Websites for science teachers

A List of Super Websites for Science Teachers

A List of Super Websites for Science Teachers

Are you looking for a great websites to use while teaching middle school science? Are you overwhelmed with trying to decide which ones are actually useful?

A List of Super Websites for Science Teachers

Updated Jan 21, 2021

I have used a lot of science websites since I started using digital science notebooks, plus I asked a lot of other middle school science teachers which sites they strongly recommended using.

I pulled the websites all together into a list, grouped into four categories.

  • Teacher tools for you to create lessons
  • Labs, activities and simulations for students
  • Articles to assign students on science topics
  • Video websites, including YouTube

Teacher Tools For You to Create Lessons

Let’s face it, we all love websites that help us create dynamic and interactive lessons and assessments. Why not use what’s out there?

The following websites help you create games, use flipped teaching by making videos, or keep you from having to reinvent the wheel when it comes to presentations. These are materials that others teachers have already developed and most of them are also free!

Science Websites with Labs, Activities and Simulations for Students

A lot of schools purchased devices for students during the recent pandemic and would prefer that they are still utilized. All of us have discovered that there are amazing resources for students to use that will nicely complement your hands-on curriculum.

If I’m going to use a website, instead of doing an actual lab, then it should be something that I cannot provide for them realistically in the classroom. For example, I can show them higher level chemistry demonstrations that I cannot safely do in my middle school classroom.

Science Articles to Assign Students

Reading in the science classroom is very important for all students. Keeping a list of websites with interesting, up-to-date articles is advised for many reasons.

One reason I keep bookmarked links to articles is so that the early finishers stay occupied with articles related to our present unit. Second, I use the articles for homework to enrich a concept that we discussed in class.

Third, they are also an important component for days when we need a substitute teacher. At the beginning of each unit, I print out copies of articles that relate to our unit and keep them in my substitute folder. These can be recycled year to year.

Video Websites

Watching videos, and being able to glean the main ideas, is an important skill that students will always need. I like to give them video notes graphic organizer templates for their digital science notebooks as they are watching short videos.

Video notes templates
Over 200 pages of templates in science interactive digital notebook

I tend to look for videos that are no more than 3 to 4 minutes long and loaded with good information. Beyond that, students start to drift off. I also like videos to be short so that I can show them twice for them to fill out their video templates.

YouTube Science Channels to Follow

YouTube has an abundance of science videos, as you know. Sometimes it can be overwhelming to narrow it down to the authors that you trust.

Note: I have recently noticed that, even my saved videos that I have watched several times, will rotate inappropriate ads. Unfortunately, that means you’ll really need to quickly preview it right before class.

Of course, I realize that this is not a comprehensive list. I would love to hear any suggestions that you have that I should add to this growing and changing resource. If you know of a wonderful website, that should be added to this list, please put it in the comments below and I’ll update this post often.

What Students Should Know Leaving Middle School Science

Besides all of the concepts that we need to cover, what do students need to know leaving middle school science?

What Students Should Know Leaving Middle School Science

Updated May, 2024

Of course, we want our students to be good citizens and independent workers, but what else? Here is a list of skills that I think we will agree are critical to cover besides our extensive content.

Critical Thinking Is First!

In my opinion, critical, thinking should be the top of the list. Being able to look at data in a rational, organized way, and draw correct conclusions is important. So many “sources” are thrown at us from social media and other places. Teaching students to weed out “the real science” is critical. Many students may not understand the concept of “fake science”. Future voting decisions, homeownership, career choices, and so on will all need to be researched the correct way, with analytical thinking.

Learning critical thinking should be taught as many different ways as possible. I start my classes with CER image writing prompt bell ringers or I weave it into other assignments, such as analyzing a chemical reaction.(Using CER Image Prompts as Bellringers)

I find that praising the students for thinking hard is effective as long as it’s not overdone. Let’s be honest, most students look for quick, easy answers, so they should be rewarded for the extra brain work.

Organizational Skills

One of the hardest things to teach another person is how to organize themselves. So much of it is a personal preference and style. That being said, most middle school students haven’t really “found their groove” yet in terms of being self-sufficient and mindful of their time and materials.

That’s where we come in as teachers to model, model, model.


