5th Grade Science Grade Level Expectations
Unit: Nature of Science
Understand:
- Science attempts to explain how and why things happen in the natural world by collecting evidence and developing theories that explain natural phenomena.
- The Scientific Method is a systematic problems solving approach to collect data and evidence
- Scientist use the scientific method and experiments to collect the data / evidence that might help them answer a question or solve a problem.
Know:
- The steps of the scientific method
- State the problem or question
- Form a testable hypothesis
- Design an experiment
- Collect and analyze data
- Draw conclusions
- Communicate results
- The skill scientist use when conducting experiments
- Observe
- Predict
- Classify
- Model
- Compare and contrast
- Key scientific definitions
- Law
- Theory
- Hypothesis
- System
- How to design an experiment
- What tools scientist use to collect data
- Lab safety procedures
Be able to:
- Write and analyze questions that can be answered by conducting scientific experiments
- Design and conduct an experiment using the scientific process and scientific skills
- Select and use appropriate tools and techniques to gather and display data
- Measure in both U.S. Customary and International Systems of measurement
- Explain the difference between observation and inference
- Demonstrate proper lab safety procedures
- Compare and contrast a law, theory and hypothesis
- Identify systems
- Read and follow technical instructions
Unit: Earth’s Systems
Understand:
- The earth is a dynamic system undergoing constant change.
- We develop theories to explain how the earth system works based on evidence.
- Rocks and minerals are nonrenewable resources that move through a cycle.
- Nonliving things can be classified based on their defining characteristics
Know:
- The layers of the earth
- The Theory of Plate Tectonics
- How the ocean floors are effected by plate tectonics
- The causes of earthquakes
- How volcanoes and islands are formed
- The stages of the Rock Cycle
- The classification of rocks
- The properties of igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks
Be able to:
- Classify and sort rocks
- Compare/contrast and define types of rocks
- Record characteristics to determine types of rocks
- Diagram rock cycle
- Interpret information from tables, graphs, maps, and charts
- Observe, illustrate, discuss, describe, and interpret changes in earth’s systems
- Create models and maps to study changes in earth’s systems
- Read and follow technical directions
- Identify the differences between renewable and non-renewable resources
Unit: Biology of Living Systems
Understand:
- Cells are the basic units of all living organisms. Some organisms are made of one cell while others are made up of systems of cells.
- Cell characteristics are one of the ways we use to classify things as plants or animals.
- Plants manufacture their own food through the process of photosynthesis which also cycles carbon and oxygen into and out of the atmosphere.
- All living things inherit traits from their parents in a molecule called DNA. Some of those traits are very common while others are rare.
- Species evolve traits to help them survive
Know:
- The cell is the basic living unit of all organisms.
- The parts and function of an animal cell.
- The parts and function of a plant cell.
- The structural differences between plants and animal cells
- That plant convert energy from the sun through photosynthesis.
- Photosynthesis recycles oxygen and carbon
- Cells organized into systems
- The plant systems required to accomplish photosynthesis
- The definition of an inherited trait.
- Common traits
- How traits are passed
- How traits can enhance an organisms survival
Be able to:
- Use microscopes to observe cells
- Compare and contrast the structural differences between plant and animal cells
- Model plant and animal cells.
- Explain how plants convert energy from the sun through photosynthesis
- Diagram the process of photosynthesis.
- Explain the concept that traits are passed from parents to offspring
- List several inherited traits.
- Describe how traits can help an organism survive
Unit: The Structure of Matter
Understand:
- The Atom is the basic unit of matter and can be classified on the periodic table according to its properties.
- Two or more atoms can chemically combine to make compounds.
- A chemical change results in a change in the characteristics of the matter. Physical change causes only a change in the appearance of the matter.
- Matter changes state when the energy is added or removed.
Know:
- Atoms are the basic unit of matter
- What elements are
- What system we use to classify elements (periodic table)
- What a molecule and compound are
- The difference between a mixture and solution
- The physical and chemical properties of matter
- The difference between a physical and chemical change
- That matter is conserved during any change
- The states of matter
- The relative position of the atoms in any state
- That energy is required to change the state of matter
Be able to:
- Create a model of an atom identifying components and charge
- Explain how we classify atoms
- Compare and contrast mixtures and solutions
- Differentiate between physical and chemical changes
- Diagram the relative position of atoms / molecules in the 3 states of matter
- Observe and record changes in matter
- Create and interpret tables and charts
- Describe the difference among elements, compounds, and mixtures
- Create a model or diagram of an element, a compound, and a mixture
- Describe the form of a matter in its solid, liquid, and gaseous state