Capstone U 3
Capstone U 3
Capstone U 3
Plan and conduct an investigation of the properties of water and its effects on Earth materials and surface processes. [Clarification Statement: Emphasis is on
mechanical and chemical investigations with water and a variety of solid materials to provide the evidence for connections between the hydrologic cycle and system
interactions commonly known as the rock cycle. Examples of mechanical investigations include stream transportation and deposition using a stream table, erosion
using variations in soil moisture content, or frost wedging by the expansion of water as it freezes. Examples of chemical investigations include chemical weathering
and recrystallization (by testing the solubility of different materials) or melt generation (by examining how water lowers the melting temperature of most solids).] (HS-
ESS2-5)
Develop a quantitative model to describe the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere. [Clarification Statement:
Emphasis is on modeling biogeochemical cycles that include the cycling of carbon through the ocean, atmosphere, soil, and biosphere (including humans), providing
the foundation for living organisms.] (HS-ESS2-6)
Construct an argument based on evidence about the simultaneous co-evolution of Earth's systems and life on Earth. [Clarification Statement: Emphasis is on the
dynamic causes, effects, and feedbacks between the biosphere and Earth’s other systems, whereby geoscience factors control the evolution of life, which in turn
continuously alters Earth’s surface. Examples of include how photosynthetic life altered the atmosphere through the production of oxygen, which in turn increased
weathering rates and allowed for the evolution of animal life; how microbial life on land increased the formation of soil, which in turn allowed for the evolution of land
plants; or how the evolution of corals created reefs that altered patterns of erosion and deposition along coastlines and provided habitats for the evolution of new life
forms.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment does not include a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms of how the biosphere interacts with all of Earth’s
other systems.] (HS-ESS2-7)
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Quick Links
Part B: How do the properties and movements of water shape Earth's surface and affect its systems?
The abundance of liquid water on Earth's surface and its unique combination Students who understand the concepts are able to:
of physical and chemical properties are central to the planet's dynamics.
Plan and conduct an investigation of the properties of water and its effects
The properties include water's exceptional capacity to absorb, store, and on Earth materials and surface processes.
release large amounts of energy; transmit sunlight; expand upon freezing,
dissolve and transport materials; and lower the viscosities and melting points
of rocks.
Part C: How does carbon cycle among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere?
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Gradual atmospheric changes were due to plants and other organisms that Students who understand the concepts are able to:
captured carbon dioxide and released oxygen.
Develop a model based on evidence to describe the cycling of carbon among
Changes in the atmosphere due to human activity have increased carbon the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere.
dioxide concentrations and thus affect climate.
Develop a model based on evidence to illustrate the biogeochemical cycles
The total amount of energy and matter in closed systems is conserved. that include the cycling of carbon through the ocean, atmosphere, soil, and
biosphere, providing the foundation for living organisms.
The total amount of carbon cycling among and between the hydrosphere,
atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere is conserved.
The many dynamic and delicate feedbacks between the biosphere and other Students who understand the concepts are able to:
Earth systems cause a continual co-evolution of Earth's surface and the life
Construct an argument based on evidence about the simultaneous co-
that exists on it.
evolution of Earth's systems and life on Earth.
After students have an understanding of the structure and formation of Earth’s surface, they examine how changes to Earth’s surface create feedback. Students also
consider what changes to other Earth systems are caused by that feedback. Students analyze data, using tools, technologies, and models to make claims about
relationships between changes to Earth’s surface and feedback. Students examine data from the Earth’s weather patterns to model how some weather patterns and
Earth events are related to the use of natural resources. Examples of feedback include how an increase in greenhouse gases causes a rise in global temperatures that
melts glacial ice, thus reducing the amount of sunlight reflected from Earth’s surface, which in turn increases surface temperatures and further reduces the amount
of ice. Other system interactions include how the loss of ground vegetation causes an increase in water runoff and soil erosion, how dammed rivers increase
groundwater recharge, decrease sediment transport, and increase coastal erosion, or how the loss of wetlands causes a decrease in local humidity that further
reduces the wetlands’ extent. Students then provide and explain examples (such as CO 2 emissions, ozone depletion, changing weather patterns, etc.) of the negative
and positive feedback that can stabilize and destabilize the environment. Students cite examples of new technologies (such as gasoline cars, hydrogen-fuel-cell cars,
biofuel cars, solar power, alternative energy, etc.) and consider their impacts on society and the environment. Students also consider the inorganic carbon cycle and
geologic processes. For example, climate feedback could be modeled by understanding relationships between sediments containing carbon (calcium carbonate made
by marine organisms) on the seafloor in subduction zones and carbon dioxide released through volcanoes.
