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Aligned Lessons
Science: Intermediate
Standard 4:
Students will understand and apply scientific concepts, principles, and theories pertaining to the physical setting and living environment and recognize the historical development of ideas in science.
Key Idea Energy and matter interact through forces that result in changes in motion.
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Students describe different patterns of motion of objects.

  PI

Students observe, describe, and compare effects of forces (gravity, electric current, and magnetism) on the motion of objects.

       
Key Idea Energy exists in many forms, and when these forms change energy is conserved.
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Students observe and describe the properties of sound, light, magnetism, and electricity.

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Students describe situations that support the principle of conservation of energy.

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Students observe and describe heating and cooling events.

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Students observe and describe energy changes as related to chemical reactions.

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Students describe the sources and identify the transformations of energy observed in everyday life.

       
Key Idea Many of the phenomena that we observe on Earth involve interactions among components of air, water, and land.
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Students explain how the atmosphere (air), hydrosphere (water), and lithosphere (land) interact, evolve, and change.

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Students describe volcano and earthquake patterns, the rock cycle, and weather and climate changes.

       
Key Idea Matter is made up of particles whose properties determine the observable characteristics of matter and its reactivity.
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Students observe and describe properties of materials, such as density, conductivity, and solubility.

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Students distinguish between chemical and physical changes.

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Students develop their own mental models to explain common chemical reactions and changes in states of matter.

       
Key Idea The Earth and celestial phenomena can be described by principles of relative motion and perspective.
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Students explain daily, monthly, and seasonal changes on earth.

       
Key Idea Human decisions and activities have had a profound impact on the physical and living environment.
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Students describe how living things, including humans, depend upon the living and nonliving environment for their survival.

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Students describe the effects of environmental changes on humans and other populations.

       
Key Idea Individual organisms and species change over time.
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Students describe sources of variation in organisms and their structures and relate the variations to survival.

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Students describe factors responsible for competition within species and the significance of that competition.

       
Key Idea Living things are both similar to and different from each other and nonliving things.
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Students compare and contrast the parts of plants, animals, and one-celled organisms.

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Students explain the functioning of the major human organ systems and their interactions.

       
Key Idea Organisms inherit genetic information in a variety of ways that result in continuity of structure and function between parents and offspring.
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Students describe sexual and asexual mechanisms for passing genetic materials from generation to generation.

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Students describe simple mechanisms related to the inheritance of some physical traits in offspring.

       
Key Idea Organisms maintain a dynamic equilibrium that sustains life.
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Students compare the way a variety of living specimens carry out basic life functions and maintain dynamic equilibrium.

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Students describe the importance of major nutrients, vitamins, and minerals in maintaining health and promoting growth and explain the need for a constant input of energy for living organisms.

       
Key Idea Plants and animals depend on each other and their physical environment.
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Students describe the flow of energy and matter through food chains and food webs.

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Students provide evidence that green plants make food and explain the significance of this process to other organisms.

       
Key Idea The continuity of life is sustained through reproduction and development.
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Students observe and describe the variations in reproductive patterns of organisms, including asexual and sexual reproduction.

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Students explain the role of sperm and egg cells in sexual reproduction.

 
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Students observe and describe developmental patterns in selected plants and animals (e.g., insects, frogs, humans, seed-bearing plants).

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Students observe and describe cell division at the microscopic level and its macroscopic effects.

       
 
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