7th Grade Science Unit Plan Template
NGSS-aligned science unit plans center on phenomena — real-world observations that drive student investigation across disciplinary core ideas, science and engineering practices, and crosscutting concepts.
Typical unit length: 3–5 weeks · ages 12–13
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Try the Unit Plan Generator →Big Ideas in Science
Strong unit plans are organized around enduring understandings — the big ideas that outlast the specific content. In Science, these core concepts anchor all unit planning.
Phenomena-driven learning: students observe something puzzling and investigate to explain it
Science and engineering practices are the methods of doing science, not just concepts to know
Crosscutting concepts (patterns, cause/effect, scale) link ideas across all science disciplines
Evidence-based argument is the core skill of scientific reasoning
Engineering design connects science learning to real-world problem-solving
Key Components of a Science Unit Plan
Every strong 7th Grade Science unit plan includes these elements. Together they ensure coherent, standards-aligned instruction with clear assessment.
Anchoring Phenomenon
The real-world observable event that drives the unit's investigation
Driving Question
The student-facing question the phenomenon generates
Disciplinary Core Ideas
The NGSS content standards addressed in the unit
Science Practices
The investigative and reasoning skills students will use
Investigations / Labs
Hands-on activities that generate data students use to construct understanding
Final Explanation Task
Students construct a written or oral explanation of the phenomenon using evidence
Sample 7th Grade Science Units
Assessment Ideas for Science Units
Explanation task: students write a scientific explanation of the anchoring phenomenon using unit evidence
Lab practical: students design and conduct a mini-investigation with a new variable
Argument board: sticky-note visible thinking map of claims, evidence, and reasoning
Science notebook: ongoing record of observations, data, and sense-making across the unit
Engineering design challenge: students solve a real problem using the unit's science content
Unit Planning Tips for Science
Return to the anchoring phenomenon at the end of each lesson — 'What can we explain now that we couldn't before?'
Student questions are data: chart what students wonder at the start and watch the list shrink as understanding grows
Talk is central to science: build in structured peer discussion about data and evidence daily
Don't teach vocabulary before the concept — introduce terms after students have the experience they label
FAQ: 7th Grade Science Unit Plans
Do I have to use phenomena for every science unit?
NGSS strongly recommends it, but the phenomenon can be simple — a photo, a video, a class demonstration. The key is that students have something to observe and question before instruction begins. It doesn't have to be elaborate.
How do I assess understanding of science practices, not just content?
Design tasks where students must use the practice: give them new data to analyze, a new scenario to explain, a design problem to solve. If the test is multiple choice recall, you're not assessing practices.
How long should a science unit be?
Most NGSS-aligned units run 4–6 weeks, though some complex units extend longer. The unit ends when students can construct a complete explanation of the phenomenon — not when you've covered all the chapters.