Students actively explore the properties of water and its effects on Earth materials and surface properties by planning and conducting investigations. Initially they
identify evidence needed to answer a question related to the properties of water and its effects on Earth materials and surface properties. The evidence may be
related to the properties, such as heat capacity of water, density of water in its liquid and solid states, and the polar nature of a water molecule due to its molecular
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structure. The evidence may be related to the effect of the properties of water on energy transfer that causes patterns of temperature, the movement of air, the
movement and availability of water at Earth's surface. The evidence may be related to mechanical effects of water on Earth's materials that can be used to infer the
effect of water on Earth's surface properties. Some examples include stream transportation and deposition, erosion using variations in soil moisture content, and
expansion of water as it freezes. Finally, the evidence may be related to the chemical effects of water on Earth materials that can be used to infer the effect of water
on Earth's surface processes. This may include the properties of solubility, the reaction of water on iron, and the properties of water that lower the melting
temperature of most solids, and decreases the viscosity of melted rock. Next, students plan out their investigation to align their data collection methods with the
evidence they are seeking. For example, they may decide to investigate the mechanical nature of running water on sediment transport and deposition by changing
the slope of a stream table. Once their protocol has been designed, they run their investigation and collect data. They analyze and interpret the data, and if
necessary, they modify the protocol and run the investigation again.
Students will continue their study of Earth’s systems by examining the history of the atmosphere. Students should research the early atmospheric components and
the changes that occurred due to plants and other organisms removing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen. By studying the carbon cycle, students should revisit the
idea that matter and energy within a closed system are conserved among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere. Students should extend their
understanding of how human activity affects the concentration of carbon dioxide in the environment and therefore climate. Students’ experiences should include
synthesizing information from multiple sources and developing quantitative models based on evidence to describe the cycling of carbon among the ocean,
atmosphere, soil, and biosphere. Students should understand how biogeochemical cycles provide the foundation for living organisms. Once again, students might use
a jigsaw activity to illustrate the relationships between these systems.
Since the Earth formed there has been a co-evolution of Earth's systems and life on Earth. Students explore multiple lines of evidence found in scientific research
papers that support this claim, such as the scientific explanations about the composition of the Earth's atmosphere shortly after its formation; current atmospheric
composition; evidence for the emergence of photosynthetic organisms; evidence of the effect of the presence of free oxygen on evolution and processes in the other
Earth systems; and other evidence that changes in the biosphere affect Earth systems. Students might use a jigsaw activity to explore selected research papers.
While reading these papers students identify the methods employed by the scientists, and interpret the data and data visualizations provided in the papers. From
this, they evaluate and critique the claims by the scientists. After investigating a variety of research papers, students select at least two examples to construct oral
and written logical arguments about the evolution of photosynthetic organisms led to drastic changes in Earth's atmosphere and oceans in which the free oxygen
produced caused worldwide deposition of iron oxide formations, increased weathering due to an oxidizing atmosphere and the evolution of animal life that depends
on oxygen for respiration; or identify causal links and feedback mechanisms between changes in the biosphere and changes in Earth's other systems.
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Mathematics
Reason abstractly and quantitatively while considering feedbacks in the Earth system, such as the feedback created from increased levels of carbon dioxide on
global temperature by correlating atmospheric carbon dioxide data and temperature data.
