| 5-8 National Science Standards |
MITC Activities (3-6
curriculum Guide) |
| SCIENCE INQUIRY Content Standard A |
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| ABILITIES NECESSARY TO DO SCIENTIFIC
INQUIRY |
Most subparts of this standard are covered in
the Experiments with Monarchs Section |
| IDENTIFY QUESTIONS THAT CAN BE ANSWERED
THROUGH SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS. Students should develop the ability to refine and
refocus broad and ill-defined questions. An important aspect of this ability consists of
students ability to clarify questions and inquiries and direct them toward objects
and phenomena that can be described, explained, or predicted by scientific investigations.
Students should develop the ability to identify their questions with scientific ideas,
concepts, and quantitative relationships that guide investigation. |
LC 1: Focus on Features
LC 6: Measuring larval growth
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants |
| DESIGN AND CONDUCT A SCIENTIFIC
INVESTIGATION. Students should develop general abilities, such as systematic
observation, making accurate measurements, and identifying and controlling variables. They
should also develop the ability to clarify their ideas that are influencing and guiding
the inquiry, and to understand how those ideas compare with current scientific knowledge.
Students can learn to formulate questions, design investigations, execute investigations,
interpret data, use evidence to generate explanations, propose alternative explanations,
and critique explanations and procedures. |
LC 6: Measuring larval growth
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
LC 8: Keeping a journal
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants
MG 4: Weather Conditions during the Fall Migration
MG 11: Milkweed Monitoring
MG 12 Weather Conditions during the Spring Migration
MG 13: How far can a butterfly glide?
EC 6: Rates and causes of mortality in larvae |
| USE APPROPRIATE TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES TO
GATHER, ANALYZE, AND INTERPRET DATA. The use of tools and techniques, including
mathematics, will be guided by the question asked and the investigations students design.
The use of computers for the collection, summary, and display of evidence is part of this
standard. Students should be able to access, gather, store, retrieve, and organize data,
using hardware and software designed for these purposes. |
LC 4: Butterfly Scales
LC 6: Measuring larval growth
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants
MG 4: Weather Conditions
MG 6: Tagging Role Play
MG 8: Tagging Fall Migrants
MG 9: Map the Recoveries
MG 10: Tracking Spring Migr.
MG 11: Measuring Milkweed
SY 2: Sorting Animals
SY 3: More than Mammals |
| DEVELOP DESCRIPTIONS, EXPLANATIONS,
PREDICTIONS, AND MODELS USING EVIDENCE. Students should base their explanation on what
they observed, and as they develop cognitive skills, they should be able to differentiate
explanation from description providing causes for effects and establishing
relationships based on evidence and logical argument. This standard requires a subject
matter knowledge base so the students can effectively conduct investigations, because
developing explanations establishes connections between the content of science and the
contexts within which students develop new knowledge. |
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
LC 8: Keeping a monarch journal
MG 4: Migration Game
MG 10: Track Spring Migration
MG 11: Measuring Milkweed
MG 12: Weather Conditions during Spring Migration
EC 1: What is a habitat? |
| THINK CRITICALLY AND LOGICALLY TO MAKE THE
RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN EVIDENCE AND EXPLANATIONS. Thinking critically about evidence
includes deciding what evidence should be used and accounting for anomalous data.
Specifically, students should be able to review data from a simple experiment, summarize
the data, and form a logical argument about the cause-and-effect relationships in the
experiment. Students should begin to state some explanations in terms of the relationship
between two or more variables. |
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
EC 4: How many grandchildren
EC 5: Why isnt the world overrun with monarchs?
