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How Fast Are You?

Use the Data/Graphs Wizard tool in the SciTools App to compare the averages of four sets of data.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/how-fast-are-you

CellSheet™ App - Chemistry & Biology Examples

Students use the CellSheet App to enter data and text in cells, create cell formulas and use built-in functions. Students explore the utility of this App in science classes, such as Chemistry and Biology. They calculate the molarity of a solution and compare the gestation periods for different ma...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/cellsheet-app--chemistry--biology-examples

Vernier - Freezing Temperature of Ocean Water

This activity makes use of the Temperature Probe to measure the temperature of water as it cools and freezes. Students' determine and compare the freezing temperature of fresh water and ocean water.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--freezing-temperature-of-ocean-water

Groucho's Sign Shop

Students' use force sensors to investigate forces and learn about force as a vector. Similar concept to the common "spring scale" force vector lab, but with a real-world twist.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/grouchos-sign-shop

Motion Graphs

Students will be able to explore distance/time graphs and velocity/time graphs. The graphs will be presented to the entire class through TI-Navigator™. Students will then take CBL 2™'s and calculators and create their own graphs (which are assigned to them). Students will then come back and pr...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/motion-graphs

Crime Scene Investigation - Stride Pattern Analysis with CBR 2

By using the Calculator-Based Ranger (CBR2™), students can plot the distance-time graph of a walking or running person. Students find correlation between the stride distance, velocity, and the height of a person, walking or running at a steady pace and compare that to the stride pattern left at t...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/crime-scene-investigation--stride-pattern-analysis-with-cbr-2

Vernier - Bungee Jump Accelerations

Students use an Accelerometer to analyze the motion of a bungee jumper and determine a point where there is maximum and minimum acceleration in the course of the motion. They also compare the experimental data with an actual bungee jump.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--bungee-jump-accelerations

Making Cents of Density

In this activity, students will measure the mass and volume of several collections of a coin type and enter the data into their handhelds and explore for patterns. Students will also make a plot of mass vs. volume and create a mathematical model that demonstrates the relationship between mass and...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/making-cents-of-density

Vernier - Evaporation and Intermolecular Attractions

Students will study temperature changes caused by the evaporation of alkenes and alcohols and relate this data to the strength of intermolecular forces of attraction. They will also predict, and then measure, the temperature change for other liquids.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--evaporation-and-intermolecular-attractions

Subnivean Comfort

Students measure and compare air temperatures inside and outside a snow shelter. If students choose to sleep in the shelter overnight they use the temperature measurements to confirm what they discover experientially- that snow is a great insulator!
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/subnivean-comfort

Vernier - Reflectivity of Light

In this activity, students will use a Light Sensor to measure reflection values from paper of various colors and compare these values to reflection values of aluminum foil. They will also calculate percent reflectivity.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--reflectivity-of-light

Vernier - Which Hot Dog Cools Faster?

Different types of hot dogs will cool at different rates after they have been cooked. This activity takes the first steps in investigating this phenomenon by measuring the rate that a warmed hot dog cools. Students can compare the ingredients of various types of hot dogs (all-beef, veggie, turkey...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--which-hot-dog-cools-faster

Vernier - Graphing Your Motion with EasyData™ App and CBR 2™

Students will use a CBR 2™ motion detector to measure distance and velocity. Students prepare graphs of motion and analyze them. They compare and match graphs of distance versus time and velocity versus time.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/vernier--graphing-your-motion-with-easydata-app-and-cbr-2

Using CBR in Egg Drop Competition

Egg drop competition is a popular activity to reinforce the lessons in force and motion. In the activity, the students are asked to design a vehicle to carry the egg safely when dropped from a height of 10 feet (about 3 m) or more. Real-time and concrete data collected and analyzed during the de...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/using-cbr-in-egg-drop-competition

Two Hot, Two Cold

In this activity, students collect both Celsius and Fahrenheit temperature data for several water samples of varying temperatures. They use the data to find a conversion equation that will calculate the Fahrenheit temperature for any given Celsius temperature.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/two-hot-two-cold

Predictable Patterns with Addition

Students learn to compare numbers. They generate patterns using repeated addends and different starting points.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/predictable-patterns-with-addition

Related Procedures

Students will use the two constant operations to compare the results of different mathematical procedures and determine how they are related.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/related-procedures

Skip Counting by 5

Students will compare counting sequences on their calculator with the patterns they generate on their own hundreds chart.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/skip-counting-by-5

The Mysterious Constant

Students investigate a pattern using the constant function on the calculator, record the ordered pairs in a table, describe the pattern, and predict what will come next.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/the-mysterious-constant

Studying Wave Phenomena with "WaveSim"

This is a program allowing teacher/student to interactively and graphically investigate a variety of wave concepts commonly studied in physics: traveling waves, standing waves, beats, Doppler effect, two-point source interference, Fourier wave forms, reflection and refraction, amplitude modulatio...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/studying-wave-phenomena-with-wavesim

Forensics Case 10 - Dropped at the Scene: Blood spatter analysis

In this activity, students graph data to find quantitative relationships and create a standard reference curve for comparison with unknown data. They analyze blood spatters and examine r2 values for linear, natural logarithm, quadratic, and power curve fit. They find the curve that best fits the ...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/forensics-case-10brdropped-at-the-scene-blood-spatter-analysis

Celsius and Fahrenheit Number Line

A number line comparing temperatures in Celsius and Fahrenheit.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/celsius-and-fahrenheit-number-line

Forensics Case 14—Hot Air, Cold Body: Using Newton's Law of Cooling to Determine Time of Death

Students create a temperature versus time graph for cooling and become familiar with Newton's Law of Cooling. They use the cooling-rate equation to estimate time of death of the victim.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/forensics-case-14hot-air-cold-body-using-newtons-law-of-cooling-to-determine-time-of-death

Who Started It All? The Spread Of Disease

Students predict the spread of disease to be exponential. They then do a hands on "sharing of bodily fluids" and see the actual data and compare these results to the projected model. You actually see the number of infected after each sharing to see the shift of the model easier. Written to be c...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/who-started-it-all--the-spread-of-disease

Coast to Coast with Alice

Students learn to solve a real-world problem comparing automobile travel in the early 1900s and travel today. They follow the route taken by Alice in 1909 from New York City to San Francisco and determine how long the trip would take today.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/coast-to-coast-with-alice