Use units as a way to understand problems and to guide the solution of multi-step problems related to Earth system feedbacks; choose and interpret units
consistently in formulas; choose and interpret the scale and the origin in graphs and data displays.
Choose a level of accuracy appropriate to limitations on measurement when reporting quantities when exploring Earth system feedbacks or the effects of water
on Earth systems materials and processes.
Represent symbolically the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere, and manipulate the representing symbols. Make
sense of quantities and relationships in the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere.
Use a mathematical model to describe the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere. Identify important quantities in the
cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere and map their relationships using tools. Analyze those relationships
mathematically to draw conclusions, reflecting on the results and improving the model if it has not served its purpose.
Use units as a way to understand the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere; choose and interpret units consistently
in formulas representing the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere; choose and interpret the scale and the origin in
graphs and data displays representing the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere.
Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling of the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere.
Choose a level of accuracy appropriate to limitations on measurement when reporting quantities showing the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere,
atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere.
Modifications
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(Note: Teachers identify the modifications that they will use in the unit. See NGSS Appendix D: All Standards, All Students/Case Studies for vignettes and explanations
of the modifications.)
Structure lessons around questions that are authentic, relate to students’ interests, social/family background and knowledge of their community.
Provide students with multiple choices for how they can represent their understandings (e.g. multisensory techniques-auditory/visual aids; pictures, illustrations,
graphs, charts, data tables, multimedia, modeling).
Provide opportunities for students to connect with people of similar backgrounds (e.g. conversations via digital tool such as SKYPE, experts from the community
helping with a project, journal articles, and biographies).
Provide multiple grouping opportunities for students to share their ideas and to encourage work among various backgrounds and cultures (e.g. multiple
representation and multimodal experiences).
Engage students with a variety of Science and Engineering practices to provide students with multiple entry points and multiple ways to demonstrate their
understandings.
Use project-based science learning to connect science with observable phenomena.
Structure the learning around explaining or solving a social or community-based issue.
Provide ELL students with multiple literacy strategies.
Collaborate with after-school programs or clubs to extend learning opportunities.
Restructure lesson using UDL principals (http://www.cast.org/our-work/about-udl.html#.VXmoXcfD_UA).
Prior Learning
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Physical science
Substances are made from different types of atoms, which combine with one another in various ways. Atoms form molecules that range in size from two to
thousands of atoms.
Each pure substance has characteristic physical and chemical properties (for any bulk quantity under given conditions) that can be used to identify it.
Gases and liquids are made of molecules or inert atoms that are moving about relative to each other.
In a liquid, the molecules are constantly in contact with others; in a gas, they are widely spaced except when they happen to collide. In a solid, atoms are closely
spaced and may vibrate in position but do not change relative locations.
Solids may be formed from molecules, or they may be extended structures with repeating subunits (e.g., crystals).
The changes of state that occur with variations in temperature or pressure can be described and predicted using these models of matter.
When the motion energy of an object changes, there is inevitably some other change in energy at the same time.
The amount of energy transfer needed to change the temperature of a matter sample by a given amount depends on the nature of the matter, the size of the
sample, and the environment.
Energy is spontaneously transferred out of hotter regions or objects and into colder ones.
When light shines on an object, it is reflected, absorbed, or transmitted through the object, depending on the object’s material and the frequency (color) of the
light.
The path that light travels can be traced as straight lines, except at surfaces between different transparent materials (e.g., air and water, air and glass) where the
light path bends.
A wave model of light is useful for explaining brightness, color, and the frequency-dependent bending of light at a surface between media.
However, because light can travel through space, it cannot be a matter wave, like sound or water waves.
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Life science
Organisms, and populations of organisms, are dependent on their environmental interactions both with other living things and with nonliving factors.
In any ecosystem, organisms and populations with similar requirements for food, water, oxygen, or other resources may compete with each other for limited
resources, access to which consequently constrains their growth and reproduction. Growth of organisms and population increases are limited by access to
resources.
