school students.

SPEAKERS:
Nancy Balter

The Design Sprint: Inspiring Student Innovation for Local Environmental Challenges

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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How can we empower students to take meaningful action on environmental challenges in their own communities? This session explores a flexible framework that uses student-driven design sprints to inspire innovative thinking, research, and problem-solving. In a design sprint, student teams identify an environmental issue, investigate its root causes through research and collaboration, and develop creative solutions through ideation and rapid prototyping—all within a condensed time frame. The process fosters deep engagement by emphasizing student choice, local relevance, and connections to community and environmental contexts. This model aligns naturally with interdisciplinary teaching and incorporates multiple content standards. Attendees will begin developing concept for a design sprint they can use with their students, building a foundation for fostering ownership, creativity, and real-world impact through environmental education.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how the design sprint model engages students in solving local or state environmental challenges through research, collaboration, and creative problem-solving. They will develop an initial plan for implementing a design sprint in their classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Liz Martinez

Use the World Almanac to Add Geography to Your STEM Lessons

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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Geography is an interdisciplinary curriculum spanning social sciences, mathematics, science, engineering design, and technology. Cross-curricular instruction is an impactful teaching and learning methodology to provide students with the tools to understand phenomena and to increase their global understanding of the world. Learn to incorporate geography topics into your science lessons in this hands-on workshop. Use the World Almanac to bring in real-world data for math- and geography-based middle school science lessons.

TAKEAWAYS:
Integrate geography topics with science phenomena.

SPEAKERS:
Kelli Bergheimer

Using Lab Practicums to Evaluate Student Conceptual Understanding

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


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The shift in evaluating a students understanding of key concepts in physics and physical science has lead to the need for more performance based evaluation. Lab practicums allow students to perform an unique lab experience, demonstrating an understanding and application of a physics concept. Using toys and easily obtained materials, students experience less stress compared to summative exams. Multiple examples with an opportunity to experience a lab practicum will be given to attendees.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will receive multiple examples of performance assessments, for formative assessment of physics and physical science concepts.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck, Jan Mader

Using Storytelling and Data to Deepen Science Understanding

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 C, North Building


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What if your science lessons began with a story hook instead of a worksheet? In this session, participants will experience how narrative-driven science stories—such as a plane crash explained by frozen fuel or wolves reshaping Yellowstone—spark curiosity, build literacy, and anchor abstract concepts in memorable contexts. Each story is paired with simple data sets and math connections where students can graph results, calculate rates of change, or analyze probabilities using scientific calculators. Participants will practice modeling with calculator tools, explore sample story-based lessons aligned to NGSS, and learn how to layer literacy, math, and science seamlessly. A collaborative digital whiteboard will support real-time graphing and interpretation of story-linked phenomena.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will discover how to use storytelling and data to create engaging, standards-based science lessons that strengthen both literacy and math connections.

SPEAKERS:
Mike Szydlowski

Using The Gamification of the Classroom to Promote 3D Learning

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Infographic
NSTA Slides Presentation

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Step into the world of game-based science learning by experiencing it for yourself! In this interactive session, participants will play at least two science games—The Cell Game and the Natural Selection Game—each designed to engage learners in active, hands-on exploration of standards based life science concepts. These games typically take about 30 minutes with adults and highlight how structured play through game-based models can build deep content understanding while encouraging collaboration, problem-solving, and critical thinking. After playing, we’ll shift into discussion and reflection, making explicit connections to the NGSS Three-Dimensional Learning Framework. Together, we’ll unpack how the game mechanics align with disciplinary core ideas, science and engineering practices, and crosscutting concepts. Participants will then explore strategies for designing their own classroom games and activities that bring NGSS standards to life through meaningful play.

TAKEAWAYS:
When you are finished with this session you will have a new understanding of how games can add to the learning of every student. You will see how games naturally encourage student discourse, prediction, and evidence-based reasoning. Games are by their very nature hypothesis generating tools.

SPEAKERS:
Robert Bowman

Weather Lesson for Elementary

Friday, April 17 • 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom J / K



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://subjecttoclimate.org/lesson-plans/weather-lesson-for-elementary?queryUid=019dabdb-e251-7b82-80f2-80684205d9b9

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This engaging lesson, designed for K-2, introduces the concept of weather to students. During the 60-min workshop, participants will learn from SubjecttoClimate’s elementary lesson plan on how to activate students to inquire, investigate and inspire with regards to earth & climate science. Key elements will include: learning ‘what is weather?’, watching and reading Fabienne’s Wild Weather Adventure, starting individual weather journalling as well as designing a weather wheel to predict Earth’s climate in 30 years. Attendees will engage in turn-and-talks and guided usage of activities. We’ll also discuss classroom applications, adaptations, and differentiation strategies. Walk away with a classroom-ready NGSS aligned lesson and ideas on how to implement climate change into what you’re teaching now.

TAKEAWAYS:
During this 60-min workshop, participants will learn from SubjecttoClimate’s elementary lesson plan on how to activate students to inquire, investigate and inspire with regards to earth & climate science.

SPEAKERS:
Benjamin Charles

A Framework for Environmental Justice

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation and Tool Information

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In this session we will introduce a 3-step process for incorporating environmental justice into your science classroom. Environmental justice explores the intersection of science, society, and ethics while also examining how environmental issues disproportionately affect marginalized communities. Regardless of your content area, environmental justice can be included in your curriculum. By using our instructional approach and related resources, your curriculum can: (Step 1) familiarize students with environmental justice (Step 1). Next, they’ll further investigate environmental justice via a local environmental justice problem (Step 2). Finally, they’ll engage in collaborative problem solving and action planning (Step 3). This tool was co-designed by a group of high school science teachers as they explored ways to create a science classroom community that invites all students to participate equally in classroom discussions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Our 3-step process can be used as a scope-and-sequence that teachers can adapt to their own classrooms. Environmental justice is more impactful when approached from a hyperlocal standpoint, and our instructional approach assures that local phenomenon will be included in your curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Aneela Raza, Amanda Lacey, Joseph Kelly, Linda Fuselier, Justin McFadden, Anna Gleason

A Global Intensive Experience for Undergraduate Students: Exploring STEM Education through Renewable Energy Innovation in Germany

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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This session explores an 11-day Global Intensive Experience (GIE): Exploring STEM Education in Germany, to investigate and experience firsthand the use of renewable energy sources in Germany - one of the most energy efficient countries in the world. Our journey takes us to three cities (Heidelberg, Freiberg, Frankfurt) and one rural village (Freiamt). Along the way, we visit schools, museums, homes, farms, businesses, forests, and district centers - all with a strong focus on renewable energy, including solar, biofuel, wind, and hydro installations. Students’ final assignment is a Passion Project inspired by their experiences in one of these unique places. In this session, we share learning resources and students' projects. We describe ways they transferred their lived experiences back to their STEM career contexts, including elementary and secondary education, special education, engineering, museum learning, and more.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about and receive materials related to helping undergraduate students from diverse colleges learn about energy transition science and engineering. They will also learn strategies for supporting students to translate their experiences to career-related passion projects.

SPEAKERS:
Michelle Jordan

A New Take on Climate Education

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Climate NSTA Session April 2026 (no video).pptx
Grand Challenges Video

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Climate change will affect every part of our lives, from health care to food systems and business. Understanding climate change and how we can respond is critical knowledge for the next generation of experts, leaders, and citizens. Today’s students are the best advocates for climate mitigation we have, and are eager to act. Students deserve the chance to interrogate information—free of fear and bias—to learn how to reduce impacts, build resilience, and contribute to a zero-carbon future. Integrating knowledge of causes, impacts, and solutions into the science classroom will prepare them to face these challenges and envision their role in shaping the future. OER Project: Climate offers free, accessible resources that can be integrated across disciplines. Science standards create a natural opportunity to bring climate into discussions of energy, carbon cycles, the environment, and more. Discover essential information, strategies, and support to bring climate literacy to your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
OER Project: Climate helps students explore climate change critically, without fear or bias, building the skills and motivation needed to shape a better future. Explore ways to teach it in your science classroom and leave with a clear plan, grounded knowledge, and free, ready-to-use materials.

SPEAKERS:
Erik Christensen

Adapting Curriculum to Support YOUR Students' Sensemaking Opportunities

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 156, North Building


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In this workshop, K12 teachers will use a free, publicly available tool (see https://www.nextgenaset.org/ngss/aset-toolkit) to analyze, evaluate and modify aspects of a science unit or lesson(s) that they currently use, with the goals of improving the unit’s opportunities for student sensemaking via the Science and Engineering Practices. The workshop will present concrete examples (including student work) of how these tools were used to achieve these goals with a middle school unit on chemical reactions. Teachers will explore the tools and the examples, and then have time to use the tools to improve their own curriculum, with the support of the workshop facilitator. The tools are differentiated by grade band, so all teachers, K-12, are invited to attend.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session gives K-12 teachers the tools and guidance to engage your students in powerful sensemaking opportunities, even if your curriculum doesn't.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Ricketts

Applying Engagement Strategies from a Science Museum and Maker Space to Maximize Science Instructional Time

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slides

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Today's elementary science classrooms face many challenges, the most common being time constraints, especially post-pandemic. Research studies often focus on curriculum integration as a way to make time for science which is a great start, but there is a lot more that can be done to take advantage of short time blocks. This workshop aims to share quick engagement strategies pre-service teachers learned from a science museum and a maker space to take advantage of ~20min time blocks at an after-school STEM program. Museum exhibits and activities are designed to be accessible by a wide age group, capture attention right away, and encourage additional exploration at home with simple materials. Educators working in informal science spaces have found that they provide different ways of thinking and strategies such as choice, flexibility, and material resources. We pose the question "what if schools leveraged these engagement strategies to maximize meaningful STEM learning?"

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be given helpful planning tips to maximize student engagement and a variety of ideas for short STEM design challenges, tinkering projects, and phenomena-based lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Madison Pishock, Ashley Frazer, Carmen Vanderhoof

Building a Vision for Equitable and Sustained Interactions for Multilingual Learners

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 B


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Teaching multilingual learners in science classrooms involves intentional planning that integrates language learning with phenomena-based three-dimensional science instruction. Even when schools and districts adopt high quality instructional materials, teachers often modify their lessons to meet the needs of their multilingual leaners, particularly students who are newcomers. In this workshop, participants will immerse in curriculum-based professional learning to learn about adapting their science lessons and units to leverage multilingual learners’ linguistic assets. Using the Quality Teaching for English Learners (QTEL)approach, participants will analyze ways to scaffold language learning, engage in academic conversations, and drive learning using students’ funds of knowledge. By the end of the session, participants will walk away with practical tools to increase multilingual learners’ engagement and achievement in their science classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will leave with the knowledge and tools to adapt science lessons, scaffold language, and leverage multilingual learners' assets to increase learning opportunities in their science classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Tanya Warren

Building Critical Thinkers: Storm Science and Media Literacy Activities That Work

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Activity: What happens to convective storms in a warmer climate?
Media literacy activity: Share or Snooze
Slides

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How are storms changing in our warming world? And how can we make sense of the flood of information we encounter, especially on social media? A joint project between the UCAR Center for Science Education and Michigan State University developed two teacher-reviewed classroom activities that help students build scientific understanding and media literacy through the lens of storms. The first lesson explores storm formation, how weather patterns are changing, and community impacts using a mix of engaging activities. In the second activity students evaluate social media posts to build media literacy through a fun, interactive game. Together, these lessons provide opportunities for students to make sense of the world around them using relevant evidence, while strengthening critical thinking skills. For instructional designers, the project offers a model for creating learning resources that empower both high school students and non-science undergraduates to engage with scientific topics.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore two engaging activities to help your students build scientific understanding and media literacy by exploring storm science and real social media posts—preparing them to think critically about real-world information.

SPEAKERS:
Melissa Rummel

Compostable, Not Disposable: Students Work Toward Replacing Plastics with Nanocellulose-based Alternatives for a Greener Future

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 6



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Slides

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Almost everything we buy comes wrapped or packed in plastic. Globally, we produce about 57 million metric tons of plastic pollution each year. Plastics fragment into microplastics (pieces smaller than 5 mm), which have now been detected in Arctic ice, the Mariana Trench, and even our blood. Larger pieces of plastic also accumulate in massive ocean gyres, such as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, which is bigger than the states of Texas and California combined. What if your students could tackle the plastic pollution problem in class? This session presents a classroom-ready and expandable research project that enables middle and high school students to engineer nanocellulose composite films as an alternative to packaging plastics. Using simple materials like cellulose nanofiber (CNF - orderless, non-toxic, and chemically benign), mason jars, and biodegradable additives, students design and test their own films for water permeability and other properties.

TAKEAWAYS:
Students can authentically engage in cutting-edge sustainability research, build eco-friendly composites, collect real data, and connect science learning to one of the world’s most urgent problems: plastic pollution.

SPEAKERS:
Tracy Vassiliev

Computational Thinking in Chemistry: An Unexpected Tool for Sensemaking

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Slides, Handout, and Detailed Thesis

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Interested in learning to incorporate the NGSS SEP “Using Computational Thinking” into your secondary science course but not sure where to start? Join us and learn how students can use computational thinking (CT) skills like decomposition, abstraction, and algorithm design to tackle complex problems or phenomena in a structured way. We will share our experiences implementing a CT+CHEM unit in the classroom and interviewing students. The session will offer you beginner-friendly CT tools and student samples to help you start integrating computational thinking into topics you already teach (whether physical science, life science, or earth science)!

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be able to describe what computational thinking looks like in high school science classrooms and take away 5 teaching strategies and beginner-friendly tools to get students to use computational thinking while making sense of phenomena in their science classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Sara Dozier, Jessica Mendoza

Cybersecurity and AI for the K-8 Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Cybersecurity and AI for the K-8 Classroom.pdf
Explore CYBER.ORG curricula for embedding cybersecurity and AI topics into any K-8 classroom.

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Join us for a dynamic and engaging workshop designed for K-8 educators to explore CYBER.ORG’s newest K–8 AI lessons from Cybersecurity Basics! In this hands-on workshop, participants will experience classroom-ready lessons that empower students to become safe, informed, and critical users of technology, while also developing awareness of how emerging fields like AI impact security. This workshop will showcase CYBER.ORG’s newly released Artificial Intelligence modules within the Cybersecurity Basics curriculum for K–8 educators. Participants will engage in hands-on lessons that introduce students to AI concepts in an age-appropriate and engaging way.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of this session, participants will: • Explore grade-banded AI lessons designed for K–8 learners. • Gain hands-on experience with activities from the AI modules • Discover practical strategies to integrate AI and cybersecurity topics into existing science and STEM instruction.

SPEAKERS:
Jessica Hexsel

Designing Your Own Model-Based Inquiry Units: A Hands-On Workshop with Practical Examples

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 304 A


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An immersive two-hour workshop where K-12 teachers learn the framework of Model-Based Inquiry—how to design units centered around phenomena, model construction, revision, and key science practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers across grade levels will explore how the MBI framework enables three-dimensional, NGSS-aligned units. They’ll learn how to choose anchoring phenomena, develop and refine scientific models, and plan for explanation, evidence, and argumentation.

SPEAKERS:
Audrey Baird, Jennifer Askew, Ron Gray

Empowering Black Girls in Science: Culturally Sustaining Sensemaking in Action

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building


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This presentation explores the design and implementation of a culturally sustaining science curriculum co-created with Black adolescent girls in a 9th-grade informal afterschool program. Grounded in evidence from a qualitative case study, I highlight how integrating students’ cultural identities, lived experiences, and interests into science instruction fosters engagement, belonging, and confidence. Anchored in Paris’ (2012) framework of culturally sustaining pedagogy, we demonstrate how the pillars of sensemaking, phenomena, student ideas, science and engineering practices, and disciplinary core ideas, were used to build a learning environment that supported identity development and equitable participation. Participants will analyze classroom artifacts and student work to explore practical strategies for adapting science instruction to elevate historically marginalized voices and create inclusive, meaningful learning experiences.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to apply culturally sustaining pedagogy through the lens of sensemaking to support Black girls’ engagement, belonging, and identity development in science.

SPEAKERS:
Tajma Cameron

Empowering Science Classrooms Through AI-Driven, Phenomenon-Based Inquiry

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Creating a “Guide on the Side” Gemini Gem
Empowering Science Classrooms Through AI-Driven, Phenomenon-Based Inquiry.pdf
Master Prompt to Create the Flooding Handout and PPT
Phenomenon creation prompt - NSTA 2026
Unit Planning Guide - NSTA 2026

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Scientific literacy grows when students investigate what they can touch, measure, and improve. In this session, we pair AI with phenomenon-based, community-rooted inquiry so teens study local air, water, heat, biodiversity, or food systems—then connect patterns to national and global challenges. You’ll see how QFT launches student questions; how simple field data and public datasets flow into AI-supported analysis (ChatGPT + spreadsheets/Colab/Geo tools); and how evidence becomes clear explanations, models, and claims. We’ll share prompts, templates, and equity guardrails that reduce doom-scroll anxiety: by acting locally, students build agency, hope, and civic pathways (policy briefs, data letters, community talks). Strong math and ELA integrations throughout: data modeling, argument from evidence, and technical writing. Leave with a reproducible workflow you can run next week.

TAKEAWAYS:
Use AI to amplify community-based, phenomenon-driven science that builds scientific literacy and civic agency: launch QFT, gather local data, analyze with AI, connect to global issues, and communicate evidence—while reducing helplessness via actionable, math/ELA-integrated workflows.

SPEAKERS:
Kyle Boyd, Kevin OToole

Evaluating Health Risks: Opportunities for Student Learning and Action

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 D


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Experience how leveraging genetic and environmental risk for complex disease as authentic phenomena supports student understanding through 3D teaching, learning, and assessment. Learn how the BSCS Anchored Inquiry Learning (AIL) instructional model develops student agency that leads to individual and community action. The NGSS calls for learning grounded in real world phenomena to ensure science learning is relevant to all students. The BSCS AIL instructional model succeeds the 5Es and utilizes culturally relevant societal challenges to anchor cycles of inquiry and sensemaking, culminating with student explanations. In this session, participants will 1) consider their ideas about teaching complex societal challenges, 2) experience 3D learning, sensemaking strategies, and science concepts required to evaluate genetic and environmental risks for complex disease, and 3) consider how societal issues as assessment tasks can motivate students and develop agency in addressing complex issues.

TAKEAWAYS:
The research-based BSCS Anchored Inquiry Learning instructional model succeeds the 5Es and leverages complex societal issues as anchoring phenomena/problems, culminating tasks, and performance assessments in 3D units of instruction to motivate students and develop agency in addressing these issues.

SPEAKERS:
Cynthia Gay

Feeding the Future: Hydroponics and Urban Gardening with Middle School Students

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 9



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Chart Compare Soil v Hydroponics
Engineer Profile
Engineer Report Rubric
Identify the Problem - Graph
Presentation Link
Project Rubrics
Soil v Hydroponics Planting Research Article
Student Facing Slides - Feeding the Future
Types of Hydroponics Systems Article
Vertical Garden Design Packet

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In the Feeding the Future project, students explored how hydroponics and vertical farming can help address one of the world’s pressing problems: feeding a growing population with limited farmland. Working with real-world hydroponics engineers, students learn about different systems and design solutions, and build a small-scale vertical hydroponic system of their choice that supports plants using minimal horizontal space. They create a self-watering system that delivers nutrients, water, and light directly to the plants without the need for soil. They test their designs by growing plants in their systems under the same conditions. Students write a design report and present designs, along with plant growth data. Using the data, students come to a consensus on the best solution to scale up in our greenhouse. This process guides MS students through the engineering design process, developing engineering skills such as brainstorming, designing, building, testing, and refining solutions.

TAKEAWAYS:
The Feeding the Future project enables students to address global food challenges by designing and testing vertical hydroponic systems, while developing real-world engineering skills such as problem-solving, teamwork, and data-driven decision-making.

SPEAKERS:
Anna Mello

From Sensemaking to Streamlining: Leveraging AI to Transform Science Teaching and Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 303 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1adAUPoIW2Kc5FvaYRCnzKwCHjOlTQYnldPjAN-vt5EU/edit?usp=drivesdk

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This 120-minute immersive workshop empowers educators to harness artificial intelligence tools to strengthen sensemaking in middle school science classrooms. Participants will actively engage as “students-as-scientists” while exploring how AI supports the four pillars of sensemaking—phenomena, science and engineering practices, student ideas, and disciplinary core ideas—across curriculum design, instruction, and assessment. Through hands-on activities, educators will experience AI-enhanced lesson planning, worksheet and presentation creation, rubric and assessment development, and simulated data for investigations. Participants will analyze classroom examples, including AI-supported student work, and reflect on equity and culturally relevant pedagogy. Attendees are highly encouraged to bring a Wi-Fi-enabled device (laptop, Chromebook, or tablet) for full participation. Participants leave with ready-to-use strategies and resources.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn practical strategies for using AI tools to enhance sensemaking in science through lesson design, assessments, and student investigations, leaving with classroom-ready resources and equity-focused practices.

SPEAKERS:
Sherrita Blackshear

Full-Court Engagement: How the Energy of Sports Fuels Scientific Sensemaking in the Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4


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In both sports and science, engagement is the game-changer. When students step into a classroom that mirrors the energy, teamwork, and strategy of athletics, learning becomes more than an academic task; it becomes an experience of discovery, collaboration, and growth. Much like athletes studying plays and adjusting their approach mid-game, students as scientists engage in authentic sensemaking by observing phenomena, testing ideas, and revising strategies based on evidence.

