Task - Science - Grade-8 - Gravity 1
Task - Science - Grade-8 - Gravity 1
Gravity
Grade-Level Expectations
The exercises in these instructional tasks address content related to the following science grade-level expectation(s):
ESS-M-C3 Relate Newton’s laws of gravity to the motions of celestial bodies and objects on Earth (GLE 39)
Contents
These instructional tasks contain a set of document- or resource-based exercises about Newton’s laws of gravity and
the motions of celestial bodies.
Teachers may choose to use or modify the tasks as part of an instructional lesson or as a formative or summative
assessment.
The printable student version excludes teacher directions.
Objective(s)
Scaffolding Exercise 2 Relate laws of gravity to objects that orbit the Earth
Scoring Rubric
Scoring Notes
Student Directions: Working in groups of two or three, discuss the statements on each of the cards and decide whether the statement is
true or false. Research the ideas to prove or negate your initial thoughts. Formulate claims for each statement and support your claims
using Newton’s laws of gravity and other scientific knowledge.
Scaffolding Exercise 2
Newton’s first law of motion states that an object in motion will stay in motion unless an outside force acts upon it. The diagram above
graphs the location of 3 asteroids and Earth over a period of 13 months. All of the celestial bodies are orbiting the Sun in a clockwise
direction. Each filled-in circle represents a time lapse of one month. At first glance, it appears that the Earth could travel close enough to
the asteroids to change their orbital path. Work with a partner to study the diagram more closely and determine whether this is true.
Defend your reasoning.
Culminating Exercise
A science class designed an experiment to determine if objects with different masses took the same amount of time to fall an equal
distance. The class then calculated the acceleration of gravity on each of the objects. The data tables below show the results of the
experiment and the calculations.
Data Table 1
Time for Objects to Fall a Given Distance
(Average of Class)
Data Table 2
Average Acceleration of the Objects
Part 2: Explain the findings of the experiment performed by the science class and provide evidence for your conclusion.
Part 3: Describe what would happen if two objects of the same mass but different volumes were dropped at the same time? Explain your
answer.
Rubric
Key Elements:
Scoring Notes
Student responses will not be an exact imitation of the responses below. These are given only as examples.
Working in groups of two or three, discuss the statements on each of the cards and decide whether the statement is true or false.
Research the ideas to prove or negate your initial thoughts. Formulate claims for each statement and support your claims using Newton’s
laws of gravity and other scientific knowledge.
Newton’s first law of motion states that an object in motion will stay in motion unless an outside force acts upon it. The diagram above
graphs the location of 3 asteroids and Earth over a period of 13 months. All of the celestial bodies are orbiting the Sun in a clockwise
direction. Each filled-in circle represents a time lapse of one month. At first glance, it appears that the Earth could travel close enough to
the asteroids to change their orbital path. Work with a partner to study the diagram more closely and determine whether this is true.
Defend your reasoning.
A science class designed an experiment to determine if objects with different masses took the same amount of time to fall an equal
distance. The class then calculated the acceleration of gravity on each of the objects. The data tables below show the results of the
experiment and the calculations.
Data Table 1
Time for Objects to Fall a Given Distance
(Average of Class)
Data Table 2
Average Acceleration of the Objects
Part 2: Explain the findings of the experiment performed by the science class and provide evidence for your conclusion.
Part 3: Describe what would happen if two objects of the same mass but different volumes were dropped at the same time? Explain your
answer.