Similarly, predatory interactions may reduce the number of organisms or eliminate whole populations of organisms. Mutually beneficial interactions, in contrast,
may become so interdependent that each organism requires the other for survival. Although the species involved in these competitive, predatory, and mutually
beneficial interactions vary across ecosystems, the patterns of interactions of organisms with their environments, both living and nonliving, are shared.
Food webs are models that demonstrate how matter and energy is transferred between producers, consumers, and decomposers as the three groups interact
within an ecosystem. Transfers of matter into and out of the physical environment occur at every level. Decomposers recycle nutrients from dead plant or animal
matter back to the soil in terrestrial environments or to the water in aquatic environments. The atoms that make up the organisms in an ecosystem are cycled
repeatedly between the living and nonliving parts of the ecosystem.
Ecosystems are dynamic in nature; their characteristics can vary over time. Disruptions to any physical or biological component of an ecosystem can lead to shifts
in all its populations.
Biodiversity describes the variety of species found in Earth’s terrestrial and oceanic ecosystems. The completeness or integrity of an ecosystem’s biodiversity is
often used as a measure of its health.
The collection of fossils and their placement in chronological order (e.g., through the location of the sedimentary layers in which they are found or through
radioactive dating) is known as the fossil record. It documents the existence, diversity, extinction, and change of many life forms throughout the history of life on
Earth.
Anatomical similarities and differences between various organisms living today and between them and organisms in the fossil record, enable the reconstruction
of evolutionary history and the inference of lines of evolutionary descent.
Comparison of the embryological development of different species also reveals similarities that show relationships not evident in the fully-formed anatomy.
Natural selection leads to the predominance of certain traits in a population, and the suppression of others.
In artificial selection, humans have the capacity to influence certain characteristics of organisms by selective breeding. One can choose desired parental traits
determined by genes, which are then passed on to offspring.
Adaptation by natural selection acting over generations is one important process by which species change over time in response to changes in environmental
conditions. Traits that support successful survival and reproduction in the new environment become more common; those that do not become less common.
Thus, the distribution of traits in a population changes.
Earth and space science
Tectonic processes continually generate new ocean sea floor at ridges and destroy old sea floor at trenches.
All Earth processes are the result of energy flowing and matter cycling within and among the planet’s systems. This energy is derived from the sun and Earth’s hot
interior. The energy that flows and matter that cycles produce chemical and physical changes in Earth’s materials and living organisms.
The planet’s systems interact over scales that range from microscopic to global in size, and they operate over fractions of a second to billions of years. These
interactions have shaped Earth’s history and will determine its future.
Maps of ancient land and water patterns, based on investigations of rocks and fossils, make clear how Earth’s plates have moved great distances, collided, and
spread apart.
Water continually cycles among land, ocean, and atmosphere via transpiration, evaporation, condensation and crystallization, and precipitation, as well as
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Capstone Science Unit 3: Dynamic Earth Systems (draft 4.7.16) Instructional Days: 25
The fact that atoms are conserved, together with knowledge of the chemical properties of the elements involved, can be used to describe and predict chemical
reactions.
Energy is a quantitative property of a system that depends on the motion and interactions of matter and radiation within that system. That there is a single
quantity called energy is due to the fact that a system’s total energy is conserved, even as, within the system, energy is continually transferred from one object to
another and between its various possible forms.
At the macroscopic scale, energy manifests itself in multiple ways, such as in motion, sound, light, and thermal energy.
These relationships are better understood at the microscopic scale, at which all of the different manifestations of energy can be modeled as a combination of
energy associated with the motion of particles and energy associated with the configuration (relative position of the particles). In some cases the relative position
energy can be thought of as stored in fields (which mediate interactions between particles). This last concept includes radiation, a phenomenon in which energy
stored in fields moves across space.
Conservation of energy means that the total change of energy in any system is always equal to the total energy transferred into or out of the system.
Energy cannot be created or destroyed, but it can be transported from one place to another and transferred between systems.