TAKEAWAYS:
Just like in sports, classroom engagement thrives when students are active participants, motivated by purpose, collaboration, and real-world relevance, because when students play to learn, everyone grows together.

SPEAKERS:
Marie Peel

How to Build a Student-Led STEM Research Program

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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What if your students could explore topics like cancer, climate change, AI, or social justice through self-directed, authentic research? This session offers a practical framework for launching or scaling a student-driven science research program in your school. Whether you’re starting from scratch or building on an existing elective, you’ll explore ways to boost engagement, scaffold key research skills, and support student ownership. We’ll cover how to structure a course, guide students in developing questions, reviewing literature, contacting mentors, and writing papers. The session also explores how to partner with local universities, labs, and professionals to place students with research mentors. Participants will receive customizable tools, including rubrics, proposal templates, learning goals, and a roadmap for implementation. You’ll leave with strategies to foster inquiry, voice, and STEM innovation, regardless of your school’s size or resources.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to launch or scale a student-driven STEM research program using practical tools and strategies that promote inquiry, mentorship, and student voice, regardless of your school’s size, schedule, or resources.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Doran

Integrating Content with Skills Based Learning in Life Science Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Google Slide Presentation with all the links
Link to folder

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Tired of feeling like you’re talking at your students instead of sparking their curiosity? In this session, two high school teachers share how they transformed their Marine Biology class into a hands-on, practice-driven course where students actively engaged in Science and Engineering Practices every day. Even better—the strategies carried over seamlessly into other Life Science courses. Come discover practical ways to weave in Science and Engineering Practices and Crosscutting Concepts without sacrificing content. You’ll walk away with classroom-tested examples, assessment ideas, and strategies you can immediately use to boost engagement and deepen learning in your own science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn practical strategies to integrate Science and Engineering Practices and Crosscutting Concepts into daily lessons—along with examples and assessments they can immediately use in their own classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Sherry Shook, Jill Ronstadt

Integrating Math and Science to Foster Belonging and Joy

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://bit.ly/CRS-NSTA2026

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Experience joyful, hands-on learning that integrates math and science while fostering inclusion and belonging. In this interactive workshop, participants engage as learners and educators to explore meaningful connections between NGSS and math standards, using creative inquiry and observation routines that deepen understanding. Through culturally relevant stories, reflective activities, and resources featuring diverse scientists, teachers discover strategies that help students see themselves as capable problem-solvers. Participants will examine standards side by side, engage in “math in sketching” activities, and plan lessons that bring science and math alive through curiosity, creativity, and community connections. Leave inspired with ready-to-use templates, digital resources, and a SMART goal for joyful, equitable STEM learning that empowers every student to belong and thrive.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to integrate math and science through joyful, hands-on lessons that foster inclusion, belonging, and curiosity—helping all students see themselves as scientists and problem-solvers in their everyday world.

SPEAKERS:
Maybelle Miranda

Launchng Inquiry through Rocketry

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 303 D


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Launching Inquiry through Rocketry is a hands-on professional learning session that immerses educators in the power of authentic inquiry-based teaching and learning. Through a dynamic rocketry activity, participants experience a STEM lesson from the learner’s perspective – posing questions, investigating ideas, and reflecting on their discoveries. The session highlights strategies to spark student curiosity, foster deep questioning, and support collaborative problem-solving. Educators leave with practical tools to cultivate a classroom culture of exploration, critical thinking, and deeper engagement.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a deeper understanding of how to design inquiry-based, student-centered learning experiences, transforming content into opportunities for exploration, and classrooms into spaces where questioning drives engagement and meaning.

SPEAKERS:
Jessica Kesler, Eric Moore

Little Engineers, Big Ideas: Accessible Design Challenges for K–2 Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 C, North Building


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How can we bring engineering design into K–2 classrooms in ways that are developmentally appropriate and engaging? This session shares hands-on, low-prep design challenges—like building bridges, testing shelters, or creating water filters—that help young learners explore problem solving. Participants will learn strategies to scaffold the design process, reduce frustration, and make challenges accessible for all children. Leave with ready-to-use activities, tips for differentiation, and ideas to nurture little engineers’ creativity and persistence.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of the session, participants will: Understand how to structure age-appropriate engineering design challenges for K–2. Gain scaffolding strategies to make engineering accessible for all learners. Leave with concrete activities and takeaways.

SPEAKERS:
Noelle Carter

NARST: Transdisciplinary Teaching for Thriving Future

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 211 A


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This section aims to share research findings from three years of partnership with teachers in two school districts. We will unpack the meanings of transdisciplinary, justice-centered teaching, and introduce possible images of teaching that embodies the ideas, along with tools. The participants will have opportunities to analyze student work produced from the co-designed transdisciplinary units. We will also present how collaborating teachers of our project navigated and disrupted the current de-contextualized, disciplinary-centeric, siloed culture of teaching and learning in secondary classrooms. We will present both research findings and practical tools that help teachers to expand their repertoires of practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
Transdisciplinary, justice-centered teaching involves crossing the boundaries of both disciplines (science vs. math) and institutions (school vs. community/home).

SPEAKERS:
Hosun Kang

NMLSTA: Empowering Educators & Students as Planet Stewards: Funding and Support for Environmental Action Projects

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2


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Environmental challenges require immediate and locally driven solutions. Educators play a critical role in cultivating the next generation of scientifically literate citizens who can respond to these issues with informed action. This session introduces Planet Stewards, a program that equips formal and informal educators with the tools, resources, and support needed to guide students in designing and implementing hands-on, action-based environmental stewardship projects. Attendees will learn how to access curriculum materials, connect with a national network of educators, and receive guidance for facilitating student-led conservation and restoration work. In collaboration with the National Earth Science Teachers Association (NESTA), new funding opportunities are now available for educators working with K–16 students. Projects may focus on habitat conservation and restoration, marine debris and waste reduction, carbon footprint reduction, or climate resilience.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will walk away with a clear understanding of the application process for funding, successful project examples, and strategies for engaging youth in meaningful, community-based environmental action.

SPEAKERS:
Liz Martinez

NSTA Press Author Session - Exploring the Sun's Apparent Motion, Lunar Phases, Eclipses and More

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Solar Science session PPT

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NSTA’s curriculum material, Solar Science, and KIDS book, When the Sun Goes Dark, provide what is needed to meet the middle school NGSS standards regarding the daily and annual motion of the sun, plus what causes lunar phases and eclipses: • Solar Motion: Students describe the patterns of the apparent motion of the sun, moon. This includes the sun appearing to rise in the east, move across the sky, and set in the west. • Lunar Phases: Students develop a model of the Earth-sun-moon system to predict the phases of the moon based on the relative positions of these bodies. • Eclipses: Using their model, students predict when a solar eclipse (Moon between Earth and Sun) or a lunar eclipse (Earth's shadow on the Moon) will occur. Come experience the various learning experiences for students that will give them the grounding they need to understand these concepts

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants have ready-to-use curriculum materials to address key middle school science standards.

SPEAKERS:
Dennis Schatz

Opening Doors to Student Sensemaking and Storytelling through Data Jam

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 303 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Resource Document
Access the shared Resource Document for this and other sessions from NSELA & NSTA 2026 for links to related resources, slides, and other opportunities.

Show Details

This interactive session explores how we can open doors for all learners to participate in sensemaking through evidence-based reasoning: to make and communicate scientific claims from real-world data using the Data Jam model. Wearing our “student-hats” we will complete a “Mini Jam”, find patterns in real-world data, and choose our own formats to creatively tell the stories we discover in the data. In “teacher-hat”, we will discuss elements of a Data Jam that make it novel, such as pattern-recognition in the data for multilingual learners, open-format story-telling to better support neurodiverse students and students with disabilities, and the opportunity to add data about real-world phenomena to enhance ideas and practices in our curriculum. You will leave the session with classroom-ready strategies, support documents, dataset-access, and a model that will support your integration of all four pillars of sensemaking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a model and toolkit of sensemaking strategies to engage all students as they practice connecting their ideas to science ideas as they make sense of data and communicate their data stories for science learning.

SPEAKERS:
Kristin Hunter-Thomson, Annette Brickley

Opening STEM Doors for All Learners: Using the OWL Method to Transform Competition Clubs

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building


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This is a model that starts from the basics of the OWL (observe, wonder, learn) large-group discussion strategy then moves onto new experiences that serve as the jumping off point for student-generated questions and investigations such as how to use in a competition like Science Olympiad, SECME, ExploraVision, etc. I first discovered the OWL chart at a NSTA conference presentation Picture Perfect Science in 2012. The authors demonstrated how three-column chart was used as a whole-group anchor chart throughout an inquiry lesson. The O represents what the student has Observed, the W what the student has Wondered, and the L what the student has Learned. This technique is a great process for finding and addressing misconceptions and holes in student learning to prepare them for the competition teams. The OWL model takes the place of the more traditional KWL strategy as it focuses on science and engineering practices.

TAKEAWAYS:
I’ll walk through how we scaffold the learning process, guide from curiosity to specialization, and foster a culture of collaboration and discovery. Whether you're starting a club or looking to revitalize one, this session will offer strategies to make STEM competitions for every learner to thrive.

SPEAKERS:
Stephanie Coy

Part 1: Scaffolding Science for Multilingual Learners: Using AI to Deepen Sensemaking

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 303 B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Scaffolding Science for Multilingual Learners: Using AI to Deepen Sensemaking
Folder of session slides and handouts
Webinar - Asynchronous video-based course.
An interactive webinar session covering the content.

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Multilingualism is a superpower, but language barriers in the classroom can limit students’ participation even when the lesson is well-designed. So, how can teachers leverage new technology to help multilingual learners actively make sense of phenomena, share their ideas, and see themselves as scientists? This interactive session will help educators reimagine classroom practice through the lens of inclusion and sensemaking, examining how AI tools can scaffold language development, help teachers personalize materials, and surface student thinking. Participants will engage in a phenomenon-based investigation that connects students’ linguistic and cultural assets to science ideas and practices, modeling how they can deepen access to three-dimensional learning. Leave with strategies and AI-supported tools that make science more accessible, authentic, and engaging for all learners.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience strategies for designing phenomenon-based science lessons where multilingual learners thrive. Learn how AI can scaffold language, personalize tasks, and support access to three-dimensional sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Drenth

Predictability Meets Curiosity: How Structures Support Student Engagement in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Predictability Meets Curiosity How Structures Support Student Engagement in Science.pptx

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Managing the flow of a science classroom can either distract students or free them to focus on learning. This session explores how intentional routines reduce the cognitive load students carry about logistics (where to get materials, how to transition, how to record data) so their mental energy is reserved for critical thinking and sensemaking in science. By removing this “background noise,” consistent routines create structure, independence, and equity while maximizing instructional time.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will see real-world examples of routines that streamline lab work, improve classroom management, and support productive discourse, with practical takeaways to adapt for their own classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Julia Buonagurio

Providing Equitable Access to Develop a Maker Mindset in Students

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building


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Empower your students to think like makers! This interactive workshop explores how to foster a maker mindset that encourages creativity, collaboration, and problem-solving in every learner. Participants will experience hands-on, low-cost STEM activities designed to remove barriers and promote equitable access for all students—especially those in under-resourced classrooms. Discover how to integrate open-ended design challenges using easily sourced or recycled materials, and learn strategies to nurture curiosity and confidence through inquiry and exploration. Facilitators from Resource Area For Teaching (RAFT) will share practical tools and frameworks that help educators cultivate inclusive maker-centered classrooms where all students can see themselves as capable innovators and scientists.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn equitable, low-cost strategies to foster a maker mindset that builds creativity, confidence, and problem-solving skills in every student—empowering all learners to engage meaningfully in hands-on STEM exploration.

SPEAKERS:
Nancy McIntyre

Reframing Teacher Learning: Supporting Asset-Oriented Approaches to Multilingual Learners in Science Education

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 161, North Building


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How are science teachers being prepared to support multilingual learners (MLs) in classrooms that often emphasize testing over equity? This session examines how pre-service and in-service science teachers shift from deficit to asset-oriented perspectives toward MLs through guided reflection, fieldwork, and coursework. Drawing on data from teacher reflection notebooks in methods seminars, we analyze changes in teachers’ thinking across their preparation trajectory to understand how they come to view language as a resource for learning science rather than a barrier. This model, though designed for one program, can be adapted across teacher preparation contexts to help science educators recognize and leverage the linguistic and cultural assets MLs bring to the classroom. Participants will explore how reflective tools and structured discussions can help teachers critically examine their assumptions, respond to test-driven pressures, and develop inclusive pedagogical strategies.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore how reflection and fieldwork help science teachers adopt asset-based approaches to support multilingual learners.

SPEAKERS:
Lisa Archuleta

Rural Secondary Educators’ Perceptions About Integrating Music into Physical Science Courses

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Dissertation Study 30 Minute Presentation_1
Sound Wave Project
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 1
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 2

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Developing a future-focus for science education with emphasis of music and arts. Bridging out for cross-curriculum among various disciplines, however, focus upon STEM education. Utilizing the ODE State Science Standards, along with state standards from various content, as well as the connections to the Next Generation Science Standards. My proposal is for the audience of 6-12 general science educators. Educators from outside of the 6-12 parameter are always welcome to attend the proposed session. The information provided for the proposed session presentation is to help all STEM educators with the integration of music and arts into the STEM education and curriculum (STEAM). Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to achieve the talented and gifted students who may not be advanced in science, but advanced in arts and music.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. There are digital programs the educators can utilize without costs to improve the connections of arts and music with STEM. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to STEAM TAG kids.

SPEAKERS:
John Davis III

Science Education Doesn't Have to be a 'Flat Circle'

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Science Education Doesn't Have to be a 'Flat Circle' - 30min.pptx
Slides make more sense in person (pun intended!), if you have questions free free to reach out to me directly (contact info on the last slide).

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This presentation will take participants on a journey through the evolution of science education, revisiting past practices that shaped how students engaged with scientific ideas and skills. From content-heavy memorization to activity-driven lab work, each era revealed both strengths and limitations, paving the way for decades of reform that ultimately converged in the NGSS Framework. Anchored in sensemaking built on phenomena, this session will connect history to present practice, affirming that reinventing the wheel is not necessary for best practice, rather defining what the "wheel" is today. Participants will explore how lessons from the past can refine future instruction, with particular attention to strategies for lesson and assessment design that integrate sensemaking. Classroom examples, including student work, video, and outcomes, will illustrate the impact of these strategies on engagement, accessibility, and meaningful learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore the evolution of science instruction, from memorization to inquiry, to see how past practices shape today’s best approaches. This session affirms current methods, drawing on history to refine 3D teaching through group interaction and individual application.

SPEAKERS:
Matthew Bulman

Teaching engineering in a physical science lesson to elementary teacher candidates: Design of a lime-ade

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Example slide show Engineering lesson SQ26 NSTA
This is an example of the slide show used to facilitate this lesson to teacher candidates.
NSTA 26SQ Engineering - Lime-ade AMRA
Slide show with information about a lesson to teach engineering to elementary students.
The Mexican lemonade ("lim-onade") engineering design challenge – a 5E lesson
Description of an engineering lesson to use with elementary teacher candidates.

Show Details

This presentation will focus on a practice-based experience for undergraduate elementary teacher candidates with no engineering background, to develop engineering content knowledge for teaching. Applying an inquiry-based approach in physical science, designing a lime-ade lesson, teacher candidates practice science and engineering practices with emphasis in engineering and the EDP. The presentation includes the experience design and data analysis of teacher candidates’ artifacts, reflections, and school faculty’s feedback. Analysis of the data indicates that these field-based experiences helped TCs’ better understand engineering practices such as SEP #3 and the importance of engaging students in an iterative design process. This study aims to provide specific examples and insights from TCs’ experiences, for teacher educators interested in teaching rigorous and culturally responsive engineering lessons in K-8 schools.

TAKEAWAYS:
One main takeway will be the use of metacognitive strategies to assess a lesson based on NGSS science and engineering practices with emphasis in engineering and the engineering design process to develop out-of-field teacher candidates' content knowledge for teaching engineering.

SPEAKERS:
Ana Margarita Rivero Arias

The Use of Test Corrections to Increase Student Understanding

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building


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This presentation will present results from a test correction practice that enables students to earn back points by showing their understanding of missed exam questions. The test correction process requires students to provide scientific support to explain why a choice is correct and why their original choice was incorrect. This practice builds understanding of missed concepts and also improves learning and testing skills, both important parts of sensemaking. Example missed questions can also be used as a pre-assessment or as part of the review prior to an exam. Examples of the process and opportunities to practice corrections will be included in the session.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with the ability to incorporate student examination of question choices into a pre- or post-assessment. Using this method can help increase student understanding of course objectives.

SPEAKERS:
Marjorie Rothschild

Tinkering With Balance: STEMwonder in PK-2 Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A


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Balance is a phenomenon that permeates our lives every day. Children take on the challenge of balance as they walk, play, and ride bikes and scooters, and are curious about how to put objects into balance. High quality STEM experiences capitalize on children’s prior experiences and their interest in the world and how it works. In this highly interactive hands-on session, we will engage in teacher play with familiar materials children can use to independently tinker with balance within the contexts of: 1) body balance, 2) balancing objects, 3) balancing to achieve stability, 4) using balance to compare, and 5) engineering kinetic balance. We will discuss how PK-2 children can engage in STEM every day in their classrooms, and how over 400 teachers in Iowa are implementing balance experiences with their students using these materials.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will experience ways to develop their students' conceptual understanding of balance and nurture science and engineering practices by providing space and materials for children to tinker with the phenomenon of balance.

SPEAKERS:
Beth Dykstra VanMeeteren

A Powerful Story of Teacher-Driven Innovation and Meaningful Student Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 2



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A Powerful Story of Teacher-Driven Innovation and Meaningful Student Learning
Presentation Slides and Resources

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How can schools translate belief into intradisciplinary learning that sticks? At Miami Country Day School, middle school teachers used established departmental belief statements and long-term transfer goals as a foundation to reimagine a STEM program that challenges students to Think Deeply About the World Around You Through a Scientific Lens. Across Grades 6–8, students revisit the interconnected concepts of water, energy, and conservation through an arc of grade-level themes that include The Science Of: Where We Are and How We Got Here, Who Calls Florida Home? and How Our Interactions Shape and Impact the Future. These explorations include climate storytelling, energy justice, and ecological belonging. Grounded in Mind, Brain, and Education (MBE) science and CTTL-informed practices, the program fosters relevance, student agency, and enduring understanding. Attendees will leave with tools to spark faculty-led curriculum design rooted in purpose and powered by authentic, global inquiry

TAKEAWAYS:
Grounding interdisciplinary curriculum in whole-child principles and a faculty-driven, inquiry-focused design process can create a vertically aligned STEM program that honors disciplinary integrity, spirals environmental concepts, and fosters deep, globally relevant inquiry.

SPEAKERS:
Kelley Brill, Joanne Aronson

Authentic Application Assessments: A Method for Measuring What Students Can DO with Their Knowledge

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Authentic Application Assessment Resources

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In an AI-driven world where information is easy to access, science educators must prepare and assess what students can do with their knowledge, not just what they know. This poster shares a classroom-tested strategy called Authentic Application Assessments that integrates higher-order thinking into a traditional test format. These assessments ask students to move beyond memorization toward true conceptual mastery by using their knowledge flexibly and creatively in unfamiliar contexts. Grounded in NGSS practices and Bloom’s Taxonomy, this approach allows teachers to assess students' ability to apply and authentically transfer ideas. Participants will explore example assessments from Chemistry and Advanced Chemistry classrooms, analyze student work, and be introduced to classroom strategies that prepare students to succeed in application-based assessments. Attendees will leave with a framework for developing their own assessments into tools for deeper learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Transform traditional tests into tools for sensemaking. See how Authentic Application Assessments promote critical thinking and deeper learning by emphasizing not just what students know, but what they can do with their scientific knowledge.

SPEAKERS:
Steven Spangenberg

Beyond the Beaker: Enhancing Chemistry Education with VR Labs

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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This session will discuss the outcomes of a research project that focuses on integrating the use of VR labs to enhance and develop the curriculum for the Chemistry classroom. Our motivation thrived on minimizing safety concerns related to the handling of lab equipment, open flames or chemicals; providing equitable learning experience for students with different backgrounds and academic levels; accessing more challenging chemistry topics and providing students with meaningful connections between the curriculum and the real-world. In the first year of the project teachers focused on curriculum development, learning how to effectively use VR technology, writing grants to purchase the VR sets, and finding the most appropriate software to be used. The second year, the team worked with the implementation of VR technology along with the curriculum already developed. The data with our results will be presented with the goal of spreading the implementation of this approach on other STEM courses.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will observe some of the most popular VR Labs for the Chemistry classroom as well as samples of the lessons used with the students. Participants will also have the opportunity to experiment with the VR sets to have a glance of what students experienced when performing this type of labs.

SPEAKERS:
Ileana Bermudez Luna

BrainSTEM: Engaging Neuroscience in STEM Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 A, North Building



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BrainSTEM Engaging Neuroscience in STEM Learning

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Grounded in neuroscience, this interactive session invites participants to explore hands-on activities that reveal how emotions, belief systems, and brain-informed teaching strategies can improve STEM learning. The presentation will delve into the evolving science of learning and how it can shape daily classroom practices and boost student engagement. Topics include: 1. The impact of emotions on thinking and memory 2. Why learning styles are a myth—and what that means for teaching science effectively 3. Why certain teaching strategies align more effectively with how the brain naturally learns

TAKEAWAYS:
Understanding how the brain learns empowers teachers to move beyond myths, such as learning styles, and instead use emotion-aware, research-based strategies that genuinely support student engagement and success in STEM.

