A few decades ago, I wrote a scavenger hunt for my AP Chem students to do After The Test. It’s gone through many iterations, and has been modified for a general chemistry class. A Biology version soon followed. It’s a great end-of-the-year activity as students must apply what they’ve learned all year and make connections among several concepts. The hunt can be done as an out of class assignment, or time in class can be given for students to plan the items they will use and write the index cards.
I’ve had students work alone, in pairs, and in groups or 3. Finding 50 items can take 2-2.5 weeks, working on the writeup in class and finding the items on their own time.
Here’s how it works:
Students get a list of 75 items to find and a set of rules. I assign some number of items to find, usually 50.
Here are a few items on the Chemistry version. Possible responses are in the image, above
3. A gas that exhibits properties of an inert gas. Give the name and formula of the gas.
16. A sample of gas whose atoms have an average velocity less than that of oxygen atoms. Show calculations which verify this.
32. A sample of an element with more than 5 electrons in its outer shell.
46. An element that has more than one isotope and can exist as an ion.
Here are a few items on the Biology version:
Students find an item that meets the criteria, seal it in a plastic sandwich baggie, and attach an index card with the description as stated on the list of items. They may have to state:
Three points are awarded for explaining how the object chosen meets the criteria in the bullet points.
For the biology version, students would find, for Item 1, something containing protein. They would write on the index card the definition of amino acid, sketch the structural formula of any amino acid, state that protein is made of amino acids, and explain how their item meets the criteria by being an example of protein. Suppose the student chose a chicken bone (they really don’t smell all that bad in a sealed plastic bag.) An explanation might look something like:
“Item 1: A chicken humerus, with some meat still attached. The meat is protein, which is made of amino acids.”
The fun really begins when students realize, as the directions encourage, that a single sample may meet the criteria for several listed items. The chicken wing could also be used for #28, which states
28. An object from a living thing that is considered amniotic. Explain how the object represents the living thing, why the living thing is considered to be amniotic, and explain the significance of an amnion.
The student would write on a card, and attach it to the same baggie:
“Item 28: A chicken humerus. This bone is from a chicken. Chickens lay eggs with amnion, a lining inside the shell. The amnion, or amniotic membrane, helps the egg retain water while the chick is developing.”
Water, sugar or salt solutions, a leaf from a plant can be used for many of the items listed.
It’s a lot of fun to write your own list for such a scavenger hunt. If you don’t want to do that, mine are linked below.