EAST LONGMEADOW PUBLIC SCHOOLS
2006 - 2007 DISTRICT CURRICULUM GUIDES

Science - Grade 4

Science

The Massachusetts Science and Technology/Engineering Curriculum Framework, December 2000 provides the following preface:

Knowledge, Inquiry, and Experimentation in Science and Technology/Engineering

This framework emphasizes that students learn best when they are directly engaged with thoughtfully selected scientific phenomena and design problems. Through this engagement, students come to understand the integral relationship of scientific inquiry and experimentation to scientific knowledge. The development of scientific knowledge is rooted in theory, investigation, and experimentation; the goal is to extend existing scientific knowledge. A brief look at the purpose of science and technology/engineering education, the nature of these disciplines, and their relationship to learning and curriculum will help illustrate this view.

The purpose of science and technology/engineering education
Investigations in science and technology/engineering involve a range of skills, habits of mind, and subject matter knowledge. The purpose of science and technology/engineering education in Massachusetts is to enable students to draw on these skills, habits, and subject matter knowledge for informed participation in the intellectual and civic life of American society, and for further education in these areas if they seek it.

The nature of science
Science may be described as attempts to give good accounts of the patterns in nature. The result of scientific investigation is an understanding of natural processes. Scientific explanations are always subject to change in the face of new evidence. Ideas with the most durable explanatory power become established theories or are codified as laws of nature. Overall, the key criterion of science is that it is a clear, rational, and succinct account of a pattern in nature. This account must be based on evidence, reflect inferences that are broadly shared and communicated, and be accompanied by a model that offers a naturalistic explanation expressed in conceptual, mathematical, and/or mechanical terms. Here are some everyday examples of patterns seen in nature:
- The sun appears to move each day from the eastern horizon to the western horizon.
- Virtually all objects released near the surface of the earth sooner or later fall to the ground.
- Parents and their offspring are similar, e.g., lobsters produce lobsters, not cats.
- Green is the predominant color of most plants.
- Some objects float while others sink.
- Fire yields heat.
- Weather in North America generally moves from west to east.
- Many organisms that once inhabited the earth no longer do so.

It is beyond the scope of this document to examine the scientific accounts of these patterns. Some are well known, such as that the rotation of the earth on its axis gives rise to the apparent travel of the sun across the sky, or that fire is a transfer of energy from one form to another. Others, like buoyancy or the cause of extinction, require subtle and sometimes complex accounts. These patterns, and many others, are the puzzles that scientists attempt to explain.

The nature of technology/engineering
Technology/engineering seeks different ends from those of science. Engineering strives to design and manufacture useful devices or materials, defined as technologies, whose purpose is to increase our efficacy in the world and/or our enjoyment of it. Can openers are technology, as are the microwave, microchip, steam engine, camcorder, safety glass, zippers, polyurethane, the Golden Gate Bridge, much of Disney World, and the Big Dig. Each of these, and innumerable other examples of technology/engineering, emerges from the scientific knowledge, imagination, persistence, talent, and ingenuity of its practitioners. Each technology represents a designed solution, usually created in response to a specific practical problem. As with science, direct engagement with the phenomena in question is central to the definition of these problems and their successful solution.

The relationship between science and technology/engineering
In spite of their different ends, science and technology have become closely, even inextricably, related in many fields. The instruments that scientists use, such as the microscope, balance, and chronometer, result from technology/engineering. In return, scientific ideas, such as the laws of motion, the relationship between electricity and magnetism, the atomic model, and the model of DNA, have contributed to improvement of the internal combustion engine, power transformers, nuclear power, and human gene therapy. In some of the most sophisticated efforts of scientists and engineers, the boundaries are so blurred that the designed device allows us to discern heretofore unnoticed natural patterns while the accounting for those patterns makes it possible to continue to develop the device. In these instances, scientists and engineers are engaged together in extending knowledge.

Knowledge, inquiry, experimentation, and learning
Asking questions is a key to learning in all academic disciplines. There are multiple ways that students can pursue questions in the science class. One way is to explore scientific phenomena in the laboratory or the field. Classroom investigation and experimentation can build essential scientific skills such as observing, measuring, replicating experiments, manipulating equipment, and collecting and reporting data. They can show that the practice of science is tentative, interactive, and surprising. Students may sometimes choose what phenomenon to study, e.g., science fair projects. More often, they conduct investigations and experiments that are selected and guided by the teacher.

Students can also explore the questions pursued by scientists in their investigations of natural phenomena and processes as reported or shown in texts, papers, videos, the internet, and other media. These sources are valuable because they efficiently organize and highlight the key concepts and supporting evidence that characterize the most important work in science. Such study can then be supported in the classroom by demonstrations, experiments, or simulations that deliberately manage features of a natural object or process. Whatever the instructional approach, science instruction should include both concrete and manipulable materials and exploratory diagrams and texts.

