SCIENCE AS INQUIRY
Develop students’ abilities to do and understand
scientific inquiry.
- Design and conduct scientific investigations.
- Use appropriate tools and techniques to gather,
analyze, and interpret data.
- Develop descriptions, explanations, predictions,
and models using evidence.
- Think critically and logically to make the connections
between evidence and explanations.
- Communicate scientific procedures and explanations.
- Use mathematics in scientific inquiry.
- Understand that different kinds of questions suggest
different kinds of scientific investigations; current
knowledge guides scientific investigations; mathematics
and technology are important scientific tools.
- Understand that scientific explanations emphasize
evidence.
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CONTENT: PHYSICAL
SCIENCE
Develop students’ understanding of motions and
forces.
- The motion of an object can be described by its
position, direction of motion, and speed. Motion can
be measured and represented on a graph.
- An object that is not being subjected to a (net)
force will continue to move at a constant speed.
- If more than one force acts on an object along
a straight line, then the forces will reinforce or
cancel one another, depending on their direction and
magnitude. Unbalanced forces will change the speed
or direction of an object’s motion.
HISTORY AND NATURE OF SCIENCE
Develop students’ understanding of the nature
of scientific inquiry and appreciation of the history
of science.
- Scientists formulate and test their explanations
of nature, using observation, experiments, and theoretical
and mathematical models. Although all scientific ideas
are tentative and subject to change and improvement
in principle, for most major ideas in science, there
is much experimental and observational confirmation.
Those ideas are not likely to change greatly in the
future.
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