District 11 Division of Operations & Instruction
Science



 

Grade 5: Overview of the Year

Overview
Topics in fifth grade science focus on learning critical science skills and include units on Ecosystems, Landforms, Levers and Pulleys, and Variables. Each unit includes hands-on, minds-on, research-based kits that give students opportunities to "do science" while learning science vocabulary, concepts and skills. Each unit equips students to improve their reading and writing skills with reading resources designed for a range of reading abilities. Science Kits are shared across the district, so students will follow the curriculum scheduled for their particular school. Although the order may differ, all students will receive instruction on the topics listed on the menu to the right.

Building Successful Foundations in Science - Elementary science integrates and organizes student scientific knowledge through a foundation made up of 'Bricks" of Big Ideas put together with the "Mortar" of Unifying Concepts.

Enduring Understandings - important ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the instruction received this year.

  • Constancy and Change: Although most things are in the process of changing, some properties remain constant (i.e. the speed of light). (Earth/Space Science)
  • An ecosystem is a community of organisms that interact with each other and the environment. Humans may affect ecosystems in many ways. (Earth/Space Science)
  • Change takes place over time. Patterns of interaction and change are useful in explaining landforms. (Earth/Space Science)
  • Interdependence: Living things interact with one another and their environment for existence and balance. (Life Science)
  • An ecosystem is a community of organisms that interact with each other and the environment.  Humans may affect ecosystems in many ways. (Life Science)
  • Order and Organization of Systems: A system consists of components/parts that interact. (Physical Science)
  • Levers and Pulleys are simple machine systems that can provide a mechanical advantage. (Physical Science)

Essential Questions - most important “big picture” questions students should be able to answer after completing learning activities.

  • What common vocabulary should be used when conducting an investigation? Why are predictions an important part of the scientific process? How can we make better predictions? Why should we follow a plan when conducting an investigation? What tools are available and how can they be used to gather data when conducting an investigation? How does data help us explain our investigation? What are some of the ways we can collect data? How can we communicate the results of our investigation to others? How can a plan be written to allow someone else to follow the directions? How can we make sure our data is accurate? How can we visually represent data? How can errors in data be discovered? What are the components of a graph? How does data help us make better predictions? How can models be used to help explain/study science? What tools are available to help gather data? When are these tools used?
  • What is an ecosystem? What are the living/nonliving parts of an ecosystem? How do terrarium organisms differ from aquarium organisms? How do specific characteristics help an organism survive? What is necessary for organisms to survive within a system? What adaptations do specific organisms have to allow it to live in their environment? What is the ecosystem represented by the eco-column? How are the plants needs met in an ecosystem? What kinds of organisms are in an ecosystem? Who consumes whom? How is the energy transferred within an ecosystem? What is the relationship between consumers and producers in an ecosystem? What are the stages in the life cycle of a mosquito fish and seed and how are they affected by non-living factors?
  • What are some of the major features of the Earth's surface? How is water essential to living things and in what ways does water affect the shape of land? How would a flood affect a human developed area?
  • What are some different simple machines? How can a lever and pulley make work easier and how much effort is needed to lift the load? Which lever/pulley system gives the greatest advantage? What are the parts of a lever system? How can a lever system be changed? What is effort and how does it apply to simple machines? How many ways can lever and pulley systems be assembled? How might you utilize a simple machine to create a device to solve a problem?
  • How has technology changed our lives? What are some careers that involve science and technology?
  • Why are safety procedures important?