This document is designed to provide guidance as to what science content should be learned at each grade span. Therefore, schools and teachers must thoughtfully scope, sequence, and coordinate school and district curricula.


Research and Inquiry

    Characteristics of objects
The learner will be able to use characteristics to group objects into groups based on shared properties.
Strand Scope Source
Observations Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Make predictions
The learner will be able to ask questions and make predictions about the natural world that can be tested.
Strand Scope Source
Investigations Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Planning investigations
The learner will be able to plan and conduct a simple investigation knowing what is to be compared or sought.
Strand Scope Source
Investigations: Plan & Perform Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Observation
The learner will be able to extend observations and make measurements and observations using simple tools, for example, hand lens, rulers, and two arm balance.
Strand Scope Source
Observations Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Data patterns
The learner will be able to recognize patterns and data and use data to create a reasonable explanation for the results of investigation.
Strand Scope Source
Investigations: Scientific Theories Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Communicate observations
The learner will be able to communicate observations, results and explanations through discussions, drawings, models, simple graphs, and writing.
Strand Scope Source
Communication Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  

Earth and Space Science

    Water cycles
The learner will be able to understand that water on earth cycles in different forms and different locations, including the atmosphere and underground.
Strand Scope Source
Water: Cycle Introduce Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Minerals
The learner will be able to recognize that rocks are made of minerals. Minerals have different physical properties, such as hardness, color, and texture.
Strand Scope Source
Rocks and Minerals Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Soil
The learner will be able to understand that soil is formed from the weathering of rocks by water and wind and from the decomposition of plant and animal remains. The properties of materials making up different soils determine the soils properties and uses.
Strand Scope Source
Soil Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  

Physical Science

    Electric circuits
The learner will be able to understand that electric circuits require a power source, such as a battery, in a closed circuit to see a bulb light, a motor turn, or a dial move. The number and arrangement of batteries affects the brightness of a bulb or speed of a motor.
Strand Scope Source
Electricity: Circuits Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Magnets
The learner will be able to understand that magnets attract and repel each other and attract certain kinds of other materials.
Strand Scope Source
Magnetism: Properties Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Effects of electricity
The learner will be able to understand that electricity can produce light, heat, sound, and magnetic effects.
Strand Scope Source
Electricity: Impact on Objects Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  

Life Science

    Characteristics of organisms
The learner will be able to understand that animals have different structures that serve different functions for nourishment, reproduction, growth, and protection.
Strand Scope Source
Organisms: Function and Structure Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Classification of animals
The learner will be able to understand that animals can be classified into groups based on shared characteristics.
Strand Scope Source
Organisms: Characteristics Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Life cycles
The learner will be able to recognize that animals go through predictable life cycles, which include birth, growth, development, reproduction, and death.Some animals such as butterflies and frogs go through remarkable changes during development that is called metamorphosis.
Strand Scope Source
Reproduction Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Variation
The learner will be able to understand that individuals of the same species differ in their characteristics. Some of these characteristics are inherited from parents and some are not.
Strand Scope Source
Heredity Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Adaptations
The learner will be able to understand that organisms have differences that allow them to thrive in different places. People, like other animals, need water, who, air, and a particular range of temperature in their environment.
Strand Scope Source
Environment Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Food chains and webs
The learner will be able to understand that all animals depend on plants. Some animals eat plants for food; others eat animals that eat plants.
Strand Scope Source
Animals Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  

Technology

    Technology
The learner will be able to analyze products by taking them apart and re-assembling them.
Strand Scope Source
Tools and MACHINES OF TECHNOLOGY Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    The nature of technology
The learner will be able to analyze a products components and their functions.
Strand Scope Source
Tools and MACHINES OF TECHNOLOGY Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Engineering design
The learner will be able to recognize a design need or engineering problem.
Strand Scope Source
Tools and MACHINES OF TECHNOLOGY Introduce Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Engineering solutions
The learner will be able to develop, sketch, and discuss possible solutions and select one.
Strand Scope Source
Tools and MACHINES OF TECHNOLOGY Introduce Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Engineering materials
The learner will be able to select appropriate materials for the proposed solution.
Strand Scope Source
Tools and MACHINES OF TECHNOLOGY Introduce Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Machines: Simple & Compound/Compare
The learner will be able to compare simple machines with compound machines.
Strand Scope Source
Technology as a Tool Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  
    Science: Build/Design/Plan/Tools
The learner will be able to plan, design and build things using basic tools and various materials.
Strand Scope Source
Technology as a Tool Master Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks
  

© 2006 by EAST LONGMEADOW PUBLIC SCHOOLS and Scantron Corporation.  All Rights Reserved. Made with Curriculum Designer by Scantron Corporation.