SPEAKERS:
Bobbi Hansen

Bringing Microbiology to Life: A Case-Based, Three-Dimensional Learning Approach to the Clinical Lab

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 160, North Building


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This 30-minute session presents a dynamic, case-based microbiology lab activity grounded in three-dimensional (3D) learning, integrating disciplinary core ideas, science and engineering practices, and crosscutting concepts as outlined in the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). The activity is centered around a clinical case study of a patient with a skin infection that does not respond to initial antibiotic treatment. Students simulate the diagnostic process used in a clinical microbiology lab—isolating, identifying, and performing antibiotic susceptibility testing on a Gram-positive cocci specimen. As students move through each lab step (e.g., Gram staining, culturing, biochemical testing, AST), they connect technical procedures to real-world clinical decisions. The activity emphasizes evidence-based reasoning, critical thinking, and the importance of antimicrobial stewardship. In doing so, it prepares students to apply microbiological knowledge to practical healthcare challenge

TAKEAWAYS:
This session is ideal for life science and biology educators seeking to bring real-world applications into the microbiology lab and increase student engagement and understanding through case-based learning.

SPEAKERS:
Kimberly Jones

Building CERiously Strong Arguments: Claim, Evidence, Reasoning

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4


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Participants will explore how to support students in writing like scientists using Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning (CER). Designed for educators ready to integrate data analysis and promote scientific writing, this session emphasizes helping students make clear claims, back them with evidence, and explain their reasoning. Educators will engage with phenomena, three-dimensional learning, focusing on SEP: engaging in argument from evidence. Participants will leave with practical strategies, including sentence frames, scaffolds, classroom activities, and digital tools using Google Forms and Autocrat to collect, organize, and provide feedback on CERs. Attendees will gain methods to make science writing engaging, accessible, and meaningful for all learners, while helping students build confidence as they observe, reason, and communicate like scientists.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with practical CER tools: Including note-taking strategies, sentence frames, a rubric, and activities to support all learners. Plus guidance on using Google Forms and AutoCrat to streamline student work collection, provide feedback, to enhance CER lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Alejandra Worozaken

Building the Double Helix: A Hands-On Classroom Interactive

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Base Cards and Replication Enzyme
How to Build the DNA LessonSlides
Transcription Cards

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In this hands-on workshop, participants will engage in an interactive DNA modeling activity, where students act as the bases and enzymes required for DNA replication. By physically linking as complementary base pairs (A-T, C-G) and constructing a double helix, students will gain a deeper understanding of DNA’s molecular structure, base pairing, and replication. The session includes a step-by-step demonstration of the activity, where participants take on the roles of DNA bases, helicase, and DNA polymerase. Participants will physically “build” the DNA, demonstrate replication, and simulate mutations to show how errors can impact protein synthesis. This interactive method enhances collaboration, movement, and active learning. Educators will learn how to incorporate this activity into their classrooms and explore ways to expand it to demonstrate transcription or mutations. Ideal for science educators in middle school, high school, and introductory college biology courses.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to engage students in DNA structure and replication through a hands-on, interactive activity. They’ll gain insights into using kinesthetic learning to teach base pairing, DNA replication, and mutation, while developing skills to implement this activity in their classrooms

SPEAKERS:
Katelin Ellis

Designing Futures: Interdisciplinary Science Projects as Gateways to STEM Opportunity

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
CCI_Connect_AI_for_STEM.pdf
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The app is optimized on a desktop! Using the QR for the mobile version is great, but so much scrolling ...! Remember, your lessons can be downloaded as PDFs on your mobile device, and the will also be saved in your demo library to access on your desktop. Give us your feedback to receive an invite to participate in the full beta platform demo. Thank you!

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In many urban high schools, STEM learning can feel disconnected from students’ lives and futures. This session explores how interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned projects transform science instruction into a bridge to college, career, and economic sustainability for historically marginalized students. Drawing from a pilot design and multimedia pathway, we’ll examine how projects rooted in core science ideas and extended through design, technology, and communication built scientific literacy, problem-solving, and workforce-ready skills. Participants will see how initiatives like the Tech Challenge engaged students in three-dimensional learning — applying disciplinary core ideas, crosscutting concepts, and science and engineering practices to solve real-world problems. Attendees will leave with strategies to launch interdisciplinary science projects, form collaborative partnerships, and design learning experiences that are meaningful, relevant, and empowering in urban school contexts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to design interdisciplinary, NGSS-aligned science projects that deepen engagement and build STEM pathways, and will leave with ready-to-use planning templates and collaboration tools to launch real-world, project-based learning in their own classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Maafi Cook

Embracing Multicultural Wisdom in Science Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 2


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Join a first-year educator as he shares his experience rooting his science teaching in culturally sustaining pedagogy. More than ever, in an anti-science world, marginalized students deserve access to educational spaces where they can learn while feeling safe, seen, and embraced. Every student possesses wisdom which extends beyond the classroom, yet they are given limited opportunities to demonstrate their unique funds of knowledge. Through reflecting upon anecdotal evidence, examining student work, and dissecting concrete examples of culturally sustaining pedagogy, learn how multiple levels of students’ culture can be embraced to increase student engagement, discourse, and mastery learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will have an introductory understanding of culturally sustaining pedagogy and the opportunities it can create in STEM learning environments.

SPEAKERS:
Bryant Rivera Cortez

Empowering Student Voices: How Classroom Collaboration Changes How We Teach

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Empowering Student Voices How Classroom Collaboration Changes How We Teach
Collaboration, curiosity, and student voice drive a thriving science classroom. This session explores practical strategies using Driving Question Boards (DQBs) and a “Communicating in Scientific Ways” chart. DQBs let students’ questions shape investigations, while the communication chart models discussion norms and evidence-based reasoning. These tools transformed my teaching: I shifted from delivering content to facilitating learning, letting student ideas guide inquiry. The result—higher engag

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Collaboration, curiosity, and student voice drive a thriving science classroom. This session explores practical strategies using Driving Question Boards (DQBs) and a “Communicating in Scientific Ways” chart. DQBs let students’ questions shape investigations, while the communication chart models discussion norms and evidence-based reasoning. These tools transformed my teaching: I shifted from delivering content to facilitating learning, letting student ideas guide inquiry. The result—higher engagement, stronger ownership, richer discourse, and a classroom where students learn and communicate like scientists.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain practical strategies to build a collaborative classroom where student questions drive learning. Experiencing a Driving Question Board and communication chart shows how these tools boost engagement and shift teachers from lecturers to facilitators of science.

SPEAKERS:
Missy Weatherly

From Chaos to Cohesion: A Framework for Building Effective Groups in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


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Effective and equitable student sensemaking in science classrooms relies on authentic, collaborative experiences engaging in the NGSS SEPs. Yet, teachers may struggle to facilitate cohesive groups where all voices are heard and ideas are developed equitably. This session will provide concrete strategies for designing and supporting student groups that actively engage in sensemaking around phenomena. Participants will analyze classroom examples of student interactions to explore the social, cognitive, and affective dimensions of group cohesion. We will share specific strategies including “off-topic talk debriefs” after collaborative activities to strengthen group cohesion and support productive engagement in the SEPs argumentation and explanation and “co-designed student groups” which elicits student input when designing and facilitating groups. These tools can be used to promote deeper understanding of phenomena and ensure an equitable experience in groups.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will leave with two practical strategies to build and support cohesive student groups. Participants will be able to explain the role of the social, cognitive, and affective dimensions of group work and use student perspectives to turn group activities into powerful sensemaking opportunities.

SPEAKERS:
Sara Dozier, Donald Buckley

From Grades to Growth: Implementing Competency-Based Learning in High School Science Conference Strand: Teaching Strategies and Classroom Practices

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Grades to Growth_ Implementing Competency-Based Learning in High School Science Conference Strand_ Teaching Strategies and Classroom Practices.pdf
Grades to Growth_ Implementing Competency-Based Learning in High School Science Conference Strand_ Teaching Strategies and Classroom Practices.pdf

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Over six years, our department shifted from exploring NGSS practices to fully grading with competencies. Starting with pilots and progressing to school-wide implementation, we built a model where scientific skills are the foundation of learning and assessment. Content remains central, but it is reframed as the medium through which students demonstrate their skills—using Bloom’s levels to connect knowledge with practice. In this session, we will share the steps of our transition, lessons learned from piloting and scaling, and how we integrated NGSS-inspired practices into our own framework. Participants will see how skills-first science learning can strengthen lab performance, critical thinking, and student ownership.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to transition to skills-first competency-based learning in science, integrating content through Bloom’s levels and NGSS practices while building a sustainable implementation process.

SPEAKERS:
Megan McLain, Joseph Grissom

Have Your Students Take on the Role of a Genetic Counselor

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 9



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Genetic Counselor Challenge NSTA Anaheim PDF
Genetic Counselor Challenge NSTA Anahiem - Google Doc

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In the Genetic Counselor Challenge performance assessment, the students will demonstrate they understand genetic terminology, a specific genetic condition, Punnett squares, pedigrees and professional writing skills. Students are allowed a lot of choice which makes them engaged and invested in their final project. They will be creating a report for Claire and Ed to see the likelihood of them having a child with a certain genetic condition. Two possible options will be presented for the genetic condition: cystic fibrosis and hemophilia. However, teachers could use others. Students will create a pedigree using Punnett squares before writing a professional report for Claire and Ed. Students will be able to make the project their own by creating the family structure, which may include variations like twins or same-sex relationships. In addition, students are able to pick their challenge level, which allows some students to take it farther.

TAKEAWAYS:
Through the challenge problem, students will demonstrate their creativity, understanding of genetic terminology, Punnett squares, pedigrees and writing skills. This can be used as a summative, performance assessment. You can make simple alterations to have it fit in with your curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Kaitlyn Johnson

Introducing Safety Science to Undergraduate Chemistry and Engineering Students: A New Digital Platform for Coursework Integration

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building


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Join us for an engaging introduction to a new digital platform designed to bring safety science into undergraduate chemistry and engineering education. Developed by the Institute of Research Experiences and Education at UL Research Institutes, this innovative resource helps students explore real-world applications of safety science through case studies. Tailored for integration into existing coursework, the platform supports instructors in fostering critical thinking around consumer safety, risk analysis, and responsible product development practices. Attendees will gain insight into the platform’s features, pedagogical alignment, and opportunities for classroom implementation. Discover how this tool empowers the next generation of scientists to prioritize safety in their academic and professional pursuits.

TAKEAWAYS:
Undergraduate chemistry, physical science, and engineering instructors will be introduced to a new digital platform that seamlessly integrates safety science into coursework, equipping students with essential knowledge and skills to prioritize safety in scientific practice and consumer product use.

SPEAKERS:
Bethany King Wilkes, UrLeaka Newsome

Let’s Coffee & Chat! A Live Hang with Class CrunchLabs

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Grab your coffee and pull up a seat. This is your chance to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team and other educators who are building the future of science class. Ask questions, share wins, swap stories, and get real-time tips from the people designing the units and using them with students. Whether you are just getting started or deep into your first mission, this is a space for honest conversation, curiosity, and community. No slides. No pressure. Just real talk with your Class CrunchLabs crew.

TAKEAWAYS:
Bring your questions, feedback, and curiosity. This is your space to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team, swap ideas with other educators, and get support from real humans.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Garelli, DeAnna Lee Rivers, Arash Jamshidi, Jesse Semeyn, Tommy Clayton

Maintaining Rigor with Access: Using UDL as a Pathway to Three-Dimensional Science Assessment

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5


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Three-dimensional science instruction has transformed assessment design, raising rigor and aligning student problem-solving processes with those of practicing scientists and engineers. Moving beyond rote recall, 3D assessments often require students to flexibly apply learning in novel scenarios. This shift has created challenges as teachers seek strategies to help students decode multimodal assessments and persist through multi-stepped processes. This presentation teaches educators to use the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Framework to identify and plan around construct-irrelevant features that arise in 3D assessments. Participants will engage in a meta-model to unpack assessment complexity, apply UDL strategies to pinpoint barriers, and learn high-leverage approaches for fostering student persistence. Presenters will share methods for selecting and gradually fading assessment scaffolds that meet student needs without lowering rigor.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how the UDL framework equips students with strategies for tackling 3D assessments in OpenSciEd and similar, sensemaking curricula. Participants will see how UDL supports student persistence, understanding and engagement with rigorous assessments without reducing rigor.

SPEAKERS:
Daniel Sonrouille, Althea Hoard

Productive Struggle: Strategies to Increase Explanation & Argumentation in Science Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Productive Struggle: Strategies to Increase Explanation and Argume
Session Handouts

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More than 10 years after the NGSS adoption, science teachers still face challenges implementing the science practices (SEPs) throughout their lessons. Our analysis of 801 science teachers’ lessons showed that while some SPs were used more frequently, only some teachers consistently engaged students in the full range of SPs (Tankersley et al., 2024; Hasseler et al., 2025). This session will share insights from these studies, highlighting which practices teachers tend to enact more often and how they can build from current strengths to increase both the type and frequency of SPs used. Drawing on strategies from real secondary science classrooms, the session will showcase practical ways teachers can integrate multiple SPs to actively support students’ sensemaking. Participants will leave with concrete approaches to encourage students to move beyond simply interacting with phenomena and data toward developing deeper scientific understanding.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how to elaborate upon the NGSS Science and Engineering Practices they currently use, integrate more SPs and strengthen sensemaking. Gain practical, classroom-tested strategies that move students beyond observing phenomena and data toward building deeper scientific understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Amy Tankersley

Putting Inquiry on the Map: Using Digital Maps to Drive Science Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3


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Mapping helps students make sense of the world by connecting observations, data, and explanations to explore how and why systems change. Through creating and analyzing maps, students interpret evidence, identify patterns, and build conceptual models that reveal understanding. These experiences enable teachers to evaluate how students utilize evidence to construct explanations and apply concepts. Participants will examine artifacts from a middle school Earth science class that show how mapping makes learning visible and explore digital mapping platforms that promote inquiry, analysis, and communication. While valuable in Earth and environmental science, these tools can be applied across subjects to help students explore relationships, analyze data, and draw conclusions. Mapping aligns with NGSS practices, providing educators with adaptable strategies and tools to help all learners make sense of complex, data-rich phenomena in authentic and meaningful ways.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will discover how mapping brings science to life by turning data into stories students can see, question, and explain. They’ll leave with hands-on strategies, classroom examples, and ways to use maps as engaging tools for inquiry, exploration, and assessment across disciplines.

SPEAKERS:
Lara Kossiakoff

Reimagining Language in Science Classrooms: A Story of a “Monolingual” Teacher and His Multilingual Students

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 161, North Building


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This session explores how translanguaging pedagogy can disrupt English-only norms and reimagine what it means to teach and learn science in linguistically diverse classrooms. Building on García and Kleyn’s (2016) translanguaging framework and González-Howard’s (2024) Language for Science perspective, this study examines how a “monolingual” science teacher can intentionally support borderless language practices that affirm students’ identities and ways of knowing. By expanding what counts as legitimate language in science, this session invites educators to challenge English language hegemony and embrace justice-centered approaches that empower both multilingual and “monolingual” teachers to create inclusive learning environments. Participants will engage with concrete examples of classroom interactions and teacher moves that encourage translanguaging in science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore translanguaging science practices that challenge English-only norms and empower multilingual and “monolingual” teachers alike.

SPEAKERS:
Marc Ortiz, Lisa Archuleta

Scale, Proportion, Quantity: Stoichiometry Simplified via NGSS

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Scale, Proportion, and Quantity NSTA 2026.pptx
Presentation Giving Scale Factor Stoichiometry

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Stoichiometry is frequently one of the most difficult units in a chemistry course. While dimensional analysis is a powerful tool that can be applied to a wide range of problems, novice chemistry students struggle when required to chain multiple conversion factors together. Even for many students who do succeed, the approach is algorithmic and non-intuitive. This session will use the NGSS cross cutting concept of scale, proportion, and quantity to provide an alternative approach to solving questions involving theoretical yields, limiting reactants, and other stoichiometry aligned concepts. Not only will students find greater success with solving the problems, they will have much better intuition about the process and understand the significance behind each step in the calculations. This presentation is also great for teachers with a non-chemistry background who have been assigned to teach chemistry and have concerns about the stoichiometry unit.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn an alternative approach to solving stoichiometry problems that will allow students to experience success much more quickly in solving stoichiometry problems while simultaneously improving the intuitive understanding behind each step in the calculations.

SPEAKERS:
Eric Carlson

Science Notebooking 101

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D


Show Details

Science Notebooking 101 is for teachers who want to get started with interactive student notebooks in their classroom. This session includes how to set up notebooks, create graphic organizers following NGSS standards, modeling, sketchnoting, using rubrics, grading notebooks, writing scaffolds, and other helpful hints. Interactive notebooks are student-generated notebooks that become a reference book for sequenced assignments throughout the school year. Our presentation will show how to set up a student notebook for an entire unit. Also included are organizational ideas for Claim/Evidence/Writing (CERs) prompts to aid in cross-curricular planning/support.

TAKEAWAYS:
An example notebook consisting of ideas and templates will be given to attendees that will help teachers introduce practical strategies and guide critical thinking for students.

SPEAKERS:
Sheryl Tabutol

Sharpening Students’ Career Paths and Goals through an Innovative Science Career Course

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 1



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Sharpening Students Career Path and Goals through an Innovative Science Career

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As graduation nears, many students remain unsure of their career goals, and the steps to obtain a career path remains unclear. To bridge the gap between STEM education and workforce, an innovative science career course (SCC) emphasizing real-world professions was designed. Teaching strategies include collaborating with an industry outreach program to teach disciplinary problems, inviting guest speakers, marketing oneself, and presenting group projects. This study evaluates to what extent the SCC impacts students’ career readiness, competency, and career choices through mixed-methods approach. Repeated surveys, exit tickets, and open-ended questions were administered over the semester. Results showed that the SCC significantly increased students’ career readiness and competency. This presentation showcases the unique features of the SCC course and explores how such courses deepen students’ understanding of STEM sectors and sharpen students’ skills in planning an actionable career path.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn teaching strategies for designing an innovative science career course, how to facilitate discussions in science careers with students, and assessments for measuring student growth in career development.

SPEAKERS:
Li Ye, Ana Ramirez

STEM in Action: Building Inclusive Playgrounds for Every Body

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7


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Students redesign playground equipment to make it more inclusive. In this 15-day STEM unit, teams research, blueprint, build 3D models, create a brand, and produce a short commercial showing how their design helps more people play. Ready-to-use, hands-on, and real-world focused.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore a ready-to-teach STEM unit where students design inclusive playground equipment. Walk away with a pacing guide, 15 lesson slide decks, digital student docs, and exemplars—everything needed to launch this hands-on, real-world project.

SPEAKERS:
Lindsey Brown, Michael Regnier

The Science Participation Index

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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The Science Participation Index will help teachers self-assess their students' participation in classroom discussions using a user-friendly checklist. Additionally, descriptions of classroom participation are provided that will enable teachers to determine which “level” their classroom discussions represent. Finally, a variety of instructional strategies are provided to support teachers as they “level up” – for example, from basic student involvement (Level 1) to more meaningful student participation (Level 3). The SPI gives teachers a clear, organized approach for improving students’ participation in classroom discussions, along with a series of reflective prompts that will enable you to monitor how students are progressing over time and support instructional modifcations. This tool was co-designed by a group of high school science teachers as they explored ways to create a science classroom community that invites all students to participate equally in classroom discussions.

TAKEAWAYS:
Students can feel disconnected in science because the curriculum fails to relate to their lives or aspirations. Without the opportunity to ask questions related to real-life issues or engage in meaningful inquiry, students’ levels of participation in the practices of science will be limited.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Lacey, Tamer Mosa, Malachi Gorga, Justin McFadden, Rawan Saleh

The St. Jude Virtual Journal Club: Engaging students in the scientific process through primary literature

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


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The St. Jude Virtual Journal Club introduces high school students to primary literature and encourages interaction between scientists, teachers, and students. Each participating class has virtual visits from three different scientists who lead interactive presentations during their visits. Presenting volunteer scientists receive training in science communication and presentation skills, working with educators to create a summary and a presentation of their chosen research paper. Students benefit from interacting with practicing scientists, improving their content knowledge and showing them multiple examples of paths into science. Because of the virtual nature of this program, it has the potential to be replicated in a variety of schools with connections made across geographic boundaries. Online resources are being developed to allow teachers who cannot participate in the synchronous sessions the opportunity to participate in the program.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about a virtual science outreach program offered by St. Jude where scientists are trained to present to a high school audience. Curriculum and other resources are being developed for teachers.

SPEAKERS:
Shelby Montague

Translanguaging Possibilities in K-6 Science Classrooms: A Video Collection

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building


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Come learn about an Open Educational Resource (OER) video collection that highlights concrete examples of what translanguaging can look like in science classrooms. Translanguaging is a term that refers to the natural, dynamic languaging practices of multilingual individuals (García et al., 2017). Translanguaging pedagogies are teaching moves and materials that center translanguaging as a normal learning practice (Parra & Proctor, 2023) and explicitly welcome students to make sense of science using their full linguistic repertoire, including home languages (Fine et al., 2023). Videos portray 2nd - 6th grade classroom teachers planning for, enacting, and reflecting on translanguaging pedagogies during science lessons. The collection is useful for pre-service educators, in-service professional learning providers, and classroom teachers who are interested in expanding how they support teachers and linguistically diverse students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about an Open Educational Resource (OER) video collection that highlights concrete examples of what translanguaging can look like in K-6 science classrooms. We will watch several videos and discuss how to use these strategies to plan for, enact, and reflect on our own practice.