EC 6: Mortality in larvae
EC 7: Monarch Mishaps: A game of survival |
| RECOGNIZE AND ANALYZE ALTERNATIVE
EXPLANATIONS AND PREDICTIONS . Students should develop the ability to listen to and
respect the explanations proposed by other students. They should remain open to and
acknowledge different ideas and explanations, be able to accept the skepticism of others,
and consider alternative explanations. |
Emphasized throughout curriculum |
| COMMUNICATE SCIENTIFIC PROCEDURES AND
EXPLANATIONS. With practice, students should become competent at communicating
experimental methods, following instructions, describing observations, summarizing the
results of other groups, and telling other students about investigations and explanations. |
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants |
| USE MATHEMATICS IN ALL ASPECTS OF
SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. Mathematics is essential to asking and answering questions about
the natural world. Mathematics can be used to ask questions; to gather, organize, and
present data; and to structure convincing explanations. |
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
MG 2: Map the Monarchs Route
MG 7: How heavy are tags?
MG 9: Map the Recoveries
MG 10: Track Spring Migration
MG 11: Measuring Milkweed
EC 4: How many grandchildren
EC 11: Toothpick Prey |
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UNDERSTANDINGS ABOUT SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY
- Different kinds of questions suggest different kinds of scientific investigations. Some
investigations involve observing and describing objects, organisms, or events; some
involve collecting specimens; some involve experiments; some involve seeking more
information; some involve discovery of new objects and phenomena; and some involve making
models.
Current scientific knowledge and understanding guide scientific investigations.
Different scientific domains employ different methods, core theories, and standards to
advance scientific knowledge and understanding.
Mathematics is important in all aspects of scientific inquiry.
Technology used to gather data enhances accuracy and allows scientists to analyze and
quantify results of investigations.
Scientific explanations emphasize evidence, have logically consistent arguments, and use
scientific principles, models, and theories. The scientific community accepts and uses
such explanations until displaced by better scientific ones. When such displacement
occurs, science advances.
Science advances through legitimate skepticism. Asking questions and querying other
scientists explanations is part of scientific inquiry. Scientists evaluate the
explanations proposed by other scientists by examining evidence, comparing evidence,
identifying faulty reasoning, pointing out statements that go beyond the evidence, and
suggesting alternative explanations for the same observations.
Scientific investigations sometimes result in new ideas and phenomena for study,
generate new methods or procedures for an investigation, or develop new technologies to
improve the collection of data. All of these results can lead to new investigations.
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LC 1: Focus on Features
LC 2: Rearing monarch larvae
LC 6: Measuring larval growth
LC 7: Very Hungry Caterpillar
LC 8: Keeping a journal
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants
MG 4: Weather Conditions during the Fall Migration
MG 8: Tagging fall migrants
MG 9: Map the Recoveries
MG 10: Track the Spring Migration
MG 11: Milkweed Monitoring
MG 12 Weather Conditions during the Spring Migration
MG 13: How far can a butterfly glide?
EC 6: Rates and causes of mortality in larvae
EX 1: What do monarchs eat?
EX 2: Where is my food?
EX 3: How does temperature affect time in the pupal stage?
EX 4: Additional investigations |
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| PHYSICAL SCIENCE Content Standard B: |
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| PROPERTIES AND CHANGES OF PROPERTIES IN
MATTER
A substance has characteristic properties, such as density, a boiling point, and
solubility, all of which are independent of the amount of the sample. A mixture of
substances often can be separated into the original substances using one or more of the
characteristic properties.
Substances react chemically in characteristic ways with other substances to form new
substances (compounds) with different characteristic properties. In chemical reactions,
the total mass is conserved. Substances often are placed in categories or groups if they
react in similar ways; metals is an example of such a group.
Chemical elements do not break down during normal laboratory reactions involving such
treatments as heating, exposure to electric current, or reaction with acids. There are
more than 100 known elements that combine in a multitude of ways to produce compounds,
which account for the living and nonliving substances that we encounter.
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| MOTIONS AND FORCES
The motion of an object can be described by its position , direction of motion, and
speed. That motion can be measured and represented on a graph .
An object that is not being subjected to a force will continue to move at a constant
speed and in a straight line.
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 cause changes in the speed or direction of an objects motion .
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| TRANSFER OF ENERGY
Energy is a property of many substances and is associated with heat, light, electricity,
mechanical motion, sound, nuclei, and the nature of a chemical. Energy is transferred in
many ways.
