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Poway Unified School District Standards (DRAFT)

THE NATURE OF SCIENCE

Scientific World View

Scientists assume the universe is a vast single system in which the basic rules are the same everywhere.

All natural objects, events, and processes, are connected to each other in such a way that only a relatively few concepts are needed to make sense of them.

Science concepts are manifested in daily life.

Science is directed towards a progressively greater understanding of the natural world.

Science develops rational decision making skills applicable to major issues of personal and public concern.

 

UNIFYING CONCEPTS AND PROCESSES

Systems

A system is a collection of things and processes and the interactions among them.

A system can include processes as well as things.

Thinking about things as systems means looking for how every part relates to others. The output from one part of a system (which can include material, energy, or information) can become the input to other parts. Such feedback can serve to control what goes on in the system as a whole.

Any system is usually connected to other systems, both internally and externally. Thus a system may be thought of as containing subsystems and as being a subsystem of a larger system.

Critical Response

Recognizes that the use or misuse of supporting evidence, the language used, and the logic of the argument presented are important considerations in judging how seriously to take a claim or proposition.

Is skeptical of arguments based on very small samples of data, biased samples, or samples for which there was no control sample.

Is aware that there may be more than one good way to interpret a given set of findings.

Criticizes the reasoning in arguments in which fact and opinion are intermingled or the conclusions do not follow logically from the evidence given.

Tool Usage

Identifies and manipulates appropriate tools.

Uses computer to access current scientific information

 

Communication

Communicates ideas, the problems, processes, and solutions.

Presents information to different audiences using a variety of formats.

THE LIVING ENVIRONMENT

Diversity of Life

There are patterns of similarities and differences in living things.

Interdependence of Life

Living things depend on one another and the environment for survival.

In all environments--freshwater, marine, forest, desert, grassland, mountain, and others—organisms with similar needs may compete with one another for resources, including food, space, water, air, and shelter.

In any particular environment, the growth and survival of organisms depend on the physical conditions. Those organisms in turn, influence their environment, to some extent.

 

Living things are a part of larger systems of interaction.

Ecosystems tend to have cyclic fluctuations around a state of equilibrium. In the long run, however, ecosystems always change when climate changes or when one or more new species appear as a result of migration or local evolution.

Human beings are part of the earth’s ecosystems. Human activities can, deliberately or inadvertently, alter the equilibrium in ecosystems.

Ecosystems can be reasonably stable over hundreds or thousands of years. As any population of organisms grows, it is held in check by one or more environmental (biotic or abiotic) factors. If a disaster such as flood or fire occurs, the damaged ecosystem is likely to recover in stages that eventually result in a system similar to the original one.

 

 

Poway Unified School District Last Revised 03/16/98
By Keith Nuthall
Poway Unified School District
knuthall@sdcoe.k12.ca.us
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