Flash a number visual—dot arrays, growing tiles, or a puzzling graph—and ask, “What do you notice? What do you wonder?” Students record multiple pathways, then pair to compare strategies. Emphasize representation shifts: table, sketch, expression. Two volunteers explain contrasting approaches. Close by linking observations to the day’s target, such as linear growth or equivalence. This fosters flexible reasoning, vocabulary, and confidence, especially for students who fear single-right-way traps.
Offer a short paragraph or headline set and invite blackout poetry, headline mashups, or metaphor swaps in three minutes. The playful constraint encourages risk-taking with syntax and imagery. Share-outs surface voice and tone choices quickly. This warm-up transitions smoothly into drafting, analysis, or rhetorical study, as students arrive already warmed to nuance and purpose. Collect favorites in a rotating gallery to celebrate craft and highlight transferable, bite-size techniques.
Present a surprising claim, mini-demonstration, or data snippet. Ask students to propose two competing hypotheses and list one variable to test. Quick pair debates sharpen clarity and evidence language. Follow with a collective prediction poll to surface assumptions before the lab or reading. By separating idea generation from verification, learners experience authentic scientific thinking and feel invited into inquiry, not just procedures. Curiosity stays high as investigations begin intentionally focused.