In sixth grade, I write up most lab result sections with data charts and questions that need to be addressed. Students need to see how it’s done, over and over. This means that by the time they are in eighth grade I can say “create your own data charts” for the lab that we are doing. 

As for student notebooks, I have gone digital, which was the best organizational change I ever made. I let the students design their own pages, and at the end of each unit I have a rubric which includes a table of contents, all homework, assignments, video, notes, book notes, lab reports, activities, project brainstorming, etc.   No more loose papers all over the place. 

If you are using paper notebooks I recommend one composition book per unit. Include a table of contents and a rubric to grade them at the end of the unit. I tried doing whole semester, or yearly, notebooks and it was a mess.

I have mentioned before that my ADHD students, or even those on the spectrum,  thrive with digital organization. I have a student whose handwriting is basically incomprehensible on a written test. I often have to ask him to translate. His digital notebook on Google Slides? Perfect score, every unit.

Teach Them to Be A Good Person

I will always pause my class if I hear someone not treating another correctly. My expectations are high and I never waver when it comes to bullying, insulting or excluding someone else, etc. Respect to themselves, teachers and others ranks high with what students should know when they leave middle school.  As they head for high school, there will be less forgiveness.

 I find boosting a child’s self-esteem goes miles with their behavior towards others. If your classroom is set up for “little wins”, then everyone gets a chance to feel good about themselves. I also use praise. Genuine praise. A little goes a long way!

Study Skills Are Essential

Let’s face it. Many students arrive in middle school without a strong set of study skills. A large part of teaching any subject is teaching students how to learn. Simply telling them to “study for the test” won’t cut it. 

They don’t even know where to start! 

Show them how to use flashcards, quiz websites, paired learning, games, etc. This will help get them motivated to study and to see the benefits. That said, I strongly believe in using many different types of assessments to hit all learning styles.   

           

How to Take Notes

Everyone should know how to take notes from someone who is speaking or from a text source. Again, we can’t assume students have this skill, and we must model it repeatedly. Give students templates to help organize their thoughts. I especially like Cornell notes and teach it as soon as they get into middle school. After they have completed any notes, I grade them carefully with suggestions.

 Since I have digital notebooks, I can watch the students on their iPads from my iPad. I often realize that I need to slow down and model more. Sometimes several students have barely any words written!

 Many students can’t process notes quickly, so they miss important points. It’s always good to have visuals and to wait for everyone to catch up.

Reading Comprehension and Pulling Information From Text

This is a very important skill.  I have been frustrated seeing even eighth graders read text and choose some of the least important information as they take notes! Guided notes and comprehension questions really work well to teach students how to glean the main ideas out of a text. 

Look for interesting reading passages that have students practicing over and over. Don’t shy away from textbook passages as students will need to use them in high school.

Compare Contrast Using A Venn Diagram

The idea of comparing and contrasting sometimes confuses students as they listen to a lecture, watch a video or read text. Being visual with a diagram helps. However, you will need to model a lot.

Look for situations for students to practice in all of your units. For example, have them compare and contrast the wings of birds and bats, a desert ecosystem to a grassland, or characteristics of a metal versus a nonmetal.

Construct and Read A Graph

When I start teaching graphing to my sixth graders, I start with students using graph paper to draw bar and line graphs. This way, students really understand how and why each plot point is located on the graph. 

We then move onto creating graphs with Google Sheets, Numbers, or Excel. Without doing it on paper first, these apps almost seem to create “magic” as they generate graphs from a spreadsheet. I’ve also noticed that if the app is incorrect at interpreting the spreadsheet, students will pick it up faster if they have done it on paper previously.

Before I did the paper activity, they had the wonkiest, meaningless, computer generated graphs but always with lots of pretty colors!

Search for graphs for students to read and interpret from real data. What trends do they see? How would the graph look differently if the increments of y-axis were changed?  Why would someone presenting the graph change the increments to make the data look more dramatic? Again, the importance of learning to distinguish “real science”. 

Research Skills

I love to bring up a picture of someone using the Dewey decimal system, in a library, and tell students how I did research at their age! We had to go through the filing system, which was difficult in itself, and then pray that the book that we needed was on the right place in the shelf, or even in the library at all! 

Yes, I’m dating myself, but it really gets the point across to the students as they sit there in shock listening to me.