Mathematical expressions, which quantify how the stored energy in a system depends on its configuration (e.g. relative positions of charged particles,
compression of a spring) and how kinetic energy depends on mass and speed, allow the concept of conservation of energy to be used to predict and describe
system behavior.
The availability of energy limits what can occur in any system.
Uncontrolled systems always evolve toward more stable states—that is, toward more uniform energy distribution (e.g., water flows downhill, objects hotter than
their surrounding environment cool down).
Although energy cannot be destroyed, it can be converted to less useful forms—for example, to thermal energy in the surrounding environment.
Electromagnetic radiation (e.g., radio, microwaves, light) can be modeled as a wave of changing electric and magnetic fields or as particles called photons. The
wave model is useful for explaining many features of electromagnetic radiation, and the particle model explains other features.
When light or longer wavelength electromagnetic radiation is absorbed in matter, it is generally converted into thermal energy (heat). Shorter wavelength
electromagnetic radiation (ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma rays) can ionize atoms and cause damage to living cells.
Life science
The process of photosynthesis converts light energy to stored chemical energy by converting carbon dioxide plus water into sugars plus released oxygen.
The sugar molecules thus formed contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen: their hydrocarbon backbones are used to make amino acids and other carbon-based
molecules that can be assembled into larger molecules (such as proteins or DNA), used for example to form new cells.
As matter and energy flow through different organizational levels of living systems, chemical elements are recombined in different ways to form different
products.
As a result of these chemical reactions, energy is transferred from one system of interacting molecules to another. Cellular respiration is a chemical process in
which the bonds of food molecules and oxygen molecules are broken and new compounds are formed that can transport energy to muscles. Cellular respiration
also releases the energy needed to maintain body temperature despite ongoing energy transfer to the surrounding environment.
Ecosystems have carrying capacities, which are limits to the numbers of organisms and populations they can support. These limits result from such factors as the
availability of living and nonliving resources and from such challenges such as predation, competition, and disease. Organisms would have the capacity to produce
populations of great size were it not for the fact that environments and resources are finite. This fundamental tension affects the abundance (number of
individuals) of species in any given ecosystem.
Photosynthesis and cellular respiration (including anaerobic processes) provide most of the energy for life processes.
Plants or algae form the lowest level of the food web. At each link upward in a food web, only a small fraction of the matter consumed at the lower level is
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transferred upward, to produce growth and release energy in cellular respiration at the higher level. Given this inefficiency, there are generally fewer organisms at
higher levels of a food web. Some matter reacts to release energy for life functions, some matter is stored in newly made structures, and much is discarded. The
chemical elements that make up the molecules of organisms pass through food webs and into and out of the atmosphere and soil, and they are combined and
recombined in different ways. At each link in an ecosystem, matter and energy are conserved.
Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are important components of the carbon cycle, in which carbon is exchanged among the biosphere, atmosphere, oceans,
and geosphere through chemical, physical, geological, and biological processes.
A complex set of interactions within an ecosystem can keep its numbers and types of organisms relatively constant over long periods of time under stable
conditions. If a modest biological or physical disturbance to an ecosystem occurs, it may return to its more or less original status (i.e., the ecosystem is resilient),
as opposed to becoming a very different ecosystem. Extreme fluctuations in conditions or the size of any population, however, can challenge the functioning of
ecosystems in terms of resources and habitat availability.
Moreover, anthropogenic changes (induced by human activity) in the environment—including habitat destruction, pollution, introduction of invasive species,
overexploitation, and climate change—can disrupt an ecosystem and threaten the survival of some species.
Genetic information provides evidence of evolution. DNA sequences vary among species, but there are many overlaps; in fact, the ongoing branching that
produces multiple lines of descent can be inferred by comparing the DNA sequences of different organisms. Such information is also derivable from the similarities
and differences in amino acid sequences and from anatomical and embryological evidence.
Natural selection occurs only if there is both (1) variation in the genetic information between organisms in a population and (2) variation in the expression of that
genetic information—that is, trait variation—that leads to differences in performance among individuals.
