12th Grade Science Student Handouts
Build science handouts for lab procedures, data collection, scientific vocabulary, phenomenon investigations, and claim-evidence-reasoning structures that align with NGSS science practices.
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Open Handout Generator →12th Grade Science Handout Types
Lab Sheet
Structured procedure guide with materials list, data table, analysis questions, and a conclusion section.
Includes
- ›Question and hypothesis section
- ›Materials and safety list
- ›Step-by-step procedure
- ›Data table with pre-labeled columns
- ›Analysis questions and CER conclusion frame
Phenomenon Investigation
Inquiry-based handout that starts with a driving phenomenon and guides students through observation, questioning, and explanation.
Includes
- ›Phenomenon description or image
- ›Initial observations and questions
- ›Data collection or research section
- ›Evidence-based explanation frame
- ›Reflection and next questions
Science Notes
Guided notes structure for science content vocabulary and concept development.
Includes
- ›Key vocabulary with definitions and diagrams
- ›Concept diagram or model to label
- ›Process or cycle with blanks
- ›Summary questions
- ›Vocabulary matching or fill-in
Data Analysis Sheet
Structured analysis guide for interpreting data from experiments, simulations, or secondary sources.
Includes
- ›Data table or graph area
- ›Pattern identification questions
- ›Error analysis prompt
- ›Claim-evidence-reasoning frame
- ›Application or prediction question
Scaffolding Features for 12th Grade Science
- ›CER (Claim-Evidence-Reasoning) sentence frames
- ›Partially-drawn diagrams for students to complete
- ›Pre-labeled data tables with unit headers
- ›Vocabulary word bank for fill-in-the-blank sections
- ›Procedure with numbered, sequenced steps
Common Handout Elements
Format Tips
Teacher Tips
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a complete lab handout include?
Question, hypothesis, materials, procedure (numbered steps), safety notes, data table, analysis questions, and a conclusion. The conclusion should require students to connect their data back to the original question using a claim-evidence-reasoning structure.
How do I scaffold a science handout for students who struggle with academic language?
Provide a vocabulary word bank at the top, use sentence frames for all written sections, add visual representations next to text definitions, and include a worked example of the type of explanation you expect (e.g., a completed CER example for a different scenario).