SPEAKERS:
Douglas Watkins, Caitlin Fine

Using Storytelling to Teach a K-2 Nutrition-based Life Science and Reading Program in Public Libraries

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation-Holben-Using Storytelling to Teach a K-2 Nutrition-based Life-Final for NSTA-April 6 2026-HANDOUT-Notes.pdf

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This session will explore development and implementation of a K-2 nutrition-based life science and reading program in Mississippi public libraries. This session will not only showcase the collaboration of K-2 science and reading educators; public, school, and academic librarians; scientists; and the public in the development of the informal science education program, but also the approach of using a storyline and children's books to facilitate science learning of children in K-2.

TAKEAWAYS:
After this session, attendees will be able to describe the development of nutrition-based life science STEM kits for implementation in informal learning environments.

SPEAKERS:
Abednego Bansah, Kerri Greene, David Holben

Watch STEM Grow! Planting and Exploring with Young Scientific Thinkers

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building


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Introducing flowering plants to young learners provides a powerful context for developing scientific inquiry, language, and collaboration. This session explores how economical, brightly colored sand pails can be used as mini-gardens for growing fast-germinating edible and flowering species such as garden cress and marigolds. Through hands-on investigations, students observe plant structures, growth patterns, and interactions between companion species while engaging in practices like measurement, drawing, and discourse. Lessons are structured using an Explore-Before-Explain framework to nurture curiosity and conceptual understanding in early elementary classrooms. Participants will experience key activities and examine strategies for integrating plant science into existing curricula using low-cost materials and accessible methods. These approaches are drawn from the Petal Pails curriculum, which will be referenced as one example of implementation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore how to use simple sand pail gardens and flowering plants to foster inquiry, language development, and conceptual understanding in early elementary science through hands-on, low-cost investigations.

SPEAKERS:
Kim Rillero

What does writing look like in secondary math and science? A systematic review of intervention studies

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides

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This research presentation shares findings from a systematic review of secondary writing interventions in math and science. We describe how the writing process was incorporated, what additional literacy practices students engage in, and which research-based writing practices were emphasized. Attendees will gain insight into how writing can be used to support learning in math and science, and more specifically, what evidence-based practices should be prioritized to strengthen students’ writing and content learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how writing can be meaningfully integrated into secondary math and science, highlighting the evidence-based practices and strategies that shape student learning.

SPEAKERS:
Tessa Arsenault, Kathleen Conley

Where Math Meets Science: Integrating Quantitative Thinking in K–5 Investigations

Saturday, April 18 • 8:45 AM - 9:15 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 C, North Building


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Elementary students often see math and science as separate subjects. This session shows how to bridge them through hands-on investigations that embed measurement, data, and number sense into meaningful science contexts. Participants will explore tasks—such as graphing plant growth, calculating rainfall, or measuring motion—that make math purposeful. Walk away with strategies and classroom-ready lessons that strengthen both science sensemaking and mathematical reasoning.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of the session, participants will: Recognize opportunities to integrate math into science investigations at K–5. Gain strategies to help students use math as a tool for science sensemaking. Leave with ready-to-use resources to strengthen both math and science learning.

SPEAKERS:
Noelle Carter

From Learning About to Figuring Out: Evaluating Elementary Lessons Using the NSTA Sensemaking Tool

Saturday, April 18 • 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Collection

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The NSTA Sensemaking Tool can help educators be critical consumers of instructional materials and create/revise lessons that reflect the shifts required by new standards (sensemaking). Gain experience using the tool and facilitating criteria-based consensus conversations with your colleagues!

TAKEAWAYS:
Use the NSTA Sensemaking Tool to evaluate instructional materials (lessons) and provide feedback.

SPEAKERS:
Emily Mathews

Aligning the Seeds of S.T.R.E.A.M. to Student Growth - Teaching Strategies and Classroom Practice

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 206 A


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This session will focus on discussion of best practices and strategies to pass on and take back to improve the implementation of the S.T.R.E.A.M. Room concept, content and community endeavors that occur at Kemp Elementary School within Dayton Public Schools. The Teacher presents hands-on student facilitated S.T.E.M., agriculture and reading cross curricular opportunities for a discussion that promotes curriculum as well as doable collaboration.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will engage in a shared exchange of STEM research–based best practices and classroom insights that strengthen student presentation and analysis skills, while collaboratively informing improvements to future STEM programming.

SPEAKERS:
Arthur Williams

Corn, Chemistry, and Culture: Teaching Collision Theory Through Nixtamalization

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Cooking Blue Corn by Asdzaan Nez
Corn Chemistry & Culture.pdf
Lesson details
Modeling Vocabulary
Nixtamalization slides for classroom

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This session features a culturally relevant, phenomenon-driven chemistry lesson that teaches reaction rates and collision theory through the Indigenous process of nixtamalization—cooking corn in an alkaline solution to release nutrients. Structured with the 5E model, students investigate how changing alkaline concentration affects reaction rates through hands-on labs, molecular modeling, and authentic data analysis. The lesson bridges chemistry and culture, supporting sensemaking through anchoring phenomena and student-generated questions aligned with NGSS HS-PS1-5. Participants will engage with classroom-tested strategies, sample student work, and adaptable assessments that promote equity, deepen engagement, and affirm cultural identity. The session offers practical guidance for connecting rigorous scientific inquiry with community knowledge to enhance student belonging in chemistry classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how nixtamalization can anchor culturally relevant chemistry instruction. Experience hands-on and modeling strategies that strengthen sensemaking in reaction-rate lessons. Access adaptable NGSS-aligned tools to promote equity and student identity in science learning.

SPEAKERS:
Deena Gould, Daniel Delgado

Creating Text Sets for Use in the Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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Led by members of NSTA Early Childhood-Elementary Committee, this workshop will introduce participants to the concepts on text sets. Participants will also discover where to find books on a variety of topics and criteria for choosing books to include in text sets

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to create and use text sets in the science classroom

SPEAKERS:
Rina Zampieron, Anne Lowry

Decoding Cellular Respiration: A Clear Path Through the Energy Maze

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
2026 NSTA Anaheim.pptx
Energetics Worksheets Instructor Key.docx
Energetics Worksheets Student Copy.docx

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This session explores collaborative learning exercises using manipulatives like pop-beads to enhance student understanding of cellular respiration and fermentation. By engaging their tactile sense, students actively participate in tracing a glucose molecule (modeled by a string of 6 pop-beads) through the various stages outlined on a provided handout. This hands-on approach allows them to track carbon movement and record its release throughout the process. Additionally, students learn to distinguish between energy production via substrate-level phosphorylation and oxidative phosphorylation. The activity fosters a clear understanding of how glucose hydrolysis fuels cellular processes. This simplified approach to cellular respiration and fermentation effectively conveys key details without sacrificing scientific accuracy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Unravel the secrets of cellular respiration! Track the fate of carbon atoms in glucose as it undergoes oxidation through various stages.

SPEAKERS:
Deborah Cardenas

Explainers: Low-Tech Learning for a High-Tech World

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 C, North Building


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Tired of digital overload and one-size-fits-all assessments? Explainers invite students to put pencils—and brains—back in motion. These hand-drawn, color-rich creations combine words, visuals, and annotation to reveal what students really understand about science concepts. Developed over eight years in a chemistry & physics classroom, Explainers transform assessment into an act of learning and reflection. Participants will see classroom-tested examples, learn the core design principles (“the non-negotiables”), and explore how Explainers align with NGSS and formative assessment goals. Walk away with templates, rubrics, and strategies for implementing this simple yet powerful practice that celebrates clarity, creativity, and comprehension.

TAKEAWAYS:
Discover how to spark deeper understanding with hand-drawn “Explainers” that make thinking visible, transform assessment into learning, and re-engage students through creativity, color, and clarity—no screens required.

SPEAKERS:
Matt Brady

Explore Science & Civics Connections In U.S. History Using Primary Sources

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 A, North Building


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Introduce your students to key connections between science and civics using primary sources from high-quality, trusted organizations like PBS, Library of Congress and the National Archives. Attendees will examine news articles, photographs and political cartoons from the past to the present on topics including the polio vaccine, Space Race, ocean pollution, aviation and medicine. We will then discuss the role that civic participation has played in the work of the scientists, inventors, and advocates involved in these historic events. We will share specific primary-source based lessons and tools that science teachers can use to connect their lessons to civic education. We will conclude by sharing specific examples of students who have demonstrated strong civic participation through their work in science class.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn meaningful connections between science and civic education using specific examples from U.S. history.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth Osborn, Victoria Pasquantonio

Exploring Monarch Butterflies in Science, Spanish, and Art

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Integrating Insects and Art 2026.pdf

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Students will join a Citizen Science program about monarch butterflies and create monarchs, which are sent to schools in Mexico in the fall. In Spanish, students will learn vocabulary related to monarchs and their migration. In art class, the students will invent and paint imaginary (but accurate) insects. How does your insect eat? Where does your insect live? How does your insect help the ecosystem? As students study insects and butterflies, they will model and create accurate visual interpretations in two and three dimensions of insects in Art class. Having them design and build an accurate insect (three body parts, six legs, antennae, sometimes wings) is a good way for them to go beyond rote memorization. In Science, we will add literature to the unit (nonfiction and fiction, such as Hey, Little Ant) and will discuss how insects are the largest and most diverse group of organisms on Earth, and worthy of respect.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will teach educators how to use STEAM to advocate for monarch butterflies.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Kurson

From Antarctica to the Classroom: Making Iron Cycling in the Ocean Accessible for Elementary Students

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://current-journal.com/articles/10.5334/cjme.136
Led by the USC Joint Educational Project (JEP) STEM staff and USC ocean researchers, the event focused on the role of iron in marine ecosystems. Supported by the National Science Foundation, the workshop featured four interactive stations—Geotracing Instruments, Iron in the Ocean, Glacier Melt, and Iron Cores—each designed to make complex ocean science accessible and engaging for young learners. This initiative exemplifies the power of community partnerships in fostering STEM curiosity and broad

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This session highlights a partnership between oceanography researchers and STEM educators at the University of Southern California’s Joint Educational Project (JEP) to co-create lesson plans that translate Antarctic iron cycle research into engaging classroom resources. By combining scientific expertise with pedagogical strategies, the team designed hands-on activities—using 3D-printed models, LEGO ships, origami, and sediment core kits—that make complex ocean science accessible for diverse elementary learners, including Special Day Classes. The collaboration offers a model for connecting cutting-edge research to K–12 education while fostering curiosity about global environmental challenges. Educators and researchers will learn strategies for building similar partnerships and receive adaptable, open-source materials to bring ocean and climate science into their own classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will discover how authentic partnerships between scientists and educators can turn advanced research into practical classroom resources, and they will leave with adaptable lesson plans, 3D printing files, and activity templates to bring ocean and climate science into their own teaching.

SPEAKERS:
Dr. Dieuwertje Kast

From Claims to Curiosity: CER in a Flipped Chemistry Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA presentation.pptx

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Join for an interactive session, where we will explore how the Flipped Classroom model and the Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (CER) framework can transform student learning and engagement. This session will highlight practical strategies for shifting direct instruction outside the classroom, freeing up valuable in-class time for collaborative, inquiry-based learning in chemistry classroom. Participants will discover how integrating CER into flipped lessons empowers students to think critically, construct scientific explanations, and support their claims with evidence and logical reasoning. Through real-world examples, hands-on activities, and discussion, educators will leave with actionable tools to foster deeper understanding, promote student voice, and enhance formative assessment practices. Whether you're new to flipped learning or looking to refine your use of CER, this session offers insights and inspiration to elevate your teaching practice.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session equips educators with practical strategies for designing flipped lessons that incorporate CER seamlessly. Participants will explore real classroom examples, tackle common challenges, and engage in hands-on activities that model the CER process.

SPEAKERS:
Bhagyashree Kulkarni

From the Lab to the Classroom: Inspiring STEM Engagement Through Forensic Science

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


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Forensics on the Fly is an innovative program that brings forensic science into high school classrooms. Developed by recognized forensic scientists, it translates professional lab practices into accessible experiments reflecting real-world methods. Students explore forensic biology, chemistry, and toxicology, learning how science applies to evidence examination. Each module combines lectures with hands-on labs emphasizing the scientific method and data analysis. Students conduct tests using materials that simulate forensic samples, reinforcing key concepts in biochemistry, analytical chemistry, and molecular biology. Interactive elements like assessments and critical-thinking challenges evaluate understanding and application of science in context. Successfully implemented in schools across Greater Philadelphia, the program shows gains in student engagement and retention. Scalable nationwide, it adapts well to STEM fields emphasizing lab-based, career-connected learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
By bridging theoretical instruction with practical experimentation, Forensics on the Fly exemplifies modern STEM pedagogy—cultivating observation, inference, and problem-solving skills while fostering a deeper understanding of how science operates in real-world forensic investigations.

SPEAKERS:
Coral Smith

Fueling Science Learning Through Food: Integrating Pilot Light’s Food Education Standards

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building


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Discover how food—a universally engaging topic—can be a powerful lens for teaching science. This session introduces educators to Pilot Light’s newly revised Food Education Standards (FES) and their connection to core science practices. Participants will explore how food systems, nutrition, and sustainability naturally align with NGSS crosscutting concepts such as systems thinking, cause and effect, and energy flow. Through case studies drawn from real classrooms across the country, attendees will see how integrating the FES can deepen inquiry, promote real-world relevance, and strengthen students’ scientific literacy. Join us to experience how food can make science more meaningful, equitable, and connected to students’ daily lives—fueling curiosity from the classroom to the cafeteria.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to integrate Pilot Light’s Food Education Standards with science instruction, using food systems and nutrition to deepen inquiry, connect NGSS concepts to real life, and engage young children in impactful, culturally relevant, and hands-on scientific learning.

SPEAKERS:
Megan Gottlieb

Hands-On Data Science: Practical Problem Sets with R for the Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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Data science is essential for scientific literacy, yet many teachers wonder how to bring it practically into their classrooms. This hands-on workshop introduces classroom-ready problem sets in R, a free and widely used statistical language. No coding experience is required to participate. Together, we will explore curated datasets connected to natural and social sciences, focusing on inquiry-driven data analysis. Problem sets are short and flexible and also align with best practices such as analyzing data, constructing explanations, and using computational thinking.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will gain experience working through problem sets, strategies for scaffolding and ordering data skills, and access to a bank of ready-to-use materials.

SPEAKERS:
Alla Baranovsky

Humans Over Hardware - The Importance of Soft Skills in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Soft Skills in Science PDF
PDF of Soft Skills in Science Presentation created by Adam Lawrence - Charlotte Country Day School
Soft Skills in Science PDF
Soft Skills in Science Presentation - Created by Adam Lawrence - Charlotte Country Day School

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“Humans over hardware.” This motto of the special forces emphasizes the importance of team members over technology/tools in determining mission success. This session will highlight how the same principle applies to learning and growth in science classrooms. While content knowledge is essential and educational technology/tools continue to evolve, “soft skills” such as communication, adaptability, and group problem-solving remain equally impactful on student understanding and engagement. Perfect for teachers looking to strengthen the connection of content with the social-emotional aspects of their learning environment, this session will have participants analyze the necessary “soft skills” of today’s dynamic learners, apply these concepts to their level of instruction/classroom, and leave equipped with ready-to-use activities and tools to intentionally develop a classroom culture where comprehension, application and teamwork thrive.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will provide educators with strategies and tools for student development of the vital “soft skills” needed in today’s classrooms. Participants will strengthen student engagement while also reinforcing the interpersonal and problem-solving skills needed to thrive beyond the classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Adam Lawrence

Inspiring Future Scientists: Women in STEM Biographies to Boost Middle School Engagement & Belonging

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Download your Free STEM Spark and Scientist Spotlight
This folder includes a five-minute bell ringer and a 10-minute mini lesson featuring two chemists: Dr. Maya, Ice Cream Scientist and Angella, Beauty Chemist. Available in editable .PPT and .PDF. From the award-winning Look Up Series by Aubre Andrus.

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Research shows that when students encounter diverse STEM role models, they are more likely to develop confidence, persistence, and a stronger sense of belonging. This session shows how short, high-interest biographies of women in STEM can spark curiosity while reinforcing NGSS practices and cross-curricular literacy. Participants will explore how to incorporate narrative nonfiction texts into science instruction to support practices such as obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information while connecting content to real-world contexts. Two flexible, plug-and-play routines will be modeled: Scientist of the Day (Warm-Up): a quick 3–5 minute slide-based routine with a reflection question, and Scientist Spotlight (Deeper Dive): a 10–15 minute strategy pairing a biography excerpt with a mini-inquiry or phenomena-based activity. Using The Look Up Series as an example text set, attendees will leave with adaptable activities, a slide template, and a QR bundle of mini-labs and prompts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with two plug-and-play routines, a slide template, and a QR code bundle of prompts and mini-labs that integrate women-in-STEM biographies with NGSS practices, which will assist in building student identity, resilience, and belonging in science.

SPEAKERS:
Aubre Andrus

Let’s Coffee & Chat! A Live Hang with Class CrunchLabs

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Grab your coffee and pull up a seat. This is your chance to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team and other educators who are building the future of science class. Ask questions, share wins, swap stories, and get real-time tips from the people designing the units and using them with students. Whether you are just getting started or deep into your first mission, this is a space for honest conversation, curiosity, and community. No slides. No pressure. Just real talk with your Class CrunchLabs crew.

TAKEAWAYS:
Bring your questions, feedback, and curiosity. This is your space to connect live with the Class CrunchLabs team, swap ideas with other educators, and get support from real humans.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Garelli, Arash Jamshidi, Tommy Clayton, Jesse Semeyn

Making Learning Local: Using Phenomenon-based Learning to Advance Environmental Science

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Presentation.pdf

Show Details

In Tennessee, more school districts are teaching environmental science early in high school, offering a clear opportunity to deepen student engagement in science by connecting curriculum to the local community. However, teacher professional learning often does not illustrate how to make these local connections. To strengthen environmental science courses, the Cumberland River Compact partners with school districts to provide curriculum-based professional learning that focuses on how to use local phenomena in the classroom. The Compact is a leader in environmental education in Tennessee and has trained 979 teachers in over half of Tennessee’s counties. In this presentation, you will learn about how our unique partnership model deepens student engagement, leads to student achievement, and broadens teacher professional learning. Presenters will share a preliminary evaluation, teacher work samples, and student work from the program.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to leverage community partnerships to localize high-quality instructional materials, deepening the relevance of environmental science curricula and increasing student engagement. Attendees will also learn practical tips to generate their own local phenomena for the classroom

SPEAKERS:
Catherine Price

Materials Matter: Sensemaking in Elementary Engineering Design

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building


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What sets engineering apart from typical science inquiry? The answer: materials! In engineering, students are provided opportunities to explore, manipulate, and challenge their scientific knowledge through their engagement with physical materials. This hands-on experience connects abstract scientific knowledge to real-world applications, making learning meaningful and tangible for young learners. This session presents research conducted with upper elementary students, revealing how encountering and overcoming material-driven obstacles can spark scientific sensemaking. This work aims to change the way we think about tensions and failures in the design process by reframing these moments as essential opportunities for sensemaking. When students engage with materials through engineering design, they are transforming their learning from simply knowing to understanding.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with insights into how materials play a role in bridging engineering design and scientific sensemaking to inform instruction and design of engineering instruction in the elementary classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Briana Trager

Meeting Students Where They Are At to Build Equitable and Productive Student Talk—from Community Building, to Academic Talk, to Making Sense of Data

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Microsoft Power Point Version of Materials
Slides used in presentation Microsoft version
Presentation Slide Deck
These are the slides used in the session with the links for the resources referenced.

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High-quality formative assessment hinges on hearing every student’s thinking, yet many science teachers struggle to generate consistent, purposeful talk. We present a continuum of discourse structures, refined through a decade of Patterns Physics implementation, that gradually releases responsibility from teacher to students while supplying real-time evidence of learning. The continuum moves through three tiers: (1) low-barrier, community-building prompts that normalize participation; (2) academic discourse scripts that connect and synthesize disciplinary big ideas; and (3) data discussion scripts that guide equitable, student-led sensemaking with experimental evidence. Data discussions follow a consistent cycle supported by nested levels of scaffolding, from teacher-modeled organizers to fully student-run conversations. The result is a classroom in which all students talk, teachers glean actionable insights, and learners strengthen their STEM identities

TAKEAWAYS:
This session offers practical tools to engage all learners—especially multilingual students—in meaningful talk about evidence, helping teachers support student voice and build a culture of collaborative sensemaking. This work was featured in the Nov/December issue of The Science Teacher.

