under license"Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike"
- Subject:
- Architecture and Design, Engineering, Elementary Education, Physical Science
- Level:
- Lower Primary
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
Standards
Learning Domain: Motion and Stability: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Plan and conduct an investigation to provide evidence of the effects of balanced and unbalanced forces on the motion of an object.
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Learning Domain: Motion and Stability: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Make observations and/or measurements of an object's motion to provide evidence that a pattern can be used to predict future motion.
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Learning Domain: Motion and Stability: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Ask questions to determine cause and effect relationships of electric or magnetic interactions between two objects not in contact with each other.
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Learning Domain: Motion and Stability: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Define a simple design problem that can be solved by applying scientific ideas about magnets.
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Learning Domain: Measurement, Data, and Probability
Standard: Measure and estimate lengths in standard units using appropriate tools.
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences: Chemistry and Physics
Topic: Physics
Standard: Demonstrate various types of motion. Observe and describe how pushes and pulls change the motion of objects.
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences: Chemistry and Physics
Topic: Physics
Standard: Explain how an object's change in motion can be observed and measured.
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences: Chemistry and Physics
Topic: Physics
Standard: Distinguish between scientific fact and opinion.Ask questions about objects, organisms, and events.Understand that all scientific investigations involve asking and answering questions and comparing the answer with what is already known.Plan and conduct a simple investigation and understand that different questions require different kinds of investigations.Use simple equipment (tools and other technologies) to gather data and understand that this allows scientists to collect more information than relying only on their senses to gather information.Use data/evidence to construct explanations and understand that scientists develop explanations based on their evidence and compare them with their current scientific knowledge.Communicate procedures and explanations giving priority to evidence and understanding that scientists make their results public, describe their investigations so they can be reproduced, and review and ask questions about the work of other scientists.
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences: Chemistry and Physics
Topic: Physics
Standard: Describe how unbalanced forces acting on an object change its velocity. Analyze how observations of displacement, velocity, and acceleration provide necessary and sufficient evidence for the existence of forces.
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Pennsylvania Standards for Science and Technology and Engineering Education
Grades 9-12Science Domain: Physical Sciences: Chemistry and Physics
Topic: Physics
Standard: Patterns Scale Models Constancy/Change - Use Newton's laws of motion and gravitation to describe and predict the motion of objects ranging from atoms to the galaxies.
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences
Topic: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Plan and conduct an investigation to provide evidence of the effects of balanced and unbalanced forces on the motion of an object. [Clarification Statement: Examples could include an unbalanced force on one side of a ball can make it start moving; and, balanced forces pushing on a box from both sides will not produce any motion at all.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment is limited to one variable at a time: number, size, or direction of forces. Assessment does not include quantitative force size, only qualitative and relative. Assessment is limited to gravity being addressed as a force that pulls objects down.]
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences
Topic: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Make observations and/or measurements of an object’s motion to provide evidence that a pattern can be used to predict future motion. [Clarification Statement: Examples of motion with a predictable pattern could include a child swinging in a swing, a ball rolling back and forth in a bowl, and two children on a see-saw.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment does not include technical terms such as period and frequency.]
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences
Topic: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Ask questions to determine cause and effect relationships of electric or magnetic interactions between two objects not in contact with each other. [Clarification Statement: Examples of an electric force could include the force on hair from an electrically charged balloon and the electrical forces between a charged rod and pieces of paper; examples of a magnetic force could include the force between two permanent magnets, the force between an electromagnet and steel paperclips, and the force exerted by one magnet versus the force exerted by two magnets. Examples of cause and effect relationships could include how the distance between objects affects strength of the force and how the orientation of magnets affects the direction of the magnetic force.] [Assessment Boundary: Assessment is limited to forces produced by objects that can be manipulated by students, and electrical interactions are limited to static electricity.]
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Science Domain: Physical Sciences
Topic: Forces and Interactions
Standard: Define a simple design problem that can be solved by applying scientific ideas about magnets.* [Clarification Statement: Examples of problems could include constructing a latch to keep a door shut and creating a device to keep two moving objects from touching each other.]
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