7th Grade

Religion Test

Scratch (No Tutorial; Make your own)

Scratch Tutorials

Science Fair: Technology - Paper

  • Title Page - First page, center aligned, appropriate spacing from the top, contains correct information (name, assignment, teacher, school, presentation date), formatting

    • Headers - Uses "Header" space of Google Doc, page numbers right aligned, running head left aligned, ONLY the first page header contains "Running Head:", formatting

    • Sections - Each section name centered on top line of body of next available page, roman numerals, all sections included (Abstract, Table of Contents, Purpose, Research, Hypothesis, Experiment: Materials, Experiment: Procedures, Analysis, Conclusion, References), section contents or place holder starts on line following the section name

    • Body - consistent formatting (Arial, 12, left-aligned, 1/2" indenting on new paragraphs, 1" margins on all sides, ONE space after a period)

Science Fair: Technology - References - http://www.easybib.com/

    • Quality of Resources - Meet qualifications discussed in technology class; each resource should have a "Responsible Research Form" submitted with it.

    • Formatting - Correct alignment (all left, first line of each entry - no change, all following lines indent 1/2"), correct punctuation and formatting per resource type, list in alphabetical order by first entry

Mr. Bailey's Sample Paper

Science Fair: Technology - Data Collection

For each of the following, create a neat and organized data table in a Google Sheet.

-You can do all these on the same spreadsheet, or make separate; the choice is yours.

  1. Find the HIGH temperature (in degrees fahrenheit) for the next 24 hours starting with noon today.

  2. Find the average annual rainfall (in inches) for 10 different countries around the world.

  3. Find the average height (in inches) of a girl from ages birth through 18. Then, do the same for a boy.

Science Fair: Technology - Graphing

  • Data - The data needs to make sense... people can't get shorter, you can't have more than 100% of something, etc.

  • Type - The type of graph you choose should be appropriate for the data... line graph vs. bar graph vs. circle graph etc.

    • Titles - Graphs need 3 titles: 1) a main title that explains what the graph shows, 2) y-axis title explaining what the y-axis represents including units, 3) x-axis title explaining what the y-axis represents including units.

    • Legend - If your graphs shows more than one "category" of data, you need a legend that show how to differentiate the categories.

    • Scale - Your axis need to be appropriately scaled to show the data correctly and consistently.