Heat moves in predictable ways, flowing from warmer objects to cooler ones, until both
reach the same temperature.
Light interacts with matter by transmission (including refraction), absorption, or
scattering (including reflection). To see an object, light from that object emitted
by or scattered from itmust enter the eye.
Electrical circuits provide a means of transferring electrical energy when heat, light,
sound, and chemical changes are produced.
In most chemical and nuclear reactions, energy is transferred into or out of a system.
Heat, light, mechanical motion , or electricity might all be involved in such transfers.
The sun is a major source of energy for changes on the earths surface. The sun
loses energy by emitting light. A tiny fraction of that light reaches the earth,
transferring energy from the sun to the earth . The suns energy arrives as light
with a range of wavelengths, consisting of visible light, infrared, and ultraviolet
radiation.
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| LIFE SCIENCE Content Standard C: |
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STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION IN LIVING SYSTEMS
- Living systems at all levels of organization demonstrate the complementary nature of
structure and function. Important levels of organization for structure and function
include cells, organs, tissues, organ systems, whole organisms, and ecosystems.
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LC 1: Focus on Features
LC 2: Rearing monarch larvae
LC 3: Preserving butterfly wings
EC1: What is a Habitat? |
- All organisms are composed of cellsthe fundamental unit of life. Most organisms
are single cells; other organisms, including humans, are multicellular
- Cells carry on the many functions needed to sustain life. They grow and
divide, thereby producing more cells. This requires that they take in nutrients, which
they use to provide energy for the work that cells do and to make the materials that a
cell or an organism needs.
- Specialized cells perform specialized functions in multicellular
organisms. Groups of specialized cells cooperate to form a tissue, such as a muscle.
Different tissues are in turn grouped together to form larger functional units, called
organs. Each type of cell, tissue, and organ has a distinct structure and set of functions
that serve the organism as a whole.
- The human organism has systems for digestion, respiration, reproduction,
circulation, excretion, movement, control, and coordination, and for protection from
disease. These systems interact with one another.
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- Disease is a breakdown in structures or functions of an organism. Some
diseases are the result of intrinsic failures of the system. Others are the result of
damage by infection by other organisms.
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EC 6: Rates and causes of mortality in larvae |
REPRODUCTION AND HEREDITY
- Reproduction is a characteristic of all living systems; because no individual organism
lives forever, reproduction is essential to the continuation of every species.
Some
organisms reproduce asexually. Other organisms reproduce sexually.
In many species, including humans, females produce eggs and males produce sperm. Plants
also reproduce sexually the egg and sperm are produced in the flowers of flowering
plants. An egg and sperm unite to begin development of a new individual. That new
individual receives genetic information from its mother (via the egg) and its father (via
the sperm). Sexually produced offspring never are identical to either of their parents.
Every organism requires a set of instructions for specifying its traits. Heredity is the
passage of these instructions from one generation to another.
Hereditary information is contained in genes, located in the chromosomes of each cell.
Each gene carries a single unit of information. An inherited trait of an individual can be
determined by one or by many genes,and a single gene can influence more than one trait. A
human cell contains many thousands of different genes.
The characteristics of an organism can be described in terms of a combination of traits.
Some traits are inherited and others result from interactions with the environment.
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EC 4: How many grandchildren?
EC 5: Why isnt the world overrun with monarchs?
EC 6: Rates and causes of mortality in larvae |
REGULATION AND BEHAVIOR
- All organisms must be able to obtain and use resources, grow, reproduce, and maintain
stable internal conditions while living in a constantly changing external environment .
Regulation of an organisms internal environment involves sensing the internal
environment and changing physiological activities to keep conditions within the range
required to survive.
Behavior is one kind of response an organism can make to an internal or environmental
stimulus. A behavioral response requires coordination and communication at many levels,
including cells, organ systems, and whole organisms. Behavioral response is a set of
actions determined in part by heredity and in part from experience.
An organisms behavior evolves through adaptation to its environment. How a species
moves, obtains food, reproduces, and responds to danger are based in the species
evolutionary history.