SPEAKERS:
David Savage, Stephen Scannell

Metacognitive Reflection: Supporting Students Learning in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F


Show Details

Metacognitive reflection gives students time to think and evaluate their own thinking and learning strategies increasing their ownership of learning and academic growth. This session looks at research-based strategies, including studies focused specifically on science classrooms, which are easy to incorporate into daily teaching. As examples: How students respond to mistakes (WTIW – Why this is wrong?), considering how they reached an answer, putting new class activities in context (Why did we do this?) and improving scientific thinking skills with the ’I DREAM of A’ method which gives a framework for students to plan, monitor and evaluate their work. Come learn about the research, benefits and how to develop and support these skills in your science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn about metacognitive reflection, how it is helpful to students, as well as several easy techniques such as 'Why did we do this?' connecting activities to learning and WTIW - Why this is wrong? focusing on how mistakes can lead to better understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Alison Seymour

Navigating the Landscape of Understanding: Spatial Cognition for Sensemaking and Assessment

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E


Show Details

The presentation integrates spatial thinking as an instructional strategy using hands-on models and visualizations to help students understand concepts like protein folding and plate tectonics by visualizing them across different scales. By broadening assessment methods using real-world case studies, like tracing the spread of diseases via GIS data, to assess students' ability to mentally manipulate objects, identify patterns, and create their own spatial representations. This approach aligns with the NGSS practice of Developing and Using Models. The final activity leverages non-traditional examples, such as analyzing blueprints, playing chess, or using a GPS, to demonstrate the real-world application of spatial skills and promote the cognitive transfer of these abilities to science. This approach aims to deepen students' engagement and their ability to solve complex problems by connecting scientific concepts with a robust understanding of space and relationships.

TAKEAWAYS:
Spatial thinking is critical to science as it allows students to visualize, manipulate, and understand complex relationships between objects, systems, and phenomena. By developing this skill, learners move beyond memorization to grasp how different scientific concepts interact across various scales.

SPEAKERS:
Salvatore Garofalo, Stephen Farenga

Research Experience for Teachers: Get paid to work in a lab and develop curriculum!

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building


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We will share our experience in a Research Experience for Teachers program, where we were funded to work in university research labs and create a engineering design curriculum piece. We will also share the lesson we created, in which students experience how simple pendulum motion is used by scientists to model brain waves. Students build paint pendulums to create pendulum art connected to science! They learn about simple harmonic motion and how complicated real life pendulums can become when a simple pendulum could oscillate in multiple directions simultaneously. They leave class with a piece of art they created and a deeper understanding of harmonic motion.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn about Research Experience for Teachers opportunities and walk away with a ready-to-go STEAM lesson plan, combining artwork and STEM in a play-based experience on the phenomena of harmonic motion.

SPEAKERS:
Tanima Mukherjee, Faith Palombi

Science in Action: Small Groups, Big Discoveries

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 4


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This presentation focuses on using targeted science instruction to enhance three-dimensional learning in small-group classroom settings, while supporting differentiated instruction. Participants will explore practical strategies for implementing hands-on, collaborative activities that engage all students. Examples from classrooms will be shared, along with tips for establishing small-group norms, getting started with effective science instruction, and fostering meaningful student participation. Attendees will gain insights on how to structure activities that promote inquiry, exploration, and active learning, ensuring students can make sense of phenomena, apply science practices, and communicate their reasoning effectively through small group instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Takeaways include: Real-world examples, and practical steps to get started, gaining strategies and insights to implement hands-on, differentiated small-group science instruction effectively in their classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Alejandra Worozaken

Seeing Student Thinking: Tools for Assessment and Sensemaking in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 3


Show Details

Helping students make sense of the natural world is at the heart of science teaching. This session explores how thinking strategies make student reasoning visible and serve as powerful assessment tools. Participants will see examples from 7th and 8th-grade classrooms where students use prompts and data to explain Earth and chemical processes, including a local water quality study that connects chemistry, geography, and human impact on ecosystems. These strategies help students explain ideas clearly, test them with evidence, and revise their understanding as they connect scientific concepts to real-world systems. Teachers will see how notebooks, models, and discussion reveal growth in reasoning and provide authentic assessment data. They also support all learners by offering multiple ways to represent and share thinking. Teachers can use this evidence to assess both understanding and process as students engage in scientific sensemaking and deeper conceptual understanding.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how to use thinking strategies as assessment tools to make student reasoning visible, support all types of learners, and deepen understanding through authentic, evidence-based scientific sensemaking.

SPEAKERS:
Lara Kossiakoff

Student Success Across Modalities: A Comparative Analysis of Microbiology Lecture and Lab Formats

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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This 30-minute presentation will analyze and compare student performance data from a college microbiology course and lab taught in three distinct modalities over several years: fully online (lecture and lab), hybrid (online lecture and in-person lab), and traditional (in-person lecture and lab). The session will provide an overview of the course structures, present quantitative and qualitative findings, and discuss implications for future course delivery. Attendees will gain actionable insights into how different teaching formats impact student learning outcomes and engagement in science education.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of this session, participants will be able to: • Interpret comparative student performance data across different course modalities. • Identify advantages and limitations of online, hybrid, and traditional course formats. • Apply evidence-based strategies to enhance student learning in science education.

SPEAKERS:
Kimberly Jones

Teaching NGSS in a Non-NGSS State

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 155, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Materials

Show Details

I prepare future teachers in a state that has not adopted the Next Generation Science Standards, but neighboring states have adopted NGSS. In this session, I will discuss ways that I approach this dilemma to prepare students who are fluent in the three dimensions of NGSS yet have to navigate a different set of learning standards. This will be followed by a discussion with the audience with strategies and tips on how to prepare future science teachers to navigate a variety of learning standards in order to teach students effectively.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees of this session will walk away with ideas on how to prepare future science teachers who can be flexible in their teaching and can provide a quality education along the three dimensions of NGSS even when NGSS is not directly adopted.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Bindis

Three-Dimensional Assessment in Elementary Science: Formative Practices that Capture Student Thinking

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 C, North Building


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How can elementary teachers assess science learning in ways that go beyond recall? This session introduces practical, low-prep strategies to capture students’ thinking across the three NGSS dimensions—Science & Engineering Practices, Crosscutting Concepts, and Disciplinary Core Ideas. Participants will explore tools like science notebooks, quick formative probes, and discourse routines that reveal sensemaking. Leave with ready-to-use examples, adaptable rubrics, and protocols for engaging all students in meaningful three-dimensional assessment.

TAKEAWAYS:
By the end of the session, participants will: Understand the principles of three-dimensional assessment in elementary contexts. Have a toolkit of formative strategies to reveal and support student sensemaking. Leave with ready-to-use resources adaptable across K–5.

SPEAKERS:
Noelle Carter

Using Project Based Learning to Promote Students' Cognitive Growth and Transition to Independent Learner

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
LA Through Time Project Template
Use this link to make a copy of the blank project slide deck. The slide deck includes links resources and videos used during the project.

Show Details

Many middle school students exhibit one or more of the characteristics of dependent learners, which include reliance on the teacher and scaffolds, hesitance towards new tasks and difficulty making “real world” connections. Students may exhibit characteristics of dependent learners because they have not built the cognitive processes that enable them to do complex thinking and independent learning. Project based learning (PBL) can promote acquisition of knowledge and skills, cognitive growth and active participation in the learning process, which may facilitate students' cognitive growth and transition to independent learner. Results of a study on the impact of an Earth Sciences PBL entitled “LA Through Time” on cognitive growth and transition from dependent to independent learner in eighth-grade middle school science students will be presented.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how project based learning can be used to strengthen cognitive processes and transition of middle school students to independent learners.

SPEAKERS:
Renee JiJi

Using Slide Decks as Storybooks: Scaffolding Learning for Amazing Student Work

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Using Slide Decks as Storybooks

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Daily lessons become illustrated storybooks with a good slide deck! Slides that include a clear visual narrative and built in scaffolds will command student attention and support diverse learners. Simple animations and intentional use of color and images provide focus, demonstrate concepts, and model processes for all students, but especially for those students who are learning English or who struggle with paying attention. When consistent use of slide decks becomes a part of the classroom routine students know what to expect when they walk through the door and where to find missing work when they are absent. Students become part of the story when they use a good slide deck to organize their thoughts in a notebook that utilizes graphic note-taking methodologies. This presentation will demonstrate the steps involved in creating illustrated, storybook-like slide decks and will include freshmen student work samples from a wide array of abilities.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to turn your daily lessons into storybook-like slide decks to engage students of all abilities and capture their interest. Tips on how to create illustrated slide decks will be shared along with real examples of freshman student work.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Libke

What Happens When Learners Become Leaders? High School Students Teaching Science to Elementary Classrooms

Saturday, April 18 • 9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


Show Details

What happens when high school science students become the teachers? In this culminating project, juniors in Anatomy & Physiology, Environmental Science, and Advanced Chemistry collaborated to design and lead hands-on science lessons for 4th–6th graders at a local elementary school. Each group chose a topic from their course, ranging from the respiratory system to invisible ink to mining practices, and transformed it into an engaging, age-appropriate experience. Through this authentic opportunity, students deepened their understanding, built collaboration and communication skills, and shared the joy of discovery by inspiring curiosity in younger learners. This session highlights student-created lessons, planning tools, and reflections that fostered both rigorous learning and community connection. Participants will discuss how this model could be adapted for their own classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a framework and ready-to-use materials, including a timeline, lesson plans, tips, rubrics, surveys, and feedback forms, to guide high school students in designing and leading science lessons for younger learners.

SPEAKERS:
Randi Bakken

20 in 20 And Beyond!

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building


Show Details

20 exciting, 20-minute mini-experiments will increase student interest and engagement. The inquiry-based activities encourage hands-on learning that focuses on important content. Students can pose their own questions, design and perform their experiment, and share results. The activities can be used as a quick review demonstration or as a “launching pad” for further investigations. Many of the activities are perfect for phenomena-based learning. These inexpensive activities cover numerous areas of biology, and the activities have repeating themes to help students tie their developing knowledge together and to previous concepts and activities. Includes genetics, electrophoresis, photosynthesis and respiration, enzymes, macromolecules, human and plant physiology, water, plant and animal responses, evolution, mitosis, and protein synthesis. Incorporation of math, writing, and art helps students make more connections. Handout available electronically.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will get to do over 20 student friendly life science mini-experiments that boost student engagement and knowledge. By doing the activities in the session, attendees will develop the skill and confidence to share them with their students.

SPEAKERS:
Whitney Hagins

A New Way to Explore the Atom & Subatomic Particles: Exploring Sports Drinks & Electrolytes [Teaching Science through Food]

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 A, North Building


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How can we make concepts like atomic structure interesting to students? Explore a lesson on sports drinks that is rooted in sense making through data and investigations, but also emphasizes core chemistry concepts, avoids “phenomena-fatigue,” and relates to students’ everyday lives. In this session, participants will engage in a variety of sensemaking activities to explore “what makes electrolyte-based drinks unique” (which includes a mini-lab). Participants will then see how this can be used to drive investigations and questions about atomic structure and subatomic particles. They will engage in another hands-on activity that makes these highly conceptual topics more tangible and drives student learning. We will discuss ways to assess learning through activities that highlight science practices like models and data analysis. Different teachers who have facilitated this lesson across different classes will discuss how their students experienced the lesson and what they learned from

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will engage in two activities that center around making sense of electrolyte-based drinks. They will hear from different teachers about how these activities, as well as a larger series of food-based chemistry lessons, encourage curiosity and interest in chemistry while keeping rigor.

SPEAKERS:
April Thompson, Jacob Rice, David Meyer, Kate Strangfeld, Jacey Hart

Adventure Awaits: Gamifying Science with Engaging Side Quests

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building


Show Details

Are you tired of hearing I’m done? Add side quests as an extension to your science curriculum. Side quests can add a gamification element to your science classes that will extend the learning and deepen the creativity of your students no matter what grade you teach.

TAKEAWAYS:
Are you tired of hearing I’m done? Add side quests as an extension to your science curriculum. Side quests can add a gamification element to your science classes that will extend the learning and deepen the creativity of your students no matter what grade you teach.

SPEAKERS:
Michelle Simmons

Affordable Indoor School Gardening

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 2



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Affordable Indoor Gardening

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Planting a school garden is a goal for many classroom and science teachers. Gardening helps connect science with a variety of subjects, and students love eating what they have planted. Gardening connects to NGSS such as describing patterns of what plants need to survive, organization for matter and energy flow in organisms, crosscutting concepts such as patterns in the natural world, and how systems in the natural and designed world have parts that work together. But many schools are reluctant to begin a garden because of both space and financial restrictions. This class will show teachers how to begin planting indoors using upcycled and inexpensive materials, how to reuse containers as planters, how to make biodegradable seedling planters in seconds, and how to transform even a barren, windowless classroom into a paradise. Teachers will learn how to grow fresh treats like mint, basil, cherry tomatoes, as well as growing milkweed plants for monarch butterfly gardens.

TAKEAWAYS:
How to find resources to create an indoor paradise, even when you don't have windows!

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Kurson

Better Together: Exploring Body Systems Through Collaborative Simulation

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Better Together - Body Systems Presentation

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Discover a classroom-tested simulation that helps students visualize how the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive systems work together to support cellular function. This interactive, NGSS-aligned activity engages middle school learners in systems thinking and supports MS-LS1-3 by encouraging evidence-based explanations of how body systems interact. Aligned with the NSTA theme “Growing Together,” this session provides ready-to-use materials, differentiation strategies, and practical ideas to foster collaboration, critical thinking, and lifelong learning in science classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement a collaborative, NGSS-aligned simulation that helps students understand how the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive systems work together to support cells, reinforcing systems thinking and evidence-based reasoning aligned to MS-LS1-3.

SPEAKERS:
Matthew Woolley, Karre Nevarez

Big Wonder for Small Scientists: Building Early Science Foundations Through The Wonder of the Real World

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 161, North Building


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Little learners have big questions, and their curiosity is where science begins! In this lively, hands-on workshop, discover how to build strong science foundations from the very start through simple, doable phenomena-based learning. Together, we’ll explore how real-world phenomena spark wonder and support sensemaking. You’ll see how these experiences connect seamlessly from PreK/TK through grade 3 and beyond. With approachable, low-prep strategies teaching early science can be meaningful for students, doable for teachers, and fun for everyone. You’ll leave with ready-to-use lessons, playful routines, and planning tools that make it easy to bring big science to little learners. No extra prep or fancy materials required, just curiosity, wonder, and your students’ big questions!

TAKEAWAYS:
Phenomena-based science can start early and be both joyful and manageable. Teachers will leave with low-prep strategies and tools to spark curiosity, guide exploration, and build strong science foundations from PreK/TK through grade 3.

SPEAKERS:
Paddy Rich

Bumpy Roads!: Fun and creative use of kitchen pantry products on a STEM-PBL road project

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
PowerPoint presentation
STEM-PBL Project Details - Bumpy Road!

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Attendees will learn how this road pavement STEM-project-based learning unit will provide students with the opportunity to integrate the STEM disciplines. Attendees will learn how to scaffold student engagement by inviting civil engineers to connect real-world examples of good and bad roads in their community, have students simulate pavement compaction testing, and journaling and showcasing their projects. Students will evaluate the various road components, criteria and constraints and be able to design solutions to real-world engineering problems which are closely connected to the goals of NGSS HS-ETS1-3. This session will cover each step starting with the design brief, historical background, socio-economic importance, materials and resources, research, design, building prototype, testing, collecting and analyzing data, iterative redesign, and examples of how to differentiate such as a cost-benefit analysis option and accommodations such as providing access to Immersive Reader.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will explore ways to improve road conditions by substituting common kitchen materials to simulate the design and construction of road pavements.

SPEAKERS:
Andrew Kipp, John Montalvo

Clean Energy in the Classroom: Teaching Chemistry & Environmental Science Through Hydrogen Fuel Phenomena

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E


Show Details

Hydrogen is often called the “fuel of the future,” but what does that look like in today’s science classrooms? In this session, high school teachers share how they brought renewable hydrogen technology into chemistry and environmental science courses through a curriculum developed in collaboration with clean energy initiatives. Tested in classrooms, these lessons use real-world phenomena to deepen student understanding of energy, chemical reactions, and sustainability while sparking engagement with cutting-edge clean energy technologies. We will demonstrate how the curriculum was implemented across two disciplines, from stoichiometry and reaction energy profiles to evaluating human impacts on climate change. Attendees will leave with classroom-tested resources, instructional strategies, and assessments that support three-dimensional learning and can be readily adapted across multiple course contexts.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain access to classroom-ready resources that use hydrogen energy as a real-world context for teaching core chemistry and environmental science concepts.

SPEAKERS:
Cassie Herndon

Cleaning up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA GPGP 2026.pdf
Slideshow presentation from session

Show Details

Put on your Student Cap! Learn about real life work happening to clean up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Then, design and build a device that will move and collect trash to be carried out of the ocean. After playing student, discuss how using real world examples when it comes to engineering a design solution. Including how to use current environmental threats to inspire the Engineering Design Process and create a solution to a real world problem. Also discuss the extension of using programing and technology in addition to the design.

TAKEAWAYS:
A lesson plan geared towards middle school students about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and how scientists are cleaning the oceans. Participants will also have confidence to take an idea and turn it into an Engineering Design Lesson.

SPEAKERS:
Amanda Petty

Cosmic Clutter: The Mission to Clean Up Space Debris

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northeast


Show Details

In this workshop, we will explore free lessons and activities created by Blue Origin's non-profit Club for the Future. Through a series of hands on activities, attendees will practice how to engage students in the lessons. By the end of the session, attendees will walk away with various free lessons, activities, and resources to explore careers in space!

TAKEAWAYS:
Through hands-on practice during the workshop, attendees will gain practical skills in facilitating engaging and interactive STEAM activities, designed to spark student interest in space-related careers.

SPEAKERS:
Kristen Yip

Creating equitable spaces while teaching traditional science content - a framework for culturally responsive, content-based classrooms.

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


Show Details

In this session, we will explore how to make science spaces culturally inclusive and welcoming to underrepresented individuals, even when engaging in traditional science content. We will share how this framework is showcased at Map Academy, an alternative high school, where a supportive and inclusive school community is designed to shift students’ perceptions of learning and success through a radical rethinking of traditional school systems. Despite the progress we have made in science thanks to the framework of culturally responsive pedagogy; a more nuanced understanding of the scientific process as being inherently a tool of the colonizer; and #blacklivesmatter and #metoo bringing intersectional feminism into the mainstream, women and minorities continue to be underrepresented in science spaces. Utilizing the framework grounded on the 3C’s for equitable learning, we aim to explore the ways in which we can be radical science teachers while still teaching traditional science content!

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session, we will explore ways in which to make science spaces more culturally inclusive and welcoming to underrepresented individuals, even when engaging in traditional science content.

SPEAKERS:
Carolina Artacho Guerra

Developing Academic Language in the Science Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 B, North Building


Show Details

Students often struggle to develop academic vocabulary in science. This session will focus on getting students to speak, listen, read and write using academic language in science. While academic vocabulary should be developed in all phases of the 5E model, we will focus on the Explain phase where participants will engage in a Talk Read Talk Write using vocabulary-focused structured visuals, the QSSSA strategy for structured conversations, and get ideas of how to differentiate reading passages for Emergent Bilingual students to improve Scientific Literacy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to incorporate vocabulary-focused structured conversations, reading and writing to improve Scientific Literacy.

SPEAKERS:
Julie Gibson

Engaging students with science vocabulary in the K-2 classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
6_ Alphabet Book Template.pdf
Dos and Donts of Vocabulary Instruction.docx
I have who has- template.docx
Instructions for the vocabulary direct teach.doc
science_root_words.pdf
Whats the connection instructions.doc
Whats the Connection Pictures.docx

Show Details

Professional development empowers primary grade teachers to intentionally and effectively embed vocabulary instruction into science lessons by increasing their understanding of a variety methods of vocabulary instruction, expanding their instructional toolkit, improving lesson planning, and building confidence. This leads to deeper science learning, improved language development, and greater academic success for all students. Resources will be available to all participants. In this session participants will actively engage with evidence-based methods of engaging all primary students with science vocabulary.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this session participants will learn multiple ways to reinforce vocabulary through science notebooks, drawings, investigations, and discussions.

SPEAKERS:
Annette Venegas

From Learning About to Figuring Out: Evaluating Secondary Lessons Using the NSTA Sensemaking Tool

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 A



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Collection

Show Details

The NSTA Sensemaking Tool can help educators be critical consumers of instructional materials and create/revise lessons that reflect the shifts required by new standards (sensemaking). Gain experience using the tool and facilitating criteria-based consensus conversations with your colleagues!

TAKEAWAYS:
Use the NSTA Sensemaking Tool to evaluate instructional materials (lessons) and provide feedback.

SPEAKERS:
Patrice Scinta, Emily Mathews

Frauds, Forgeries, and Hucksters: Expanding the Forensics Lesson Toolkit

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 A, North Building


Show Details

Forensics is more than just murder! This session introduces forensics teachers to using scams, frauds, forgeries, and social media investigations as interdisciplinary tools for teaching forensic science. Participants won’t just analyze evidence—they’ll explore the behavioral science of deception, learning what drives fraudsters to manipulate trust, exploit systems, and build false identities. Through case studies from art forgeries to crypto scams, teachers will uncover patterns of deception while engaging in hands-on activities blending document analysis, digital investigation, psychological profiling, and media literacy. During the session, teachers will create their own playful, simulated scam to step into a fraudster’s mindset—then use that experience to design a classroom activity that empowers students to recognize, analyze, and resist misinformation and fraud in the real world.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will leave with a modern, hands-on approach to teaching forensic science through today’s scams, forgeries, and social media deception, plus a classroom-ready activity that builds critical thinking, media literacy, and fraud detection skills.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Hirsch

From Primary Sources to Discovery: Promoting Critical Thinking in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 A, North Building


Show Details

Explore strategies for using primary sources in science education to inspire student discovery. Learn how to leverage original scientific materials to foster critical thinking, encourage inquiry and discussion, and deepen understanding of the historical development of scientific ideas.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore teaching strategies that demonstrate how analyzing primary sources supports critical thinking and reinforces the scientific practices of observation, hypothesis formation, and data analysis.

