We present our computer-based learning environment, Science Assistments (http://users.wpi.edu/ sci_assistments/; NSF-DRL # 0733286; NSF-DGE #0742503; U.S Dept of Ed # R305A090170), for Physics, Life Science, and Earth Science that scaffolds middle school students' scientific process skills, namely, hypothesisgeneration, design of experiments, data collection, data interpretation, and warranting claims with evidence Our project builds on prior development by the investigators of the Math Assistments project (http://www.assistment.org/) Specifically, we utilized the existing authoring functionality of the Math Assistments system and extended the logging functionality in order to capture students' fine-grained actions within interactive microworlds In addition, we developed a suite of inquiry tools to support students' inquiry in terms of the five skills mentioned above Together, the logging functionality and the inquiry tools provide the basis for adaptive scaffolding of students' inquiry in real time By reacting to students' inquiry strategies in real time, we hypothesize that it will be possible to positively affect both students' science process skills, shown by more goal directed inquiry and more systematic experimentation, measured through log files, as well as students' content learning, as measured by prepost test gains We plan to test our adaptive scaffolding in a series of randomized controlled studies in our four partner schools; the demographics of these students represent a wide range of SES and ethnic backgrounds, and thus, our data should generalize well Goal outcomes include empirical data regarding the efficacy of our system at improving students' science learning, namely, inquiry skills and content learning, across several dependent measures in each content domain.