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LC 1: Focus on Features
LC 2: Rearing monarch larvae
LC 3: Preserving butterfly wings
MG 1: Winter is coming
MG 2: Map the monarchs route
MG 3: Observing fall migrants
EC 1: What is a habitat?
EC 4: How many grandchildren
EC 5: Why isnt the world overrun with monarchs?
EC 6: Mortality in larvae
EC 8: How living things protect themselves
EC 9: Plant defenses
EC 10: Hide a Butterfly
EC 11: Toothpick prey
EC 12: Warning Coloration
EC 13: Startle Coloration
EC 14: Mimicry
EC 15: Monarch protection |
POPULATIONS AND ECOSYSTEMS
- A population consists of all individuals of a species that occur together at a given
place and time. All populations living together and the physical factors with which they
interact compose an ecosystem.
- Populations of organisms can be categorized by the function they serve in an ecosystem.
Plants and some microorganisms are producersthey make their own food. All animals,
including humans, are consumers, which obtain food by eating other organisms.
Decomposers, primarily bacteria and fungi, are consumers that use waste materials and dead
organisms for food. Food webs identify the relationships among producers, consumers, and
decomposers in an ecosystem.
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EC 1: What is a habitat?
EC 2: Make a Field Guide to a Monarch Habitat
EC 3: Who ate my food?
EC 8: How living things protect themselves
EC 9: Plant defenses |
- For ecosystems, the major source of energy is sunlight. Energy entering ecosystems as
sunlight is transferred by producers into chemical energy through photosynthesis. That
energy then passes from organism to organism in food webs.
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- The number of organisms an ecosystem can support depends on the resources available and
abiotic factors, such as quantity of light and water, range of temperatures, and soil
composition. Given adequate biotic and abiotic resources and no disease or predators,
populations (including humans) increase at rapid rates. Lack of resources and other
factors, such as predation and climate, limit the growth of populations in specific niches
in the ecosystem.
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EC 4: How many grandchildren
EC 5: Why isnt the world overrun with monarchs?
EC 6: Mortality in larvae
EC 7: Monarch Mishaps : A game of survival |
DIVERSITY AND ADAPTATIONS OF ORGANISMS
- Millions of species of animals, plants, and microorganisms are alive today. Although
different species might look dissimilar, the unity among organisms becomes apparent from
an analysis of internal structures, the similarity of their chemical processes, and the
evidence of common ancestry.
Biological evolution accounts for the diversity of species developed through gradual
processes over many generations. Species acquire many of their unique characteristics
through biological adaptation, which involves the selection of naturally occurring
variations in populations. Biological adaptations include changes in structures,
behaviors, or physiology that enhance survival and reproductive success in a particular
environment.
Extinction of a species occurs when the environment changes and the adaptive
characteristics of a species are insufficient to allow its survival. Fossils indicate that
many organisms that lived long ago are extinct. Extinction of species is common; most of
the species that have lived on the earth no longer exist.
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SY 2: Sorting Animals
SY 3: Monarch and Human Classification |
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| EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE Content Standard D |
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| STRUCTURE OF THE EARTH SYSTEM
The solid earth is layered with a lithosphere; hot, convecting mantle; and dense,
metallic core.
Lithospheric plates on the scales of continents and oceans constantly move at rates of
centimeters per year in response to movements in the mantle. Major geological events, such
as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and mountain building, result from these plate
motions.
Land forms are the result of a combination of constructive and destructive forces.
Constructive forces include crustal deformation , volcanic eruption, and deposition of
sediment, while destructive forces include weathering and erosion .
Some changes in the solid earth can be described as the "rock cycle. " Old
rocks at the earths surface weather, forming sediments that are buried, then
compacted, heated, and often recrystallized into new rock. Eventually, those new rocks may
be brought to the surface by the forces that drive plate motions, and the rock cycle
continues.
Soil consists of weathered rocks and decomposed organic material from dead plants,
animals, and bacteria. Soils are often found in layers, with each having a different
chemical composition and texture.