Now the students have the problem that there is TOO MUCH information to weed through and a lot of it is unreliable. Start with explaining the reason why most teachers don’t allow Wikipedia for research and then how anyone can create a website.

OCTUPOD 

When doing research projects always ask the students to use citations and make sure you spot check them. Students must learn the laws of copyright and the consequences for plagiarism. They need to understand that just because an image is on the internet, that they can right click and save, doesn’t give them free rein to use it anywhere. Honestly, many adults still don’t understand that! Google images seems like an endless source of free pictures.

Students also need to understand the methodology for doing a research paper. Model how to outline their thoughts and how to structure the paper so that they don’t ramble randomly.

Work Ethic and Pride in Their Work

This isn’t so easy to teach, but if you set up the classroom with many little wins, it will become easier. Try not to focus on “getting it done for the sake of the grade”. This may encourage overwhelmed students to take shortcuts, or to shut down completely.

Breaks down work into little bites. Brainstorm with them and then do daily check-in so students feel accomplished. Reward the work that is done for those that struggle.

If an assignment is ripped out of a notebook and it tears, don’t accept it. Keep your standards high, and students will rise to them. Model at the beginning of the year what is acceptable and talk about having pride in their hard work.

Learning How to Communicate

This covers many aspects of being a good student and citizen. How should students ask for help in class? What should an email to you look like? Should it look like you’re texting your teacher?  Model this on the first day of school.  

Discuss how to work in a group where others may have different opinions than yours. Constantly remind them how they would prefer to be treated themselves.

Organizing a Project

Some teachers may shy away from long-term projects, such as Rube Goldberg machines, or other STEM activities. This could simply be because the lack of structure and chaos is just too much.

Try structuring the projects in doable sections with stop points. Implement daily rubrics to keep up accountability. When students learn how to work against reasonable deadlines, they are calmer and more organized with less “false starts”.

If possible, I try to keep the majority of the project work in school rather than at home. This means each student learns time management equally without having home distractions.

Learn Enough Basic Science Concepts to Make Intelligent Decisions

Of course, we have course content that needs to be taught. However, I believe that every concept should be brought into the student’s every day lives. Work hard to tie the topics into their world. Anticipate the “why do we have to learn this?” and START with the importance first. This helps the students be engaged and own the material.

For example, if you’re studying weather and clouds you can ask the students “how did you know, before you started this unit, that it might rain by looking at the sky?” Build on their existing knowledge, and they will see how knowing more simply enriches their lives. 

Yeah yeah, not every concept works out so well. However, the more you try to make it relatable, the better.

There are teachers who feel rushed to get concepts into students before end of year testing. If you choose even the shortest activities, that are relevant to their lives, you will find much more concept retention.

Conclusion

There are a lot of concepts that we need to get into middle school students, in terms of the actual science content. However, making them into good citizens, self-reliant learners, and organized workers, is critical as well. Please check out my other blog post on how to structure projects, keep students organized, set up digital notebooks, teach relevant topics, etc. 

Kindergarten, First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Homeschooler, Staff, Not Grade Specific - TeachersPayTeachers.com
Kindergarten, First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Homeschooler, Staff, Not Grade Specific - TeachersPayTeachers.com

Comments

5 responses to “A List of Super Websites for Science Teachers”

  1. Suzanne Sprague Avatar
    Suzanne Sprague

    Your posts are filled with such useful information. Thank you! I’ve been enjoying them and appreciate the time and thought you’ve spent sharing what you’ve figured out. I keep the Science By Sinai website at the top of my bookmarked list.

    1. Karen Sinai Avatar
      Karen Sinai

      Thank you so much! This means a lot coming from a fellow science teacher! You made my day.🙂

  2. Jeanetts Avatar
    Jeanetts

    Awesome resources for the classroom. I’ve used some of these and look to use even more. Thanks for the ideas

    1. Karen Sinai Avatar
      Karen Sinai

      I’m so glad they helped! Thank you for your nice feedback.

  3. Ryan Saenz Avatar
    Ryan Saenz

    This site might be helpful too for science teachers. Expontum (https://www.expontum.com/) – Helps researchers quickly find knowledge gaps and identify what research projects have been completed before. Thanks!

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