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Cause
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Cause
and Effect:
    
Overview: To
show examples of cause and effect and encourage students to recognize
the process around them.
Resources: Teacher: one hardboiled egg; one raw egg; one
bowl. Student: pencil, paper.
Teacher Preparation: boil one egg before class and mark it.
Procedure:
- Hold up raw egg
and say "CAUSE" as you crack the egg on the side of the bowl.
- Say "EFFECT"
as you break open the egg into the bowl.
- Hold up the hardboiled
egg and say "CAUSE" as you go through exaggerated motions
of tossing the egg to a student.
- As they either
catch it or drop it, say "EFFECT".
- If student catches
the egg, retrieve it, then go through the cause-and-effect procedure
again, but this time, just hold it up and drop it on the floor.
- Have students locate
all the possible causes-and-effects that have taken place (e.g. boiling
the egg makes it hardboiled.)
- Have students write
down real-world examples of cause-and-effect.
Variations/Options:
Look for examples in different subject areas: driving on slick streets
and slamming on the brakes, not getting a term paper done on time, taking
your parents' car without permission, adding two whole numbers together,
staying up until 3 a.m. watching movies the night before school, being
late to a job repeatedly, leaving clothes next to a room heater or hot
water heater, seeking retaliation against an enemy during war. Also, have
them give examples from their own lives.
(Note: putting an egg on a flat tabletop and spinning it is a way
to tell if an egg is raw or hardboiled. A hardboiled egg spins freely
as you would expect, but a raw egg slows down quickly and behaves sluggishly,
due to the motion of the liquid inside.)
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