Water, which covers the majority of the earths surface, circulates through the
crust, oceans, and atmosphere in what is known as the "water cycle. " Water
evaporates from the earths surface, rises and cools as it moves to higher
elevations, condenses as rain or snow, and falls to the surface where it collects in
lakes, oceans, soil , and in rocks underground.
Water is a solvent. As it passes through the water cycle it dissolves minerals and gases
and carries them to the oceans.
The atmosphere is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and trace gases that include water
vapor. The atmosphere has different properties at different elevations.
Clouds, formed by the condensation of water vapor, affect weather and climate.
Global patterns of atmospheric movement influence local weather. Oceans have a major
effect on climate, because water in the oceans holds a large amount of heat.
Living organisms have played many roles in the earth system, including affecting the
composition of the atmosphere, producing some types of rocks, and contributing to the
weathering of rocks.
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| EARTHS HISTORY
The earth processes we see today, including erosion, movement of lithospheric plates,
and changes in atmospheric composition, are similar to those that occurred in the past.
earth history is also influenced by occasional catastrophes, such as the impact of an
asteroid or comet.
Fossils provide important evidence of how life and environmental conditions have
changed.
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3-6 Curriculum
MG 3: Observing Fall Migrants
MG 9: Map the Recoveries
MG 10: Track the Spring Migration |
| EARTH IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
The earth is the third planet from the sun in a system that includes the moon, the sun,
eight other planets and their moons, and smaller objects, such as asteroids and comets.
The sun, an average star, is the central and largest body in the solar system.
Most objects in the solar system are in regular and predictable motion. Those motions
explain such phenomena as the day, the year, phases of the moon, and eclipses.
Gravity is the force that keeps planets in orbit around the sun and governs the rest of
the motion in the solar system. Gravity alone holds us to the earths surface and
explains the phenomena of the tides.
The sun is the major source of energy for phenomena on the earths surface, such as
growth of plants, winds, ocean currents, and the water cycle. Seasons result from
variations in the amount of the suns energy hitting the surface, due to the tilt of
the earths rotation on its axis and the length of the day.
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| SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Content Standard E: |
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| IDENTIFY APPROPRIATE PROBLEMS FOR
TECHNOLOGICAL DESIGN. Students should develop their abilities by identifying a specified
need, considering its various aspects, and talking to different potential users or
beneficiaries. They should appreciate that for some needs, the cultural backgrounds and
beliefs of different groups can affect the criteria for a suitable product. DESIGN A
SOLUTION OR PRODUCT. Students should make and compare different proposals in the light of
the criteria they have selected. They must consider constraintssuch as cost, time,
trade-offs, and materials neededand communicate ideas with drawings and simple
models.
IMPLEMENT A PROPOSED DESIGN. Students should organize materials and other resources,
plan their work, make good use of group collaboration where appropriate, choose suitable
tools and techniques, and work with appropriate measurement methods to ensure adequate
accuracy.
EVALUATE COMPLETED TECHNOLOGICAL DESIGNS OR PRODUCTS. Students should use criteria
relevant to the original purpose or need, consider a variety of factors that might affect
acceptability and suitability for intended users or beneficiaries, and develop measures of
quality with respect to such criteria and factors; they should also suggest improvements
and, for their own products, try proposed modifications.
COMMUNICATE THE PROCESS OF TECHNOLOGICAL DESIGN. Students should review and
describe any completed piece of work and identify the stages of problem identification,
solution design, implementation, and evaluation. |
MG 13: How far can a butterfly glide?
CS 2: Planting a School Butterfly Garden |
| UNDERSTANDINGS ABOUT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Scientific inquiry and technological design have similarities and differences.
Scientists propose explanations for questions about the natural world, and engineers
propose solutions relating to human problems, needs, and aspirations. Technological
solutions are temporary; technologies exist within nature and so they cannot contravene
physical or biological principles; technological solutions have side effects; and
technologies cost, carry risks, and provide benefits.
Many different people in different cultures have made and continue to make contributions
to science and technology.