The traits that positively affect survival are more likely to be reproduced, and thus are more common in the population. Evolution is a consequence of the
interaction of four factors: (1) the potential for a species to increase in number, (2) the genetic variation of individuals in a species due to mutation and sexual
reproduction, (3) competition for an environment’s limited supply of the resources that individuals need in order to survive and reproduce, and (4) the ensuing
proliferation of those organisms that are better able to survive and reproduce in that environment.
Natural selection leads to adaptation that is, to a population dominated by organisms that are anatomically, behaviorally, and physiologically well suited to survive
and reproduce in a specific environment. That is, the differential survival and reproduction of organisms in a population that have an advantageous heritable trait
leads to an increase in the proportion of individuals in future generations that have the trait and to a decrease in the proportion of individuals that do not.
Adaptation also means that the distribution of traits in a population can change when conditions change.
Changes in the physical environment, whether naturally occurring or human induced, have thus contributed to the expansion of some species, the emergence of
new distinct species as populations diverge under different conditions, and the decline–and sometimes the extinction–of some species.
Species become extinct because they can no longer survive and reproduce in their altered environment. If members cannot adjust to change that is too fast or
drastic, the opportunity for the species’ evolution is lost.
Earth and space science
The sustainability of human societies and the biodiversity that supports them requires responsible management of natural resources.
Scientists and engineers can make major contributions by developing technologies that produce less pollution and waste and that preclude ecosystem
degradation.
Though the magnitudes of human impacts are greater than they have ever been, so too are human abilities to model, predict, and manage current and future
impacts.
Through computer simulations and other studies, important discoveries are still being made about how the ocean, the atmosphere, and the biosphere interact
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and are modified in response to human activities.
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Capstone Science Unit 3: Dynamic Earth Systems (draft 4.7.16) Instructional Days: 25
Plan and conduct an investigation of the properties of water and its effects on Earth materials and surface processes.[Clarification Statement: Emphasis is on
mechanical and chemical investigations with water and a variety of solid materials to provide the evidence for connections between the hydrologic cycle and system
interactions commonly known as the rock cycle. Examples of mechanical investigations include stream transportation and deposition using a stream table, erosion
using variations in soil moisture content, or frost wedging by the expansion of water as it freezes. Examples of chemical investigations include chemical weathering
and recrystallization (by testing the solubility of different materials) or melt generation (by examining how water lowers the melting temperature of most solids).] (HS-
ESS2-5)
Develop a quantitative model to describe the cycling of carbon among the hydrosphere, atmosphere, geosphere, and biosphere. [Clarification Statement:
Emphasis is on modeling biogeochemical cycles that include the cycling of carbon through the ocean, atmosphere, soil, and biosphere (including humans), providing
the foundation for living organisms.] (HS-ESS2-6)
Construct an argument based on evidence about the simultaneous co-evolution of Earth's systems and life on Earth. [Clarification Statement: Emphasis is on the
dynamic causes, effects, and feedbacks between the biosphere and Earth’s other systems, whereby geoscience factors control the evolution of life, which in turn
continuously alters Earth’s surface. Examples of include how photosynthetic life altered the atmosphere through the production of oxygen, which in turn increased
weathering rates and allowed for the evolution of animal life; how microbial life on land increased the formation of soil, which in turn allowed for the evolution of land
plants; or how the evolution of corals created reefs that altered patterns of erosion and deposition along coastlines and provided habitats for the evolution of new life
forms.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment does not include a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms of how the biosphere interacts with all of Earth’s
other systems.] (HS-ESS2-7)
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The Student Learning Objectives above were developed using the following elements from the NRC document A Framework for K-12 Science Education:
Science and Engineering Practices Disciplinary Core Ideas Crosscutting Concepts
Analyzing and Interpreting Data ESS2.A: Earth Materials and Systems Stability and Change
Analyze data using tools, technologies, and/or Earth’s systems, being dynamic and interacting, Change and rates of change can be quantified
models (e.g., computational, mathematical) in cause feedback effects that can increase or and modeled over very short or very long periods
order to make valid and reliable scientific claims decrease the original changes. (HS-ESS2-2.) of time. Some system changes are irreversible.