SPEAKERS:
Dat Le

From Principles to Practice: Integrating Science and Literacy to Enhance Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 201 D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Session Slides and Example Unit Texts

Show Details

How do literacy and science practices strengthen one another and what can that look like in elementary classrooms? In this session, participants will learn about key research-based principles for integrating literacy and science in elementary classrooms. We will also engage with K-5 materials from the OpenSciEd Elementary curriculum as a model for how these principles can be enacted in classrooms. This will include a review of student-facing materials, including a variety of grade-level science texts, to showcase how integrating literacy practices into science lessons enhances science and literacy learning. We will also examine teacher-facing materials and other curricular resources to understand how these tools help make the connections between science and ELA explicit. Finally, the presentation will highlight how teachers can apply these key principles into their classrooms to support young children’s sensemaking and ELA development.

TAKEAWAYS:
Integrating literacy practices within elementary science strengthens learning in both science and ELA. Participants will learn key research-based principles for integrating literacy into science time to support students’ sensemaking in science, while also building their ELA skills.

SPEAKERS:
Gail Housman, Amanda Dahl

Fruit Loops for Lewis Structures for Ionic Bonding

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
CreatingLewisStructionsIonicCompounds.pptx
ElementCards_IonicBonding.docx
Fruit Loop for Lewis Structures for Ionic Compounds Presentation

Show Details

How would you like to use Fruit Loops to show ionic bonding and create Lewis Structures for Binary Ionic Compounds? This hands-on activity shows attendees how to utilize Fruit Loops to show how ionic bonds are formed between metals and nonmetals while creating Lewis Structures for ionic compounds.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to make the Fruit Loops for Lewis Structures for Ionic Bonding activity and bring the resource to their high school chemistry and physical science classes at their schools.

SPEAKERS:
Nichole DePaul

Global Safari: Using Imagination to Study Earth's Creatures

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 9


Show Details

Explore the world on a Global Safari, as you discover new ways to bring imagination into your classroom. This session is geared towards kindergarten-second grade. It will have you moving and using your imagination as you travel the world on a safari, discovering ways to teach your students about animals that reside on this beautiful planet. You will leave the session with the confidence to turn your students into global citizens and receive resources you can immediately start integrating into your teaching. It is never too early to start teaching children about the world and the creatures in it. After all, the sooner children start learning about them, the longer they can care for them.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to use imaginative “travel” experiences to engage students in scientific inquiry, helping kids explore global ecosystems, develop curiosity about animals, and make meaningful connections to science concepts in a fun, memorable way.

SPEAKERS:
Trisha DePasquale

Good for All: Strategies for Inclusive STEM Teaching and Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A


Show Details

STEM is for everyone, so how can we help every student achieve STEM literacy? In this session, you will dismantle STEM hierarchies using place-based science and Universal Design for Learning. We’ll examine positionality, analyze a "low floor/high ceiling" lesson, share student work, and model best practices that support all students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a toolkit of good-for-all practices and place-based strategies to make STEM accessible. You will gain a framework for reflecting on how you make instructional choices and practical methods to ensure your choices help every student succeed in rigorous inquiry.

SPEAKERS:
Whitney Aragaki, Christina Romero

Having Students Explore without Labs (Or Have Them Explore Labs Better!) Using Structured Visuals

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building


Show Details

Implementing hands-on, student-centered models of instruction such as the 5E through labs and other activities can be challenging in practice because of unavailability of time and materials. Additionally, it is a challenge to help students understand the science phenomena behind each experience, and not just the experience itself. Structured visuals bridge that gap: they are easy to make or find, and they intuitively engage students in deep, rich thinking and academic conversation. Additionally, they help level the playing field by providing all of the needed background information for students to access critical thinking opportunities about science concepts. Participants in this session will experience exploration of science phenomena from students’ perspective by engaging in peer-to-peer academic conversations using structured visuals. Participants will also be shown how to create structured visuals and structured visual resources such as The Visual Non-Glossary.

TAKEAWAYS:
Structured visuals are easy to prepare and implement, and they can either replace labs or dramatically enhance them. Structured visuals get students talking and making inferences and connections. This session shows how to find, make, and use them.

SPEAKERS:
Stephen Fleenor

How do Plants Acquire Nutrients? An Exploration of Diffusion, Plant Vascular Systems, and Soils

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 C, North Building


Show Details

In this interactive workshop, teachers will engage in a hands-on, standards-aligned 5E lesson, on plant biology and soil science. Participants will conduct investigations to explore key concepts such as diffusion, active transport, and the vascular system of plants while investigating the processes that allow plants to absorb nutrients and water from the soil. Participants do close examination of seedling roots through hand lenses, model diffusion using food dye to simulate how roots absorb water and nutrients, explore soil horizons and the processes behind soil formation. To conclude, participants will investigate the historical impact of the Great Dust Bowl, learning how the disruption of topsoil layers led to changes in agricultural practices. This workshop provides teachers with the tools to foster a deeper understanding of plant and soil science, equipping them to enhance their students' learning through inquiry-based investigations.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will participate in a hands-on lesson to explore the roles of diffusion and active transport in moving nutrients from the soil to the plant.

SPEAKERS:
Jennifer Hofeld

Let's Do This! How To Teach Hands-On Classroom Challenges Designed by the CrunchLabs Toy Engineers

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 B


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Get ready to channel your inner builder. In this session, you will learn how to teach the hands-on classroom challenges created by the CrunchLabs toy engineers, the same crew behind some of Mark Rober’s most memorable builds. These challenges are more than just fun. They power deeper science understanding and give students the chance to design, test, and think like engineers. We will walk through how to launch a challenge, organize your space, support student testing, and help learners reflect on what they discovered. You will leave with practical strategies to keep the mess under control, the ideas flowing, and the energy high.

TAKEAWAYS:
Get practical strategies for setting up and running CrunchLabs classroom challenges. These hands-on experiences build student confidence, creativity, and sensemaking skills.

SPEAKERS:
Arash Jamshidi

Model Chemistry: Build Glucose Molecules

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building


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Models are excellent tools assisting students’ understanding of chemical reactions. Models enable students to visualize molecular structure and chemical bonding. Students build 3-D structures of glucose using two modeling systems. Models are used to develop questions, predictions, and explanations. Remember, models are representations, not replications. Students explain the photosynthetic reaction in terms of Conservation of Mass and Conservation of Energy. Photosynthesis is not just a chemical equation; it is a physiological process whereby light energy is transformed and stored as chemical energy. LEGOTM bricks and/or MolymodTM atom representations of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen are used to build water and carbon dioxide. Students then build glucose. Oxygen gas is emitted. Students will understand the 3-D structure of the five-carbon, one-oxygen ring in the glucose molecule and discuss how the ring structure affects the orientation of the OH- and H+ groups on the glucose ring.

TAKEAWAYS:
Models of atoms create small molecules, build glucose, and assist students’ understanding of photosynthesis. These models are used to explain chemical bonding and molecular function. Science misconceptions are addressed. Students misconstrue the source of the oxygen gas produced from the reaction.

SPEAKERS:
Suzanne Cunningham

Mutation Mayhem: Modeling Natural Selection with Probability

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F


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How do chance events shape evolution? In this interactive simulation, participants will explore natural selection and genetic drift through a probability-based activity. Using coin toss simulations and simple scientific calculator data analysis tools, students model trait survival across generations while adjusting for environmental change. Participants will graph trait frequencies, make predictions, and interpret how chance and selective pressures influence populations over time. A shared digital whiteboard supports collaborative thinking and real-time data visualization.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will gain a ready-to-use simulation that uses probability and data analysis to help students model how natural selection and chance influence trait survival over generations.

SPEAKERS:
Mike Szydlowski

Order Up a Helping of Forensics, With a Side of Maggots!

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 B, North Building


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This session isn't a "whodunit", it's a "who is it". A body is found and it's up to our attendees to figure out the identity. True STEM at it's finest! Thanks to the popularity of crime-based TV shows and movies, public interest in forensics has never been greater. Not so coincidentally, the number of Forensic Science course offerings in U.S. high schools continues to mushroom. Most of what is studied in a typical Forensics class has to take the form of hypothetical situations that arise from studying famous crime scenes from the past. In this conference session, however, participants will turn into analyzers of evidence from crime scene simulations that are played on handheld technology. Participants will be charged with determining time-of-death in order to find the identity of a victim who was found dead in a remote location. The activity has a “whodunit” flavor to them and requires the participants to use crime scene evidence to help authorities solve crimes.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will make use of forensics strategies to piece together a case involving the identity of a missing person.

SPEAKERS:
Jeffrey Lukens

Physics is Elementary

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 B, North Building


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With the adaptation of the NGSS by many state or states using the NGSS for their own standards, elementary teachers are now expected to teach physics and physical science concepts. For many elementary teachers this is a concern as their undergraduate training may have had little to no formal preparation with basic physics concepts. This workshop will allow attendees the opportunity to increase their content understanding through conceptually sound highly engaging learning cycles requiring minimal equipment and preparation.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will receive multiple 5 elearning cycles that are easily adapted to an elementary science class addressing physical science topics.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck, Jan Mader

Rural Secondary Educators’ Perceptions About Integrating Music into Physical Science Courses

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Dissertation Study Hour Presentation_1
Sound Wave Project
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 1
Vietnam War Song Soundwave Project_Student Presentation 2

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Developing a future-focus for science education with emphasis of music and arts. Bridging out for cross-curriculum among various disciplines, however, focus upon STEM education. Utilizing the ODE State Science Standards, along with state standards from various content, as well as the connections to the Next Generation Science Standards. My proposal is for the audience of 6-12 general science educators. Educators from outside of the 6-12 parameter are always welcome to attend the proposed session. The information provided for the proposed session presentation is to help all STEM educators with the integration of music and arts into the STEM education and curriculum (STEAM). Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to achieve the talented and gifted students who may not be advanced in science, but advanced in arts and music.

TAKEAWAYS:
Empower and equip educators thinking outside of the bun to utilize music with the STEM curricula. There are digital programs the educators can utilize without costs to improve the connections of arts and music with STEM. Teachers will learn how to improve their critical thinking to STEAM TAG kids.

SPEAKERS:
John Davis III

Science Education Doesn't Have to be a 'Flat Circle'

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Science Education Doesn't Have to be a 'Flat Circle' - FULL.pptx
Most of the visuals are "stolen" so don't "quote" me on them. I am happy to provide more details related to their origin/source.

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This presentation will take participants on a journey through the evolution of science education, revisiting past practices that shaped how students engaged with scientific ideas and skills. From content-heavy memorization to activity-driven lab work, each era revealed both strengths and limitations, paving the way for decades of reform that ultimately converged in the NGSS Framework. Anchored in sensemaking built on phenomena, this session will connect history to present practice, affirming that reinventing the wheel is not necessary for best practice, rather defining what the "wheel" is today. Participants will explore how lessons from the past can refine future instruction, with particular attention to strategies for lesson and assessment design that integrate sensemaking. Classroom examples, including student work, video, and outcomes, will illustrate the impact of these strategies on engagement, accessibility, and meaningful learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore the evolution of science instruction, from memorization to inquiry, to see how past practices shape today’s best approaches. This session affirms current methods, drawing on history to refine 3D teaching through group interaction and individual application.

SPEAKERS:
Matthew Bulman

SEL in the Science Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1PxFd9lzvnNqyWc-pQSJnEvMxc8ByvsPxJxh4uZUJHHQ/edit?usp=sharing

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Most science teachers are required to include SEL practices in their classroom without training. This session will give teachers SEL experiences and strategies that can practically be applied in the science classroom. This includes general practices as well as those specific to science classes that connect to standards.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will give teachers SEL experiences and strategies that can practically be applied in the science classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Nadene Klein

Sensemaking through project based problem solving in high school physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building


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Learn how to turn real-world problems into powerful science phenomena that drive sensemaking and engineering design. In this interactive session led by UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering, participants will experience the Problem Solving Framework - a structured approach that helps students define problems, apply science ideas, and design effective solutions. Participants will engage in a physics learning segment that teaches them an industry-proven problem solving strategy that they will combine with their science knowledge to collaboratively identify and solve a real-world problem. Through this learning segment participants will learn how the Framework supports scientific sensemaking and integrates engineering principles into any science course.

TAKEAWAYS:
Leave equipped to integrate real-world problem solving into your science teaching using UC San Diego’s Problem Solving Framework. You will also learn how to access UC San Diego's Problem Solve Like An Expert library of pre-written problem solving and science learning segments.

SPEAKERS:
Alec Barron

Storytelling, Science, and Reciprocity: Integrating Indigenous Knowledge in STEM Classrooms - NGSS Aligned

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1rS8QaDA2Kw2vM5XOx00VwQR-mo9V7Px4?usp=sharing
Tools to use with the book Braiding Sweetgrass to include lab science, social studies and ELA (Middle/High school)

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This interactive STEM workshop integrates GLAD strategies and Place-Based Learning to explore the role of Indigenous knowledge and storytelling in science education. Designed for educators familiar with Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, the session offers tools for integrating themes like reciprocity into classrooms and labs. Participants will engage in observation charts, a Cognitive Content Dictionary, and a read-aloud of “Windigo Footprints,” followed by text marking and discussion. We’ll connect these strategies to NGSS and Since Time Immemorial-aligned classroom and lab activities that bridge Indigenous and scientific ways of knowing. Participants will co-design culturally sustaining, locally grounded science lessons and review an adaptable scope and sequence.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will learn how to use GLAD strategies and Place-Based Learning to integrate themes from Braiding Sweetgrass—especially reciprocity—into science classrooms and labs through observation, vocabulary, storytelling, and inquiry.

SPEAKERS:
Christie Ryba

The Amazing Race: Air Quality, Culture & Claim-Evidence-Reasoning

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 1



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Amazing Race: Air Quality

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Turn your classroom into an international adventure! In this NGSS-driven project, students “race” around the world investigating global air quality, comparing AQI data, making CER claims, and exploring cultural connections. From Beijing to Bogotá, students develop science literacy and empathy through engaging tasks that incorporate maps, multimedia, and real-world environmental data.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will receive a global CER lesson framework that integrates air quality science with geography and culture.

SPEAKERS:
Ricardo Padilla

The NSTA Atlas of the Three Dimensions

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 202 A


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The Atlas is a collection of 62 maps of the practices, core ideas, crosscutting concepts, and performance expectations in NGSS and other Framework-based standards. The maps show how goals in science are meant to build upon each other and relate to each other over a student’s K-12 education.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to read the maps and use other tools in the Atlas to understand and interpret standards and plan instructional sequences as part of their work in curriculum, instruction, and assessment.

SPEAKERS:
Ted Willard

Uncovering the Unknown: Exploring the Nature of Science with a Cube Mystery Challenge

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building


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Science is more than facts and formulas—it’s collaboration, curiosity, creativity, and community. In this interactive workshop, participants will experience how something as simple as a dice challenge can capture the open-ended, dynamic, and collaborative nature of scientific work. Step into the role of a scientist, explore how scientific practices emerge through play, and discover strategies you can bring back to your classroom to help students live science, not just learn about it.

TAKEAWAYS:
Science is a shared journey of collaboration, communication, and evidence-based exploration driven by curiosity. Along the way, we may not always find definitive answers—but the process of questioning, investigating, and learning together is what makes science meaningful.

SPEAKERS:
Seung Yeon Lee

Understanding the Underlying Science of Over-the-Counter DNA Health Reports

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
understanding your dna health report_handout_bergheimer.pdf

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How can you apply the discoveries and lessons of the Human Genome Project to your classroom? Learn how to read sample over-the-counter DNA health reports. Learn how to analyze the magnitude, position, and frequency of traits, carrier status, and tendency toward diseases. Learn the nuance between “tendency toward” a disease or condition and “diagnosis of.” Find out what the Human Genome Project discovered about specific genetically linked traits and diseases. Analyze what the tests can tell you and what can they not tell you. Take worksheets and sample results back to your classroom to bring this topic to life.

TAKEAWAYS:
Explore the Human Genome Project through a lens of DNA health reports. Take worksheets and sample results back to your classroom to bring this topic to life.

SPEAKERS:
Kelli Bergheimer

Using Bad Data Analysis to Teach Data Analysis

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building


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Building data skills in today’s learners can often feel very dry, but it’s arguably the most essential skill to succeed in the future workforce. And in a time where so many adults use data poorly to prove a point, why not use these “What not to do” stories to help teach these skills and build their digital literacy at the same time! In this session, we’ll describe multiple data misuses such as Cherry-Picking, Correlation vs Causation, and Sampling Bias to help learners see and interpret data through a more sophisticated lens. While highlighting the type of error, students also break down fundamental components of graphic organizers and how they should be decoded. Pulling from relevant and familiar examples of how data is misused in society to make arguments allows for a natural bridge to your 6 - 12 science classroom and builds confidence in analyzing the data you provide them!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will be provided with multiple student-friendly examples of how data misuses and biases lead to argument fallacies that span the societal spectrum. They will also see the learning opportunities found within each example and how they can be implemented immediately in any 6-12 classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Ramy Mahmoud

Using NASA HEAT in the Physics Classroom

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
HEAT Resources
Here is the main page with resources and webinar information.

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The Heliophysics Education Ambassador Team (HEAT) through NASA and AAPT have created classroom resources. These research-based instructional materials for astrophysics taught in the context of introductory and upper division physics and astronomy courses help make real world connections for your students. Come and try out a few lessons to infuse some real life space data from NASA into your physics lessons.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to access HEAT's research-based materials and use them in their physics classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Erin Bontempo

Wee Greens: An Interdisciplinary Gardening Unit for Early Childhood

Saturday, April 18 • 10:20 AM - 11:20 AM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Wee Greens Slides

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This interactive workshop introduces Wee Greens, an interdisciplinary gardening unit designed to cultivate science literacy and curiosity in early childhood classrooms. Originally developed for kindergarten, the unit is adaptable across diverse learning environments, ensuring access for all students. Using recycled materials to grow and harvest microgreens, children engage in authentic gardening that integrates science with literacy, math, art, social studies, and engineering. Participants will experience the unit as their students would—planting, engineering, harvesting, and reflecting—while also exploring strategies to foster a lifelong appreciation for science. By engaging in this hands-on model, educators will build community, gain practical tools for classroom implementation, and advance their own professional learning in support of NSTA’s mission to transform science education for all.

TAKEAWAYS:
Step into your students’ shoes with Wee Greens, a hands-on early childhood gardening unit that blends STEM, literacy, and art. Leave with strategies to spark curiosity, promote sensemaking, and support science learning for all young learners.

SPEAKERS:
Peter Rillero, Kim Rillero, Kate Hoffner

A Slow Approach to Modifying Curricula for Phenomena Based Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation Slides

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This session explores a practical, stepwise approach to implementing phenomena-based learning in existing science curriculum. Participants will see how small modifications—real-world context in labs, storytelling in direct instruction, and adjusted assessments—can gradually evolve into full phenomena-based modules. The presenters will share a three-step framework, examples from their classroom, and strategies for incorporating student feedback to guide the development of anchoring phenomena. Attendees will engage in discussions and hands-on planning exercises to identify immediate, realistic ways to integrate phenomena-based learning into their own teaching, demonstrating that meaningful curriculum change can start small and grow over time.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to gradually transform existing science curriculum into phenomena-based learning, using small, practical steps that build teacher confidence, engage students with real-world contexts, and make meaningful curriculum changes achievable over time.

SPEAKERS:
Ashlynn Hall, Jeffrey Lampert

Are We There yet?: Exploring Mapping and Orienteering with Young Children

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 A, North Building


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From treasure maps to migration flyways, mapping opens a whole world for children. Imaginations take flight when we create and read maps, all while building skills in science, technology, engineer and math. During our time, we'll identify curriculum topics that can be enhanced through the use of mapping, such as following animal tracks and learning how our food gets from the farm to our table. Participants in this workshop will learn basic orienteering skills and will leave with a list of resources they can use to teach map literacy in their classrooms.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn basic orienteering skills and techniques for teaching map reading skills to young children. Teachers will leave with resources they can use in their own classrooms and ideas for how to include mapping in their existing curriculum.

SPEAKERS:
Rina Zampieron

Assessing Student Knowledge & Thinking: Looking through Chemistry

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTAmolStoich2026.pptx

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In this session, we’ll dive into both formative and summative strategies that get students thinking out loud—whiteboarding, quick checks, CERs (Claim-Evidence-Reasoning), lab assessments, and project-based tasks tied to Science and Engineering Practices. But we won’t stop at theory—you’ll actually chew gum to model counting molecules and build a “mini airbag” with ziplock bags, Alka-Seltzer, and vinegar. Along the way, you’ll pick up ready-to-use activities, creative whiteboarding questions, practice problems, and quick digital reads to keep students engaged and make their thinking visible. Come ready to think like your students—and leave with strategies that will pop, fizz, and stick in your classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Make student thinking visible with engaging formative and summative strategies—whiteboarding, CERs, labs, and projects. Experience hands-on demos like gum molecule models and a mini airbag while leaving with ready-to-use activities, questions, and tools to spark curiosity.

SPEAKERS:
Kendia Herrington

Authentic TK-2 Science: From "To-Do" to "Ta-Da!"