Science and technology are reciprocal. Science helps drive technology, as it addresses
questions that demand more sophisticated instruments and provides principles for better
instrumentation and technique. Technology is essential to science , because it provides
instruments and techniques that enable observations of objects and phenomena that are
otherwise unobservable due to factors such as quantity, distance, location, size, and
speed. Technology also provides tools for investigations, inquiry, and analysis.
Perfectly designed solutions do not exist. All technological solutions have trade-offs,
such as safety, cost, efficiency, and appearance . Engineers often build in back-up
systems to provide safety. Risk is part of living in a highly technological world.
Reducing risk often results in new technology.
Technological designs have constraints. Some constraints are unavoidable, for example,
properties of materials, or effects of weather and friction; other constraints limit
choices in the design, for example, environmental protection, human safety, and
aesthetics.
Technological solutions have intended benefits and unintended consequences. Some
consequences can be predicted, others cannot.
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Emphasized throughout the curriculum |
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| SCIENCE IN PERSONAL AND SOCIAL PERSPECTIVES
Content Standard F |
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| PERSONAL HEALTH
Regular exercise is important to the maintenance and improvement of health. The benefits
of physical fitness include maintaining healthy weight, having energy and strength for
routine activities, good muscle tone, bone strength, strong heart/lung systems, and
improved mental health. Personal exercise, especially developing cardiovascular endurance,
is the foundation of physical fitness.
The potential for accidents and the existence of hazards imposes the need for injury
prevention. Safe living involves the development and use of safety precautions and the
recognition of risk in personal decisions. Injury prevention has personal and social
dimensions.
The use of tobacco increases the risk of illness. Students should understand the
influence of short-term social and psychological factors that lead to tobacco use, and the
possible long-term detrimental effects of smoking and chewing tobacco.
Alcohol and other drugs are often abused substances. Such drugs change how the body
functions and can lead to addiction.
Food provides energy and nutrients for growth and development. Nutrition requirements
vary with body weight, age, sex, activity, and body functioning.
Sex drive is a natural human function that requires understanding. Sex is also a
prominent means of transmitting diseases. The diseases can be prevented through a variety
of precautions.
Natural environments may contain substances (for example, radon and lead) that are
harmful to human beings. Maintaining environmental health involves establishing or
monitoring quality standards related to use of soil , water, and air.
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| POPULATIONS, RESOURCES, AND ENVIRONMENTS
When an area becomes overpopulated, the environment will become degraded due to the
increased use of resources.
Causes of environmental degradation and resource depletion vary from region to region
and from country to country.
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CS 1: Is our Community a Good Home for
Monarchs?
CS 3: Monarchs in the Balance - Dilemma Cards |
| NATURAL HAZARDS
Internal and external processes of the earth system cause natural hazards, events that
change or destroy human and wildlife habitats, damage property, and harm or kill humans.
Natural hazards include earthquakes, landslides, wildfires, volcanic eruptions, floods,
storms, and even possible impacts of asteroids.
Human activities also can induce hazards through resource acquisition, urban growth,
land-use decisions, and waste disposal. Such activities can accelerate many natural
changes.
Natural hazards can present personal and societal challenges because misidentifying the
change or incorrectly estimating the rate and scale of change may result in either too
little attention and significant human costs or too much cost for unneeded preventive
measures.
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| RISKS AND BENEFITS
Risk analysis considers the type of hazard and estimates the number of people that might
be exposed and the number likely to suffer consequences. The results are used to determine
the options for reducing or eliminating risks.
Students should understand the risks associated with natural hazards (fires, floods,
tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions), with chemical hazards
(pollutants in air, water, soil, and food), with biological hazards (pollen, viruses,
bacterial, and parasites), social hazards (occupational safety and transportation), and
with personal hazards (smoking, dieting, and drinking).
Individuals can use a systematic approach to thinking critically about risks and
benefits. Examples include applying probability estimates to risks and comparing them to
estimated personal and social benefits.
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- Important personal and social decisions are made based on perceptions of benefits and
risks.
