Posts tagged Science
4th grade - science

Science

The main focus of our fourth grade science curriculum is in providing opportunities for students to engage in and understand science practices, explore issues related to engineering practices, as well as the use of natural resources. Students apply what they know as they complete hands-on activities, which helps strengthen current understanding and promotes new knowledge of the world around us. While actively participating in scientific investigations, students observe objects and events, think about how they relate to what is already known, test their ideas in logical ways, analyze outcomes, and generate explanations that describe what, why, and how a certain result occurred.

  • Students will learn skills that allow for successful inquiry and explanation.

  • Students will review the steps of the scientific method.

  • Students will design and carry out experiments that provide opportunities to make clear observations, infer and make connections with what is happening, as well as classify, measure, analyze and evaluate data.

  • Students will learn the importance of organizing information through the use of science notebooks where students document what they experience, any data they collect, and their thinking during the activity.

Our science instruction is broken down into two main modules, Energy and Environments.

During our Energy module, students explore electricity, learn about circuits, discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each, and understand which materials conduct electricity. Students demonstrate their knowledge of these concepts through assessment and project-based learning opportunities, such as designing and constructing their own flashlight. A second topic introduced during this unit is magnetism and electromagnets. Through testing compasses, exploring the strength of magnetic attraction, creating visual magnetic fields, and building electromagnets and generators, students discover the phenomenon of magnets and interactions they have with materials and each other. Our final focus of this unit is energy transfer. Students observe and analyze data to determine how one form of energy can be transferred to another and document evidence seen that supports their ideas. Through well designed investigations, students discover what happens to energy when two objects collide, how variables affect one another, and use controlled experiments involving the transfer of potential energy into kinetic energy to test how mass and release position affect energy transfer.

The second module introduced in fourth grade is Environments. This module focuses on the way animals and plants interact with their environment and with each other. The driving question for the module deals with structure and function. Students design investigations to study environments, range of tolerance, and optimum conditions for growth and survival of specific organisms. Students conduct controlled experiments by incrementally changing specific environmental conditions and use data collected to develop and use models to understand the impact of changes to the environment. Students explore how animals use their sense of hearing and develop models for detecting and interpreting sound. They graph and interpret data from multiple experiments and develop explanations from evidence. Students gain experiences that will contribute to the understanding of patterns, cause and effect, system models, energy and matter, structure and function, and stability and change.

While participating in active investigations, online activities, outdoor experiences, and formative and benchmark assessments, students practice teamwork and interdependence, problem-solving skills, critical thinking, and applied understanding of past concepts to generate new hypotheses and conclusions. Our learning environment allows students to work and think like scientists and engineers.

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3rd grade - science

Science

Third grade students will study three science domains over the course of the year: Life Science, Earth and Space Science, and Physical Science.

  • Students will learn to define a simple design problem that can be solved by applying scientific ideas about magnets.

  • Students will determine cause and effect relationships of electric or magnetic interactions between two objects.

  • Students will study life cycles, plant and animal traits, how animals’ habitats help them to survive, and environmental changes to habitats.

  • Students will study seasonal weather conditions, climates of different regions of the world, and the impact of weather-related hazards.

  • Students will learn about the effects of balanced and unbalanced forces on the motion of an object and analyze patterns to predict future motion.

  • Students will learn to determine and describe the climate and vegetation of the various regions in the USA, Canada, Mexico and Caribbean.

  • Students will learn to identify natural resources in these biomes and apply knowledge to a culminating end-of-year science project.

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2nd grade - science

Science

Students will be exposed to examples for each category: Earth Science, Life Science, and Physical Science,

  • Students will learn to discover the world around them as they test predictions through creative thinking.

  • Students will learn to explore energy changes through motion and movement, energy in the form of sound and light, the significant impact of water and climate, the roles of plants and animals in their environment, and the structure of life in an ecosystem.

  • Students will learn how energy can be changed through motion and movement. Students will learn to recognize forces at work.

  • Students will understand the roles that plants and animals play in their environment and they will recognize the structures of life.

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1st grade - science

Science

Greene School students learn to research, compare and contrast, problem solve, and persevere throughout our thematic units of study. Students learn to work collaboratively with their peers and are encouraged to ask questions and research their answers. Field experiences to the Palm Beach Zoo and the South Florida Science Museum are provided and expert guest speakers support the class curriculum.

During our Human Body and Anatomy unit:

  • Students will learn about major organs, as well as the various systems that the organs are located in.

  • Students will learn the importance of each organ, nutrition, and how each system works together to help keep our body healthy.

  • Students will research, write, and present specific body parts to the class.

  • Students will complete a model of the human body.

In our Solar System unit:

  • Students will learn about the various planets, and their location in space, the moon, and how humans successfully visit space.

  • Students choose an area of interest to research further and present to the class.

In our Animal Classifications and Habitats unit:

  • Students will learn the six different animal groups, and the various characteristics that make up each animal classification.

  • Students will learn the habitats, and environmental needs of various animals.

  • Students will compare and contrast animals to humans.

The Dinosaur Era unit:

  • Students will research and learn about the dinosaurs that once roamed our Earth.

  • Students will learn about omnivores, herbivores, and carnivores, as well as why and how dinosaurs became extinct.

  • Students will create a powerpoint of their chosen dinosaur, as well as a diorama depicting a scene of their dinosaur in its environment.

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kindergarten - science

Science

Kindergarten scientists learn through questioning, exploring, doing, and utilizing their natural curiosity.

  • Students will actively conduct investigations, share ideas with peers, and record data in their science journals.

  • Students will learn about science tools and the science journal.

  • Students will learn to accurately record their assignments and findings in the journal.

  • Students will explore daily with science tools and materials (such as magnifying lenses, construction materials, and magnets).

Units covered in science include:

  • Life Cycles

  • Plants and Animals

  • Weather

  • Engineering and Design

  • Magnetism

  • Forces and Motion

  • Properties of Matter

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early childhood - science

Science

Early childhood science includes experiments, discussion, crafts, and exploration. Our students take part in hands-on activities for each concept that is introduced.

Units include:

  • Trees

  • Science Tools

  • The Plant Cycle

  • Seasons and Weather

  • The Five Senses

  • Animals and Their Habitats

  • Nutrition

  • Our Environment

Within each unit, students brainstorm things they already know and things they want to know. Lessons stimulate interests, and activities are planned around student curiosities.

  • Students will learn to answer questions through thoughtful and meaningful exploration.

  • Students will participate in planting and maintaining a garden.

  • Students will learn to recognize and use their senses.

  • Students will learn to research animals around the world.

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