or determine an optimal design solution. (HS- (HS-ESS2-2)
ESS2.C: The Roles of Water in Earth's Surface
ESS2-2)
Processes Much of science deals with constructing
Planning and Carrying Out Investigations explanations of how things change and how they
The abundance of liquid water on Earth’s
remain stable. (HS-ESS2-7)
Plan and conduct an investigation individually surface and its unique combination of physical
and collaboratively to produce data to serve as and chemical properties are central to the Structure and Function
the basis for evidence, and in the design: decide planet’s dynamics. These properties include
The functions and properties of natural and
on types, how much, and accuracy of data water’s exceptional capacity to absorb, store, and
designed objects and systems can be inferred
needed to produce reliable measurements and release large amounts of energy, transmit
from their overall structure, the way their
consider limitations on the precision of the data sunlight, expand upon freezing, dissolve and
components are shaped and used, and the
(e.g., number of trials, cost, risk, time), and transport materials, and lower the viscosities and
molecular substructures of its various materials.
refine the design accordingly. (HS-ESS2-5) melting points of rocks. (HS-ESS2-5)
(HS-ESS2-5)
Developing and Using Models ESS2.D: Weather and Climate
Energy and Matter
Develop a model based on evidence to The foundation for Earth’s global climate systems
The total amount of energy and matter in
illustrate the relationships between systems or is the electromagnetic radiation from the sun, as
closed systems is conserved. (HS-ESS2-6)
between components of a system. (HS-ESS2-6) well as its reflection, absorption, storage, and
redistribution among the atmosphere, ocean, and - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Engaging in Argument from Evidence
land systems, and this energy’s re-radiation into
Influence of Engineering, Technology, and Science
Construct an oral and written argument or space. (HS-ESS2-2)
on Society and the Natural World
counter-arguments based on data and evidence.
ESS2.D: Weather and Climate
(HS-ESS2-7) New technologies can have deep impacts on
Gradual atmospheric changes were due to society and the environment, including some that
plants and other organisms that captured carbon were not anticipated. Analysis of costs and
dioxide and released oxygen. (HS-ESS2-6),(HS- benefits is a critical aspect of decisions about
ESS2-7) technology. (HS-ESS2-2)
Changes in the atmosphere due to human
activity have increased carbon dioxide
concentrations and thus affect climate. (HS-ESS2-
6)
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ESS2.E Biogeology
The many dynamic and delicate feedbacks
between the biosphere and other Earth systems
cause a continual co-evolution of Earth’s surface
and the life that exists on it. (HS-ESS2-7)
Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of science and technical texts, Reason abstractly and quantitatively. (HS-ESS2-2), (HS-ESS2-6) MP.2
attending to important distinctions the author makes and to any gaps or
Use units as a way to understand problems and to guide the solution of multi-
inconsistencies in the account. (HS-ESS2-2) RST.11-12.1
step problems; choose and interpret units consistently in formulas; choose and
Determine the central ideas or conclusions of a text; summarize complex interpret the scale and the origin in graphs and data displays. (HS-ESS2-2), (HS-
concepts, processes, or information presented in a text by paraphrasing them in ESS2-6) HSN.Q.A.1
simpler but still accurate terms. (HS-ESS2-2) RST.11-12.2
Choose a level of accuracy appropriate to limitations on measurement when
Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects to answer a question reporting quantities. (HS-ESS2-2), (HS-ESS2-5), (HS-ESS2-6) HSN.Q.A.3
(including a self-generated question) or solve a problem; narrow or broaden the
Model with mathematics. (HS-ESS2-6) MP.4
inquiry when appropriate; synthesize multiple sources on the subject,
demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. (HS-ESS2-5) Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling. (HS-ESS2-
WHST.11-12.7 6) HSN.Q.A.2
Write arguments focused on discipline-specific content. (HS-ESS2-7) WHST.9-12.1
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