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CS 3: Monarchs in the Balance - Dilemma Cards |
| SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY
Science influences society through its knowledge and world view. Scientific knowledge
and the procedures used by scientists influence the way many individuals in society think
about themselves, others, and the environment . The effect of science on society is
neither entirely beneficial nor entirely detrimental .
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- Societal challenges often inspire questions for scientific research, and social
priorities often influence research priorities through the availability of funding for
research.
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CS 1: Is our community a good home for
monarchs?
CS 3: Monarchs in the Balance - Dilemma cards |
- Technology influences society through its products and processes. Technology influences
the quality of life and the ways people act and interact. Technological changes are often
accompanied by social, political, and economic changes that can be beneficial or
detrimental to individuals and to society. Social needs, attitudes, and values influence
the direction of technological development.
- Science and technology have advanced through contributions of many different people, in
different cultures, at different times in history. Science and technology have contributed
enormously to economic growth and productivity among societies and groups within
societies.
- Scientists and engineers work in many different settings, including colleges and
universities, businesses and industries, specific research institutes, and government
agencies.
- Scientists and engineers have ethical codes requiring that human subjects involved with
research be fully informed about risks and benefits associated with the research before
the individuals choose to participate. This ethic extends to potential risks to
communities and property. In short, prior knowledge and consent are required for research
involving human subjects or potential damage to property.
- Science cannot answer all questions and technology cannot solve all human problems or
meet all human needs. Students should understand the difference between scientific and
other questions. They should appreciate what science and technology can reasonably
contribute to society and what they cannot do. For example, new technologies often will
decrease some risks and increase others.
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| HISTORY AND NATURE OF SCIENCE Content
Standard G: |
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| SCIENCE AS A HUMAN ENDEAVOR
Women and men of various social and ethnic backgroundsand with diverse interests,
talents, qualities, and motivations engage in the activities of science,
engineering, and related fields such as the health professions. Some scientists work in
teams, and some work alone, but all communicate extensively with others.
Science requires different abilities, depending on such factors as the field of study
and type of inquiry. Science is very much a human endeavor, and the work of science relies
on basic human qualities, such as reasoning, insight, energy, skill, and
creativityas well as on scientific habits of mind, such as intellectual honesty,
tolerance of ambiguity, skepticism, and openness to new ideas.
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NATURE 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. Scientists do and have changed their ideas about
nature when they encounter new experimental evidence that does not match their existing
explanations.
In areas where active research is being pursued and in which there is not a great deal
of experimental or observational evidence and understanding, it is normal for scientists
to differ with one another about the interpretation of the evidence or theory being
considered. Different scientists might publish conflicting experimental results or might
draw different conclusions from the same data. Ideally, scientists acknowledge such
conflict and work towards finding evidence that will resolve their disagreement.
It is part of scientific inquiry to evaluate the results of scientific investigations,
experiments , observations, theoretical models, and the explanations proposed by other
scientists. Evaluation includes reviewing the experimental procedures, examining the
evidence, identifying faulty reasoning, pointing out statements that go beyond the
evidence, and suggesting alternative explanations for the same observations. Although
scientists may disagree about explanations of phenomena, about interpretations of data, or
about the value of rival theories, they do agree that questioning, response to criticism,
and open communication are integral to the process of science. As scientific knowledge
evolves, major disagreements are eventually resolved through such interaction s between
scientists.
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Emphasized in Migration and Overwintering
Sections |
HISTORY OF SCIENCE
- Many individuals have contributed to the traditions of science. Studying some of these
individuals provides further understanding of scientific inquiry, science as a human
endeavor, the nature of science, and the relationships between science and society.
In historical perspective, science has been practiced by different individuals in
different cultures. In looking at the history of many peoples, one finds that scientists
and engineers of high achievement are considered to be among the most valued contributors
to their culture.
Tracing the history of science can show how difficult it was for scientific innovators
to break through the accepted ideas of their time to reach the conclusions that we
currently take for granted.
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LC 8: Keeping a monarch journal |