Standards 

Highest Frequency Standards  High Frequency Standards  Other Standards & E-skills


 

Standard 1: Students apply the process of scientific investigation and design, conduct, communicate about, and evaluate such investigations.
Standard 1 Benchmarks:     Grades 3-5 
1. design, plan and conduct a variety of simple investigations (for example: formulate a testable question, state a hypothesis, make systematic observations, develop and communicate logical conclusions based on evidence
2. select and use appropriate tools and technology to gather and display ( for example: graphs, charts, diagrams ) quantitative and qualitative data related to an investigation (for example: length, volume, and mass measuring instruments, thermometers, watches, magnifiers, microscopes, calculators, and computers)
  
Standard 2: Physical Science: Student know and understand common properties, forms, and changes in matter and energy. (Focus: Physics and Chemistry)
Standard 2 Benchmarks:     Grades 3-5
1.  objects have physical properties that can be measured (for example: length, mass, volume and temperature)
2.  measurable physical properties can be compared before and after effecting a change to verify a change has occurred and used to predict its outcome in similar circumstances
3.  matter is made up of parts that are too small to be seen 
4.  matter exists in physical states (solid, liquid, gas) and can change from one state to another
5.  there are different types and sources of energy ( for example: light, heat, motion) 
6.  electricity in circuits can produce light, heat, sound and magnetic effects
7.  there are different types of forces (for example: gravity and magnetism)
8.  changes in speed or direction of motion are caused by forces


Standard 3:
Life Science: Students know and understand the characteristics and structure of living things, the processes of life, and how living things interact with each other and their environment. (Focus: Biology – anatomy, Physiology, Botany, Zoology, Ecology)
Standard 3 Benchmarks:     Grades 3-5
1.  each plant or animal has different structures and behaviors that serve different functions in growth, survival, and reproduction
2.  green plants need energy from sunlight and various raw materials to live, and animals consume plants and other organisms to live 
3.  human body systems have basic structures, functions and needs (for example:  digestive, respiratory, circulatory, skeletal, muscular)
4.  there is interaction and interdependence between and among nonliving and living components of ecosystems ( for example: food webs, symbiotic and parasitic relationships, dependence on rainfall, pollination)
5.  life cycles vary from organism to organism (for example: frog, chicken, butterfly, radish, bean plant)
6.  fossils can be compared to one another and to living organisms according to their similarities and differences
7.  there are similarities and differences in appearance among individual organisms ( for example: plants vs. animals, vertebrate vs. invertebrate )


Standard 4:
Earth and Space Science: Students know and understand the processes and interactions of Earth’s systems and the structure and dynamics of Earth and other objects in space. (Focus: Geology, Meteorology, Astronomy, Oceanography)
Standard 4 Benchmarks:
    Grades 3-5
1.  fossils are evidence of past life 
2.  natural processes change Earth's surface (for example: weathering, erosion, mountain building, volcanic activity, earthquakes and floods)
3.  many of the Earth’s resources can be conserved, recycled and depleted
4.  weather is different from climate 
5.  most of the Earth’s surface is covered by water, that most of the water is salt water in the oceans, and that fresh water is found in rivers, lakes, underground sources and glaciers 
6.  water exists on Earth in different states (solid, liquid, gas) and changes from one state to another (for example: evaporation, condensation and precipitation) 
7.  there are basic components of the solar system  (for example: Sun, planets, moons)
8.  the Earth and Sun provide a diversity of resources (for example: soils, fuels, minerals, medicines and food)
9.  the rotation of the Earth on its axis, in relation to the Sun, produces the day-and-night cycle and the orbit of the Earth around the Sun completes one year  


Standard 5:
Students understand that the nature of science involves a particular way of building knowledge and making meaning of the natural world.
Standard 5 Benchmarks:
    Grades 3-5
1.  when a science experiment is repeated with the same conditions, the experiment generally works the same
2.  models are used to represent events and objects (for example: comparing a map of the school to the actual school; a model of the Earth to the Earth itself )  

Sample Units

District 11 Diamond Units/Lessons Overview - includes information about the purpose, goals and structure of these sample instructional units:

Units Science Leveled Readers With Audio
Ecosystems Unit Earth's Ecosystems  Earth's Natural Resources  Earth's Water  Changes on Earth Follow a Raindrop  Follow a River  Ecosystem Changes  Changes in Ecosystems
Landforms Unit Earth's Cycles  Changing Surface of the Earth  Fossil Detectives  Changes to Earth's Surface     Earth's Changing Surface
Levers and Pulleys Unit  
Variables Unit (Optional Unit)  

Science Leveled Readers Complete Library in online audio format

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