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Presentation slides

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Primary teachers, we see you! The struggle is real, the to-do list is long, and finding time for science can feel like an impossible task. But meaningful science instruction doesn’t have to feel impossible. In this hands-on workshop, we'll bust the myth that science instruction must be a scripted, literacy lesson to fit into your schedule. We'll explore simple, powerful strategies that bring the Science and Engineering Practices to life without adding to your already full plate. Through a model lesson, you'll discover how to ignite your students' natural curiosity and empower them to think and act like scientists and engineers. You'll leave with access to a resource that transforms science from a "to-do" to a "ta-da!" with minimal prep. Say goodbye to the textbook and hello to a classroom buzzing with authentic discovery and wonder!

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will leave with access to a resource that models simple ways to integrate the Science and Engineering Practices into instruction. They'll learn how to shift from reading about science to hands-on, inquiry-based learning that fuels student curiosity and builds foundational science skills.

SPEAKERS:
Lesley Gates

Confidence Matters - Cultivating Courageous, Curious Learners in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 155, North Building


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Are your students hesitant to take risks in science? Do they feel like science is just “not for them”? In this workshop, we will explore practical strategies to boost student confidence, spark curiosity, normalize mistakes, and engage all learners—helping every student unleash their inner scientist.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will explore strategies and hands-on activities to help students become curious, resilient science learners and collaborate on ways to adapt them for their own classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Yishan Lee

Core Practices that Center Justice in Ambitious Teaching

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 210 C



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
S12: Core Practices that Center Justice in Ambitious Teaching

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Teachers developed the Justice-Centered Ambitious Science Teaching framework and practices as part of professional learning communities to be responsive to students' cultures and communities, build upon expansive forms of student meaning-making, and committed to disrupting injustice in society.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about teaching practices aimed at building a welcoming, joyful, and critical community that is meaningful for youth and centers justice, elicits local stories, nurtures revisions of scientific thinking with diverse and local expertise, and uses science to advocate for justice.

SPEAKERS:
April Luehmann, Samantha Stickley

Creating Video Games to Enhance Conceptual Understanding in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom E



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
CellModel2025.png
https://InteractiveChemistry.org
Website offering many free science education games
Video Games for Science (slide show)

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This presentation shows how teachers at Laguna Beach High School have been using a professional video game development engine (Unity) to create differentiated learning activities that engage students in fun, rewarding explorations of complex concepts. The presentation will focus on Chemistry games designed by teacher Steve Sogo and Biology games designed by teacher Alonda Hartford. Teachers of other subjects are welcome to attend, as the Unity templates provided will enable teachers to make games for any subject. The games shown in this presentation are freely available at the website InteractiveChemistry.org, and Unity itself can be used free of charge by teachers. Participants will leave with a number of innovative teaching tools to add to their classrooms, and motivated teachers can learn how to begin creating their own games with Unity.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be introduced to teacher-designed video games that engage students in fun, powerful learning activities. The presentation will provide teachers with free web-based games as well as customizable templates that enable teachers to create their own games.

SPEAKERS:
Steven Sogo

Discovery Made Doable: Phenomena-Based Science

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 A, North Building


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Discover how phenomena-based science can be simple, powerful, and doable in your classroom. In this hands-on, interactive workshop, you’ll step into phenomena-based lessons first as a curious student and then as an empowered teacher. Together, we’ll explore practical strategies, dive into the pedagogy behind inquiry-driven instruction, and unpack the 5E model to make science both meaningful for students and manageable for teachers. You’ll leave with ready-to-use tools, planning supports, and plenty of fresh ideas to spark curiosity, ignite discovery, and bring science to life in your PreK-5 classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Phenomena-based science can be both inspiring and practical. Teachers will leave with strategies, tools, and confidence to spark curiosity, guide discovery, and create meaningful learning experiences that are manageable and engaging for every student.

SPEAKERS:
Paddy Rich

DNA Matchmaking: How Shared Segments Reveal Family Connections

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Classroom discussion notes
DNA Matchmaking Companion Sheet NSTA2026.pdf

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How do consumer DNA tests identify genetic relatives? This session unpacks the science behind “DNA matchmaking,” showing how shared DNA segments can reveal family relationships across generations. Participants will explore the concepts of identity by descent (IBD), centimorgans, recombination, and inheritance probabilities, and see how testing companies use these principles to estimate relatedness. Along the way, we’ll connect abstract genetic concepts—like recombination and chromosome shuffling—to engaging, real-world examples of how scientists (and students) can track family trees through DNA. Teachers will leave with classroom-ready strategies for explaining why siblings share different percentages of DNA, why second cousins can be more alike than first cousins once removed, and how genetic evidence can be both precise and probabilistic.

TAKEAWAYS:
Gain tools to teach genetics and probability through real-world examples of how shared DNA segments reveal family relationships.

SPEAKERS:
Diahan Southard

Dollar & Sense: Smart Chemistry Labs That Stick Without Breaking the Budget

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA Dollars and Sense.pdf

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Engage your students in chemistry without breaking the budget! This hands-on workshop will show educators how to create fun, standards-aligned demos and labs using everyday materials from discount/dollar stores. Participants will explore activities featuring items like Twizzlers, candies, and Whack-a-Pack balloons—each linked to NGSS Performance Expectations, Science and Engineering Practices, Disciplinary Core Ideas, and Crosscutting Concepts. Walk away with ready-to-use, low-cost lesson ideas that make abstract concepts like half-life, stoichiometry, gas laws, and chemical reactions exciting, accessible, and unforgettable.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with creative, low-cost chemistry activities using discount store materials that align with NGSS and make complex concepts like half-life, stoichiometry, and gas laws engaging and easy to understand.

SPEAKERS:
Marlene Gutierrez

Dynamic CERs: Scaffolded Support for Evidence-Based Explanations Using Templates

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Dynamic CERC Resources 2026

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Arguing from Evidence and Constructing Explanations are essential tasks in the NGSS Science and Engineering Practices. My experience in a rural school district, where about 80% of students are ELL and socioeconomically disadvantaged, has led to the development of templates that support equitable teaching. These templates guide student sensemaking and evidence-based explanations. In this session, participants will explore how Claim-Evidence-Reasoning templates can enhance learning in science. Examples that illustrate how students use these templates to build evidence-based arguments for scientific phenomena and laboratory data will be shared. Participants will engage hands-on with sample data from a physics investigation to collaboratively construct evidence-based explanations using a sample template. They will learn to adapt templates for various tasks and develop a scoring rubric for these activities. This workshop aims to empower educators to enhance student sensemaking effectively.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience how Claim-Evidence-Reasoning templates can enhance student sensemaking in science. Gain hands-on experience using data to construct evidence-based explanations from several lab examples. Learn how to adapt CER templates for a variety of assessment tasks that can be used in your next unit.

SPEAKERS:
Aldo Chavira, Loretta Anders

Engaging Students in 3D Tasks That Motivate All Students to Learn Science and Engage Parents

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 10



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
RVCC Science Education Institute Resource Page

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Participants will make sense of a phenomenon by engaging in 3D tasks that apply the Principles of Learning (How People Learn, 1999) and recommendations from the Framework (NRC, 2012). They will be given NGSS Core Ideas to use as they develop system models and construct explanations of this phenomenon. We will share examples of students' work to illustrate how this and similar 3D investigations were used in middle school classrooms and how they motivate all students to learn science. We will share examples of worksheets to support students in using and applying Core Ideas to phenomena, student self-assessment sheets, and rubrics. Participants will have open access to these tools, which can be used with any investigation, and will leave with an understanding of how to use them effectively in their own classrooms. We will also share examples of how this was communicated to parents so they can provide appropriate support at home.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn how to structure 3D investigations with the Principles of Learning in mind. They have access to several tools and sample parent communications that can be used with any 3D investigation and gain an understanding of how to use them to improve science learning for all students.

SPEAKERS:
Wil Van der Veen, Denise Magrini

Engineering Student Success on a Budget

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 B, North Building


Show Details

NGSS includes standards for engineering. Many small schools don't have the resources for hi-tech maker spaces, so we meet those standards using common, inexpensive materials. Come see how we make it work!

TAKEAWAYS:
Engineering doesn't have to be complicated, and it doesn't require high-tech tools and equipment. We can engineer solutions to world problems using simple household materials.

SPEAKERS:
Vanessa Ueltzen

Equipping Science Learners: Using S.T.U.C.K S.T.U.De.S Foundational Knowledge and Skills for Resilient Thinking on Problem Solving

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H


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Many science learners experience persistent conceptual and problem solving disposition roadblocks that hinder their ability to engage in science problem solving. This session introduces a research based framework for identifying and addressing these stuck points through diagnostic assessment, targeted scaffolding, and metacognitive strategies. Participants will explore classroom-tested tools such as the foundational knowledge and skills inventories on Physics problem solving that help students recognize and overcome foundational gaps. Drawing from ADDIE instructional design, the session emphasizes effective teaching strategies for multilingual and under-resourced learners. Attendees will leave sample work, and a logic model for integrating STUCK STUDES into their own curriculum. This session aligns with NSTA’s strands on teaching strategies and classroom practices, offering practical strategies to transform stuck moment into springboards to heighten problem solving flexibility.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will leave with a practical framework for transforming student “stuck” moments into diagnostic opportunities that build foundational science understanding, foster problem-solving disposition, and cultivate resilient, metacognitive learners.

SPEAKERS:
Crisostomo Canencia

Escape Traditional Assessment - Building Physical Escape Rooms and Bringing Learning and Logic Together

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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Have you ever been to an escape room? Want to turn your classroom into the same experience and not just have kids open envelopes? This session will show you an escape room designed for the Physics classroom and tools to help build your own on a concept of your choosing in any Science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session will help you see the actual thought behind the puzzle-making for a meaningful escape room and how it transforms the learning and engagement of students when you bring the room to life. This style of assessment has proved to have the best engagement of any strategy we have used.

SPEAKERS:
Gregory Brown

Exploring Extreme Heat with Understanding Global Change

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building


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Participants will connect with one another through the launch of an anchoring phenomenon with Land Surface Temperature data with a free digital dashboard from the SoCal Heat Hub at Scripps Oceanography at UC San Diego. From exploration of this data, participants will use the Understanding Global Change (UGC) framework and explanatory modeling tools to construct rough draft explanations from the data. Following this instruction and connections activity, participants will reflect on the modeling practices they experienced and how the UGC framework is designed to support students’ systems thinking with global change based phenomena. Participants will then use either a provided unit of instruction or their own to plan how to integrate UGC within a storyline of learning. Last, participants will prepare an action plan on how to share the UGC Framework and Earth system modeling tools with your students and colleagues.

TAKEAWAYS:
Experience the nature and processes of science by constructing explanations about a global change phenomenon with the Understanding Global Change framework and explanatory modeling practices.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel Stein Meisner, Alec Barron

Exploring Fire Science: A case study approach of the Use-Modify-Create framework for curriculum decision making

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Use Modify Create: Fire Science Case Studies

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Using fire science related anchor phenomenon, we will present the Use-Modify-Create computational thinking framework as a means by which to make decisions about curricula. In the “use” section, we will present an interdisciplinary curriculum that integrates indigenous approaches to fire science as well as reading and social studies. In the “modify” section we will present a robotics/coding curriculum that integrates science and engineering in computational thinking, and we will demonstrate how to modify this curriculum to meet local needs. In the “create” section we will present ways to create teachers’ own curricular unit that addresses fire science. Participants will have time to experience lessons from each of these sections and will see student work samples from classrooms implementing each.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers will learn how to apply the Use-Modify-Create framework to become empowered to modify and create more locally relevant materials. Teachers will generate a set of local phenomena ideas based on the prompts we provide and will learn how to adapt national resources to local contexts.

SPEAKERS:
Kari Hinkle, Heidi Schuster, Jeanette Chipps

Growing Green Thumbs in Early Education

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 8


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Teaching environmental science to preschoolers may seem daunting, but with time, curiosity, and repeated opportunities to explore the garden, children become empowered scientists and environmental stewards. This session aligns with the Teaching Strategies and Classroom Practice strand by demonstrating how NGSS-aligned, hands-on garden projects can nurture inquiry, collaboration, and sustainability. We will share how teachers partnered with field experts to connect classroom learning to real-world science through observation, prediction, and evidence-based reasoning. The project intentionally supported multilingual and neurodivergent learners using visual supports, peer collaboration, and family engagement—creating equitable access for all children to participate in science inquiry. Participants will engage in a short garden inquiry simulation, review child work samples, and discuss practical ways to integrate green STEM learning into their settings.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will gain actionable strategies to transform garden spaces into equitable, inclusive science classrooms that spark children’s curiosity and environmental responsibility.

SPEAKERS:
Daisy Acevedo-Encizo, Samuel Ortiz Romero

NSTA Post-Secondary Teaching Committee and Society for College Science Teaching (SCST) Present: Strategies for Effective College Science Teaching

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - OC Ballroom Salon 1



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1P17mK_IdEJZa87eHSVdCZl5NgAtziI_bPc7UhzN66ec/edit?usp=sharing

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Teaching science to college-level learners presents a variety of challenges and opportunities. This session will feature strategies to increase student engagement and success in college-level science courses.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn about strategies to increase student engagement and success in college-level science courses.

SPEAKERS:
Cheryl Robertson, Emily Mills Ko, Heather Scherr

Put your Walls to Work: 5 Steps to Engaging Students with Academic Vocabulary

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building


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Learn how to guide teachers in planning and building interactive word walls that transform classroom vocabulary instruction. Interactive word walls are dynamic, student-created vocabulary tools that look like graphic organizers and enhance understanding of science concepts, boost academic vocabulary, and highlight patterns across lessons and units. This workshop will introduce a five-step framework to support teachers in designing and using interactive word walls aligned with the NGSS. Participants will explore materials and strategies for training teachers and analyze NGSS verbs and content to understand rigor and depth of knowledge expectations. Discover how to coach teachers in creating effective, standards-based experiences that help students read, write, and think like scientists through intentional vocabulary instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn a five-step process to help teachers plan and build interactive word walls that align with NGSS, strengthen science vocabulary, and promote sensemaking. They’ll leave ready to coach teachers in creating engaging, standards-based academic language experiences.

SPEAKERS:
Julie Jackson

Science in Early Education: A Vehicle for All Knowledge

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Science in Early Education Notes

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Too often, science in the earliest grades takes a back seat to literacy and numeracy until high-stakes testing begins in upper elementary. This delay undermines children’s innate curiosity and their capacity to build cross-disciplinary skills. This interactive workshop will invite participants to step into a “student hat” perspective and experience hands-on inquiry activities designed for preschool and early elementary classrooms. Participants will engage in playful investigations of natural phenomena, practice weaving literacy and numeracy into science lessons, and explore strategies for integrating culturally relevant knowledge from families and communities. By modeling these practices, the session demonstrates how early science is not just a content area but a powerful vehicle for language, cognitive development, and equity in learning. This workshop equips teachers with practical tools and inspiration to make science a foundation—not an afterthought—in every child’s education.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will be able to: Develop early-science inquiry activities; Apply strategies to integrate literacy, numeracy, and cultural knowledge into science instruction; Advocate for equitable early science education; and Return to school with concrete lessons to elevate science instruction.

SPEAKERS:
Shekkola Gray

Seeds of Change: Crop 'til You Drop!

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Seeds of Change NSTA 26.pdf

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FREE multimedia tools showing how technology has and can help to feed our communities. A short and easy tie-in to a genetics unit, these materials highlight how today’s farmers and scientists might feed more people in challenging growing conditions. Includes a beautiful interactive highlighting genetic technology solutions in crops, an engaging classroom activity using comics to explore agriculture trade-offs, and a fun crop-growing simulation!

TAKEAWAYS:
Gene editing, transgenic technology and traditional breeding are applications of genetic knowledge that offer solutions for growing crops in challenging conditions. There are tradeoffs involved with each method, yet they offer hopeful solutions to address challenges to human health.

SPEAKERS:
Jen Taylor

Taking Action for a Healthier World: Catalyzing a Systems Approach to Studying Scientific Wellness, Disease, and Health Careers

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Attendee's_ISB-SystemsMedicine_NSTA-Anaheim-2026.pptx
Slide deck used in Taking Action for a Healthier World: Catalyzing a Systems Approach to Studying Scientific Wellness, Disease, and Health Careers
Systems-Med-ISB-Handouts-NSTA-2026.pdf
Combined handouts for "Taking Action for a Healthier World: Catalyzing a Systems Approach to Studying Scientific Wellness, Disease, and Health Careers"

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Medicine is at a fundamental tipping point, transforming from a reactive disease-care system to a proactive Systems Medicine discipline that utilizes a breadth of personalized data to optimize wellness and minimize disease. To help individuals thrive now and in the future, scientists at the Institute for Systems Biology (ISB) are working to understand the biological complexities of wellness and disease. Hundreds of teachers, students, scientists and physicians have come together to develop and pilot a free and accessible 180-hour course for 11-12 graders to learn about these complexities and the emerging careers around them. We will begin with a high-level overview of the modular course, providing a brief overview of the paradigm shifts and technologic advances that led us to this tipping point. Then in groups we’ll explore this “Systems Medicine” curriculum from a student’s perspective while completing sample hands-on activities and viewing student work and lab set ups.

TAKEAWAYS:
The Systems Medicine free 180-hour course will guide you through a variety of engaging pedagogical strategies for 11-12 graders as they apply their biology knowledge to learn new interdisciplinary STEM content while exploring the many careers around this new field.

SPEAKERS:
Barbara Steffens

Teaching All Subjects Through Science - An Innovative New Approach to STEAM

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 152, North Building


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As science professionals, we have always been able to see the connection between subjects through the lens of science. But what would happen if science were the conduit to teach reading, language usage, math, social studies, speaking, listening, SEL, art, morphology, phonics, and writing in elementary? Tasked with making this a reality and unable to find an example, our team created its own model. Join a public K-5 school on its journey, led by a former high school science teacher in charge of an elementary staff with no science background. We will show you how to integrate your curriculum to teach all Common Core ELA and math standards, as well as social studies, using NGSS pacing. We will share how our discipline has decreased, and our engagement and attendance have increased. Come and see the excitement, ask questions, and leave with a paradigm shift in applying science in elementary!

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will receive tools on applying a new approach to teaching in elementary school. We will share our experience, answer questions, and explain how to create independent, curious thinkers in elementary school.

SPEAKERS:
Kelly Bradley, Nicole Hahn

Teaching Physics for the First Time

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 B, North Building


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Often teachers of physics and physical science are broad field science instructors with minimal physics preparation. This workshop will allow seasoned and new instructors an opportunity to perform learning cycles linked to common core math and NGSS standards to augment their current physics and or physical science curricula.

TAKEAWAYS:
The workshop is a hands-on workshop in which attendees will conduct 5 elearning cycles in physics and physical science content.

SPEAKERS:
Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck, Jan Mader

Visible Thinking Routines in Science

Saturday, April 18 • 11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 153, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Visible Thinking Routines in Science
Canva Presentation

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This session explores how to evaluate, select, and effectively integrate Project Zero’s Visible Thinking Routines into science classrooms to promote deeper student engagement and understanding. Drawing inspiration from Ron Ritchhart’s books and research, participants will learn practical strategies for fostering a classroom culture of active thinking. I will share insights from my own journey implementing these routines, including classroom data on their impact and connections to Mind, Brain, and Education principles. Attendees will leave with concrete examples, implementation tools, and ideas for cultivating student-centered inquiry and reflection in their own teaching practice.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn what Visible Thinking Routines are, how they deepen learning in science, and gain ready-to-use tools, templates, and resources to enhance student engagement, reflection, and classroom thinking culture.

SPEAKERS:
Fernando Azcona

Beyond the Science Block: Bridging STEM, Literacy and Social Studies

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 255 A, North Building


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STEM integration at the early elementary level provides powerful opportunities for students to develop problem-solving, critical thinking, and collaboration skills while deepening their reading, writing, and civic understanding. This session will share practical strategies to weave STEM into ELA and Social Studies instruction, using inquiry-based learning, storytelling, and hands-on exploration. Participants will leave with developmentally appropriate lessons, ready to use materials and strategies that connect math, science, and engineering practices to foundational literacy and social studies skills, making learning more meaningful, equitable, and engaging for young students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn practical and engaging strategies for integrating STEM with literacy and social studies to deepen student learning.

SPEAKERS:
Gabriella Lamothe

Brain-Based Growth Mindset for Young Learners

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 254 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Brain-Based Learning for Elementary

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What do young learners know about how the brain works? Brain-based research and mindfulness can have a profound impact on young learners. Foster a growth mindset in your young students. The presenter will share research and curriculum guides to plan a similar unit in your classroom. Students learned about the amygdala and the pre-frontal cortex, and why learning to control impulsive, angry behavior would benefit everyone. Students made mindfulness jars for themselves and for their classrooms so they could use them to calm down, refocus, and give their pre-frontal cortex time to make better decisions. We finished the unit by engineering skulls that could protect their “brain,” (a raw egg), from a five-foot drop. Introducing brain study and growth mindset to the youngest students will have a profound impact on their future. I will provide teachers with research and curriculum guides to plan a similar unit.

TAKEAWAYS:
Introducing brain study and growth mindset to the youngest students will have a profound impact on their future.

SPEAKERS:
Rebecca Kurson

Building Better Biologists: Visual Notetaking in the Lab

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 260 A, North Building


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Ditch the worksheets and bring science to life through visual notetaking in the biology lab. In this interactive session, participants will experience how sketching procedures, observations, and data helps students think, communicate, and work like scientists. Engage in a hands-on, NGSS-aligned biology lab where visual notes replace fill-in-the-blank worksheets with meaningful records of inquiry and sensemaking from start to finish. Explore ready-to-use strategies and examples for integrating visual notetaking into labs across Biology, Anatomy, and AP Biology. Discover how this approach deepens understanding, strengthens retention, and fosters engagement while empowering students to collaborate, model thinking, and document evidence-based learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how visual notetaking transforms biology labs into spaces for inquiry, sensemaking, and communication—replacing worksheets with authentic scientific thinking.

