CONTENT STANDARD B:Physical Science
As a result of their activities in grades 5-8, all students should
develop an understanding of
Properties and changes of properties in matter
Motions and forces
Transfer of energy
DEVELOPING STUDENT UNDERSTANDING
In grades 5-8, the focus on student understanding shifts from properties
of objects and materials to the characteristic properties of the substances
from which the materials are made. In the K-4 years, students learned
that objects and materials can be sorted and ordered in terms of their
properties. During that process, they learned that some properties,
such as size, weight, and shape, can be assigned only to the object
while other properties, such as color, texture, and hardness, describe
the materials from which objects are made. In grades 5-8, students
observe and measure characteristic properties, such as boiling points,
melting points, solubility, and simple chemical changes of pure substances
and use those properties to distinguish and separate one substance
from another.
Students usually bring some vocabulary and primitive notions of atomicity
to the science class but often lack understanding of the evidence
and the logical arguments that support the particulate model of matter.
Their early ideas are that the particles have the same properties
as the parent material; that is, they are a tiny piece of the substance.
It can be tempting to introduce atoms and molecules or improve students'
understanding of them so that particles can be used as an explanation
for the properties of elements and compounds. However, use of such
terminology is premature for these students and can distract from
the understanding that can be gained from focusing on the observation
and description of macroscopic features of substances and of physical
and chemical reactions. At this level, elements and compounds can
be defined operationally from their chemical characteristics, but
few students can comprehend the idea of atomic and molecular particles.
In grades 5-8, students observe and measure characteristic properties,
such as boiling and melting points, solubility, and simple chemical
changes of pure substances, and use those properties to distinguish
and separate one substance from another.
The study of motions and the forces causing motion provide concrete
experiences on which a more comprehensive understanding of force can
be based in grades 9-12. By using simple objects, such as rolling
balls and mechanical toys, students can move from qualitative to quantitative
descriptions of moving objects and begin to describe the forces acting
on the objects. Students' everyday experience is that friction causes
all moving objects to slow down and stop. Through experiences in which
friction is reduced, students can begin to see that a moving object
with no friction would continue to move indefinitely, but most students
believe that the force is still acting if the object is moving or
that it is "used up" if the motion stops. Students also
think that friction, not inertia, is the principle reason objects
remain at rest or require a force to move. Students in grades 5-8
associate force with motion and have difficulty understanding balanced
forces in equilibrium, especially if the force is associated with
static, inanimate objects, such as a book resting on the desk.
See the example entitled "Funny
Water"
The understanding of energy in grades 5-8 will build on the K-4 experiences
with light, heat, sound, electricity, magnetism, and the motion of
objects. In 5-8, students begin to see the connections among those
phenomena and to become familiar with the idea that energy is an important
property of substances and that most change involves energy transfer.
Students might have some of the same views of energy as they do of
force--that it is associated with animate objects and is linked to
motion. In addition, students view energy as a fuel or something that
is stored, ready to use, and gets used up. The intent at this level
is for students to improve their understanding of energy by experiencing
many kinds of energy transfer.
GUIDE TO THE CONTENT STANDARD
Fundamental concepts and principles that underlie this standard include
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.
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.[
See
Content Standard D (grades 5-8)]
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 object's motion.
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 it--must 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.[
See
Unifying Concepts and Processes]
The sun is a major source of energy for changes on the earth's
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 sun's energy arrives as light with a range of wavelengths,
consisting of visible light, infrared, and ultraviolet radiation.