SPEAKERS:
Shane E Raggio

Building Language and Literacy in 5E (5TH-12TH)

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 7


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Students often struggle to develop academic vocabulary in science. This session will focus on getting students to speak, listen, read and write using academic language in science. While academic vocabulary should be developed in all phases of the 5E model, we will focus on the Explain phase where participants will engage in a Talk Read Talk Write using vocabulary-focused structured visuals, the QSSSA strategy for structured conversations, and get ideas of how to differentiate reading passages for Emergent Bilingual students to improve Scientific Literacy.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to incorporate vocabulary-focused structured conversations, reading and writing to improve Scientific Literacy.

SPEAKERS:
Julie Gibson

Connecting Literature With Physics and Physical Science Education.

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 C, North Building


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An emphasis on cross-curricular education is often necessary in many elementary classes. With the introduction of new science standards, elementary teachers are now tasked with teaching physics and physical science concepts that they may have had little to no exposure to during their undergraduate studies. Coupling underpreparedness with the increased emphasis on reading often limits the time allocated for science instruction.

TAKEAWAYS:
Come and discover a method of balancing both instructional issues. Attendees will receive literature pieces and corresponding science lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Jan Mader, Elizabeth (Tommi) Holsenbeck

Fishing for Science Phenomena in Local Ecosystems

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 252 B, North Building


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Local ecosystems provide real-world scenarios for students allowing them to better understand science content while also using science and engineering practices. For instance, Muskegon Lake, a lake in western Michigan, is an ecosystem that students in the community are familiar with due to recreational activities such as fishing and boating. During the summer of 2025, two pre-service teachers (KF & RL) worked with a professor (CAS) to conduct research and write corresponding lesson plans. Here, we will explore issues related to Muskegon Lake that are tied to NGSS disciplinary core ideas such as nutrient cycling, parasitism, and experimental design. Participants will conduct hands-on activities related to fish populations in Muskegon Lake, and they will also consider how these activities can be modified for different grades/learners. Additionally, participants will brainstorm ecosystems near their school that provide relevant phenomena for student learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with lesson plans related to Muskegon Lake. These lesson plans are ready for classroom use and include all the templates and rubrics. Participants will also leave with ideas on how to incorporate local phenomena and research into their classes.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel LeMaster, Kezia Fong, Carrie Sharitt

From Framework to Classroom: Customizing Open Science Ed for Deeper Engagement and NGSS Alignment

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 251 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
AUDIENCE SHEET CUSTOMIZING OSE.pdf
FINAL CUSTOMIZING OSE Slides.pptx

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Open Science Education (OSE) offers an excellent, NGSS-aligned curriculum that brings phenomena-based learning to life. To maximize engagement and learning outcomes, teachers must adapt materials to meet students' diverse needs. I've developed a collection of customizable resources that deepen student engagement and strengthen NGSS alignment. My work preserves OSE's core philosophy while providing teachers with tools to strengthen instruction.  My work focuses on five key areas:  Investigation Worksheets: Comprehensive, student-friendly worksheets for student empowerment  Science Texts: Differentiated, interactive readings with comprehension checks  Assessments: Tools to backward plan from unit standards, creating targeted exit tickets and assessments  Scientist Circles: Resources for students to reference during discussions, driving greater engagement and participation  Review Materials: Targeted practice and review resources that support content internalization and mastery.

TAKEAWAYS:
Educators will feel empowered to customize their Open Science Ed classroom while maintaining fidelity! They will leave with tangible tools and techniques to efficiently, and meaningfully create student-facing materials that will drive stronger engagement, participation, and student learning outcomes.

SPEAKERS:
Jed Graboys

From Idea to Impact: A Starter Kit for Sustainable K-12 STEM Clubs

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 203 A


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Informal STEM experiences play a critical role in student engagement and career awareness, but launching and sustaining clubs can be challenging. In this session, participants will analyze traditional and non-traditional STEM club models that have been successful to identify practical structures that support participation and long-term impact across K-12. Participants will work with a practical “starter kit” to design a feasible informal STEM implementation plan tailored to their own context. The session will address logistics, student leadership, maintenance, and sustainability, while evaluating funding and resource strategies. K–12 adaptations and strategies for measuring impact will be explored, empowering educators to create inclusive, sustainable STEM opportunities beyond the classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will leave with a practical starter kit to launch and sustain STEM clubs for all students, including logistics, funding sources, and real case examples. They will also gain strategies to support students in building leadership skills and awareness of STEM career pathways.

SPEAKERS:
Carla Waller, Stacey Reed, Eric Botello

From Misconception to Mastery: Using Cognitive Psychology to Strengthen Science Learning

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom C / D



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1qctZQ5nQ8g54GlSIS0_ZeNrbkXqF2pE95jmJGiyFn-I/edit?usp=sharing

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Students often bring deeply held misconceptions into science classrooms, and these ideas frequently persist despite instruction. Insights from cognitive psychology help explain why: memory structures, prior knowledge, and faulty schema all contribute to the resilience of misconceptions. This session explores how educators can move students from misconception to mastery by applying evidence-based strategies grounded in how the brain learns. Participants will examine practices such as retrieval practice, elaboration, and conceptual change teaching, with a focus on integrating them into daily instruction. Through interactive examples and lesson design applications, teachers will learn how to reinforce accurate scientific understanding, promote long-term retention, and create opportunities for students to actively reconstruct knowledge. Educators will leave with practical tools to help learners replace misconceptions with scientifically sound concepts.

TAKEAWAYS:
By leveraging strategies from cognitive psychology, such as retrieval practice, elaboration, and conceptual change teaching, educators can help students replace persistent misconceptions with accurate scientific understanding and strengthen long-term mastery.

SPEAKERS:
Chelsea Robertson, Cheryl Robertson

From Research to Innovation: Teaching Students to Think Like Inventors

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 259 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
_From Research to Innovation_ Teaching Students to Think Like Inventors.pdf

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This session empowers educators to build confidence in STEM education by guiding students to transform research projects into innovative solutions. Participants will learn practical strategies to develop an inventor's mindset in their classrooms, helping students think creatively, embrace failure as a learning opportunity, and approach problems with resilience and curiosity. The session provides ready-to-use resources, including lesson plans, activity guides, assessment rubrics, and project templates that can be implemented immediately across multiple grade levels. Participants will explore invention competitions and recognition opportunities such as Invention Convention, eCYBERMISSION, and other national platforms where students can showcase their work. Attendees will leave with concrete action plans and resources to transform their classrooms into innovation hubs.

TAKEAWAYS:
Participants will learn practical strategies to develop an inventor’s mindset, connect classroom research to real-world innovation, and ready-to-use resources and competitions that support invention education.

SPEAKERS:
Laura Wilbanks, Milene De Farias

Inexpensive hands-on activity to teach fundamental physics concepts such as potential and kinetic energy, gravity, friction, and electronics.

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Marble run NSTA.docx
NSTA Conference 2026.pptx

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You will learn how to build a horizontal system for a marble run using inexpensive materials. The marble should be able to travel smoothly down a track, moving through different turns, ramps, and added features, all while keeping continuous motion. You begin by placing the marble at the designated starting point and releasing it. The goal is for the marble to complete the track and trigger a switch at the end, which will turn on an LED light. This is an exciting way to explore fundamental physics concepts such as potential and kinetic energy, gravity, friction and electronics.

TAKEAWAYS:
In this activity, you will learn how to construct a horizontal system, including what materials are needed and how to collect or purchase them. You will receive a complete list of materials along with vendor information, as well as a handout that explains the activity and outlines the key physics co

SPEAKERS:
Aulikki Pekkala-Flagan

Isotope Walk

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 258 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Isotope Walk Poster
Isotope Walk Presentation
IsotopeWalk.docx

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The Isotope Walk is an activity for students to learn about isotopes through visualize representation. Attendees will learn how to make various isotopes using beads and petri dishes to bring to life the concept and understanding of isotopes. Attendees will bring back to their schools the resources necessary to make the isotopes for the Isotope Walk activity for their chemistry and physical science classes.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to make the isotopes to utilize in the Isotope Walk and implement them in their classroom.

SPEAKERS:
Nichole DePaul

Making Magic in MS: Sing, Play, and Quest Together!

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom A / B



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Making Magic in MS.pdf

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A fusion of playful observation, song, and autonomy will keep students coming back for more. Learn how to organize your MS units into a menu of delightful choice for students! Experience the power of sneaking in the content using parodies.

TAKEAWAYS:
Playing and singing together are powerful way to encourage learning in science

SPEAKERS:
Jen Taylor

Making Sense of Data in Healthcare: Teaching with Pulse Oximeters

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 264 A, North Building


Show Details

This workshop uses pulse oximeters to engage participants in exploring real-world phenomenon and illustrate how data analysis is central to understanding science. Participants will engage in a 5E lesson that integrates NGSS science and engineering practices, crosscutting concepts, and disciplinary core ideas while examining bias in medical devices. Through hands-on activities, CODAP visualizations, and examples from student work, teachers will learn strategies to help students critically analyze authentic health data. Takeaways include a pulse oximeter activity adaptable for high school biology, computer science, data science, and biomedical CTE pathways.

TAKEAWAYS:
A hands-on pulse oximeter activity that illustrates bias in medical devices and is adaptable for biology, computer science, data science, and biomedical CTE pathways.

SPEAKERS:
Michael Cassidy, Elizabeth Price

Murder, Mayhem and All Things Forensic

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 C, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NSTA 2026 Murder, Mayhem and All Things Forensic.pdf

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Apply science in a real-world activity and combine all the skills learned to solve a crime. Student take the content learned and practice many of the skills needed by CSIs in these activities. Students are able to take on the role of a CSI, become part of the story, walk around and engage with classmates, faculty and staff while competing to see who can solve the crimes. Attendees will take on the role of a student to participate in the hands on parts of the crime scene activity. They will collect evidence, document evidence and analyze evidence in an attempt to solve the crime. Attendees will be given access to a shared Google drive with all the documents necessary to use these activities in their classrooms. Teachers will be given the tools needed to create outside of the classroom learning environments including a body farm, blood spatter chamber and outdoor crime scene.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will act as CSI's to collect evidence, document evidence and analyze evidence. Attendees will be able to create additional learning environments for their students with limited resources and no additional training required and willl learn how to create an interactive learning environment.

SPEAKERS:
Lori Barber

Promoting Science Learning through a Social Justice Lens

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom G / H



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/16F-0Y89Tk1S6pZm5c_s6JQoPyr-vqupDvmuQlvVqvbI/edit?slide=id.g3d730e7b2a2_0_0#slide=id.g3d730e7b2a2_0_0

Show Details

This session unfolds in two parts. The first part will share how concepts of measurement, graphing, extrapolation, speed, acceleration, forces, and engineering design can be used to understand how social justice-centered issues have unfolded historically. These concepts provide a new lens for students to assess and understand historical events, and the unfolding of those historical events provide an opportunity for students to deepen their understanding of the science concepts by applying them to unfamiliar scenarios. This session will explore the framework of asking students to consider the manifestations of scientific concepts and terminology in current and historical events. The second part of this session will invite participants to share their own ideas about how to incorporate social justice in science classes and to use social justice topics as a way to reinforce the understanding of science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn different strategies for reinforcing science understanding by applying scientific content, thinking and vocabulary to the analysis of social justice-focused historical content. Attendees will also learn practical strategies for incorporating social justice in science classrooms.

SPEAKERS:
Maurice Telesford

Routines for Integrating Structured Student Interactions into EVERY Lesson

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 263 B, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Slides Presentation for SSI
See the link for presentation on Structured Student Interaction. Additional resources are linked to slidese.

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Structured student interactions (SSI) are important because they promote active learning, improve conceptual understating, allow all students to access content, and relay crucial social and emotional skills. Over my past 22 years of teaching I have found ways to incorporate structured student interactions into all of my lessons. During this session participants will learn about the importance of these interactions, gain access to a list of many types of SSI, and be lead through practicing SSI during a lesson on energy including a SEL check-in, partner listen and share, group models, driver-navigator routine, and partner reflection. Although these strategies are pulled from my chemistry and physics classroom they can be used in any science classroom.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will walk away with a greater appreciation for the importance of structured student interactions, the confidence in using them in their own classrooms, and a list of interactions with step-by-step instructions to seamlessly integrate into their own lessons.

SPEAKERS:
Rachel Stein Meisner

Should Pluto be Considered a Planet Again?

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Platinum Ballroom 5



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Experience Instructions
Pluto session PPT

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Twenty years ago, Pluto was demoted to a dwarf planet. It’s time to reconsider this decision to determine if Pluto should be a planet again. This learning unit for middle and high school students has them think like astronomers to analyze and interpret planetary data (e.g., object shape, orbit inclination, and eccentricity) of the historical and new objects in the solar system to decide which objects should be considered planets and which dwarf planets. Students use NGSS-based science practices to analyze the data to learn core ideas about objects in the solar system. They also understand how science concepts change as new discoveries occur and new data is available. Students can access the data of objects in the solar system in different ways, so the data is accessible to students with different learning skills. At the conclusion of the unit, the students get to decide, based on data, if Pluto deserves a change in status.

TAKEAWAYS:
Teachers have a classroom-ready unit that focuses on the nature of the objects in our solar system.

SPEAKERS:
Dennis Schatz

STEM in PreK-2..Where the Magic Happens!

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 256 A, North Building


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Participants will learn how to integrate PreK-2 science and math concepts into English Language Arts (ELA) instruction to support students’ literacy development while nurturing critical thinking, problem-solving, and a lifelong interest in the world around them. Primary students are exposed to the 5 C’s of STEM: critical thinking, creativity, communication, collaboration and character which will help them to be better prepared for a 21st Century workforce.

TAKEAWAYS:
STEM learning in the Primary grades supports the most critical point of brain development (between birth to age 5). STEM learning improves social-emotional learning skills, builds vocabulary and encourages a positive school experience.

SPEAKERS:
Vivianne Young, Kimberly Berry

Teaching Literacy in the Biology Classroom: Our Experiences

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Grand Ballroom F


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This session highlights the powerful connection between science instruction and literacy development, demonstrating how the two can be integrated to enhance engagement, critical thinking, and success. Many students currently are not reading on grade-level in the United States. This means they cannot detect many of the key details within the text that is delivered to them. This presentation will demonstrate some of the classroom strategies that have worked to help students build literacy in the content area of biology, helping them to think as scientists and understand the nature of science. Choice books in the science classroom help literacy by connecting students to their interests and the content. Because these are choice novels students are able to choose a topic that relates to their interests which may increase their engagement. With biology’s vocabulary-rich content, we will share strategies for incorporating roots to deepen students’ understanding of terminology.

TAKEAWAYS:
This session demonstrates how integrating literacy strategies into biology instruction—through approaches like choice books, vocabulary development with Latin roots, and science-rich texts—can strengthen student engagement, improve reading skills, and deepen scientific understanding.

SPEAKERS:
Brooke Bauersfeld, Cathryn Maga

Teaching Science through a Cultural Lens: A Self-Study in Culturally Relevant Teaching in Middle School

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 155, North Building


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This session explores culturally relevant teaching strategies that make science accessible and meaningful for all students in a Title I, majority Latino middle school. Drawing from a middle school teacher's self-study, we illustrate how centering student identity and funds of knowledge enhances sensemaking and engagement, aligning with the NGSS emphasis on equitable science practices. We will share practical classroom strategies, including "bell ringers" to understand students' backgrounds and interests, "Who Are Scientists" activities that challenge stereotypes, and adjusting lesson plans to meet students’ needs. Particularly, grounding phenomena in students' lived experiences and valuing student ideas deepens engagement with disciplinary core ideas and scientific practices. Student work samples and lesson plans will be shared to demonstrate how culturally relevant teaching strategies support students’ authentic, equitable participation in science learning.

TAKEAWAYS:
Attendees will learn how to implement culturally relevant teaching that deepen students' engagement in science sensemaking and will leave with adaptable strategies including a bell ringer protocol, “who are scientists” activities, sample modified lesson plans, and a reflection tool.

SPEAKERS:
Xinying Yin, Michelle Estrada-Quezada

The Soul of Science Student Engagement Strategic Initiative

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 262 A, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
NGSS HS-PS1 Matter and its Interactions (Do Aliens Drink Water)
Why the Community Board Drives Engagement & Collaboration 1. Students Learn First, Then Teach Others Peer-to-peer explanation deepens understanding and strengthens cognitive processing because students must reorganize and articulate ideas in their own words (Dr. Yogeesha, 2020). 2. Creates an Equal Playing Field All students contribute from the same starting point, reducing status differences and increasing equitable participation (Georgia Southwestern State University, 2020). 3. Boos

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Soul of Science is a student-driven STEM initiative that centers learning activities on inquiry , cultural relevance, and student empowerment. It is designed to increase engagement in STEM by integrating storytelling, real-world applications, and intrinsic motivation models into its curriculum. Core Goals Promote Equity in STEM: Prioritize representation for BIPOC and women students by creating inclusive learning environments. Empower Through Identity: Help students see themselves as scientists by connecting STEM concepts to their lived experiences and cultural narratives. Foster Intrinsic Motivation: Use models like Ames’ TARGET, Keller’s ARCS, Chi’s ICAP, and Ryan & Deci’s SDT to deepen engagement and ownership of learning. Drive Systemic Change: Influence educational systems and funding structures to support long-term, equity-centered reform.

TAKEAWAYS:
Providing the Foundational Anchors for BIPOC Students in STEM. Foundational anchors for BIPOC students in STEM are the principles, supports, and cultural connections that help students feel rooted, empowered, and equipped to thrive in science, technology, engineering, and math fields.

SPEAKERS:
Edgar Massingale

ToxinLab: An NGSS-responsive model-building experience that highlights the interplay of environmental science, neuroscience, and public health

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 261 A, North Building


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ToxinLab is an NGSS-responsive classroom and citizen science experience that connects ideas, concepts, and data from environmental science, brain science, and public health. Developed through a 2-year collaboration among teachers and neuroscientists, this STEM+M unit engages students in a wide range of science practices to explain the neurological symptoms presented by case report subjects. As the experience unfolds in the classroom, students identify the agents responsible for the symptoms, their actions on body systems, and efforts by public health agencies to minimize their health risks. During this workshop, our team will engage attendees in a number of interactive activities and instructional routines that enable them to experience the unit as both educators and students. The session will conclude with a description of the resources developed to support classroom implementation of the ToxinLab unit and upcoming professional learning experiences hosted by our group.

TAKEAWAYS:
Workshop attendees will learn how specific design features of the ToxinLab unit and its component lessons establish a practical blueprint that teachers can follow to transform their classrooms into collaborative learning spaces where students can meaningfully engage in science practices.

SPEAKERS:
Madelaine Travaille, Ralph Imondi

Turn Common MIsconceptions Into Unforgettable Science Lessons

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 253 C, North Building


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Science misconceptions take hold because they seem reasonable or logical or appealing, despite little to no evidence to support them. We'll take a look at some common misconceptions, and then discover how science practices and a skeptical mindset can triumph over the most tempting false notion. Your session leader is a veteran writer and editor of science educational materials, and he has much knowledge and many experiences to share.

TAKEAWAYS:
We're all susceptible to believing exciting but false ideas. Come away with a lesson to help students develop a skeptical, scientific mindset.

SPEAKERS:
Joseph Berman

Unlocking Student Sensemaking with NSTA Coaching Tools

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 204 A


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Discover how K–12 teachers, coaches, and leaders can use NSTA’s free instructional coaching tools to strengthen coaching cycles and spark student sensemaking. In this interactive session, explore the full suite of OER resources and try out practical tools you can use right away.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to use NSTA’s suite of instructional coaching tools to support instructional coaching cycles in your school/district.

SPEAKERS:
Brianna Reilly Oliveira, Zoe Evans

Wakanda Forever: Carbon Cycle, Climate Change & Culturally Responsive Teaching

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Convention Center - 151, North Building



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Wakanda Anaheim

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Using Black Panther as an anchor text, this lesson explores the carbon cycle, climate change, and environmental justice. Students analyze Wakanda’s ecosystems, engage in carbon simulations, and write CERs connecting fiction to real climate science. This unit promotes equity, climate literacy, and cultural connection in middle school science.

TAKEAWAYS:
Learn how to use culturally relevant pop culture to teach the carbon cycle and environmental justice in middle school science.

SPEAKERS:
Ricardo Padilla

Your Students Become My Patients

Saturday, April 18 • 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

Anaheim Marriott - Marquis Ballroom Northwest



(Only registered attendees may view session materials. Please login with your NSTA account to view.)
Misconception Activity Printable Cards
Presentation slide deck

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Genetics is being increasingly used across healthcare to define disease risk, make diagnoses, and guide treatment options. Join a genetic counselor to discuss common genetics misconceptions encountered with patients in clinical settings. Brainstorm the possible roots of these misconceptions and opportunities to leverage classroom instruction to build lifelong genetic literacy among your students.

TAKEAWAYS:
Genetics touches us all, from the classroom to the clinic. Join us to explore real-world examples, tackle common misconceptions, and see how genetic literacy empowers students and citizens alike.

SPEAKERS:
Kelly East, Madelene Loftin

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