CONTENT STANDARD C: Life Science
As a result of activities in grades K-4, all students should develop
understanding of
The characteristics of organisms
Life cycles of organisms
Organisms and environments
DEVELOPING STUDENT UNDERSTANDING
During the elementary grades, children build understanding of biological
concepts through direct experience with living things, their life
cycles, and their habitats. These experiences emerge from the sense
of wonder and natural interests of children who ask questions such
as: "How do plants get food? How many different animals are there?
Why do some animals eat other animals? What is the largest plant?
Where did the dinosaurs go?" An understanding of the characteristics
of organisms, life cycles of organisms, and of the complex interactions
among all components of the natural environment begins with questions
such as these and an understanding of how individual organisms maintain
and continue life. Making sense of the way organisms live in their
environments will develop some understanding of the diversity of life
and how all living organisms depend on the living and nonliving environment
for survival. Because the child's world at grades K-4 is closely associated
with the home, school, and immediate environment, the study of organisms
should include observations and interactions within the natural world
of the child. The experiences and activities in grades K-4 provide
a concrete foundation for the progressive development in the later
grades of major biological concepts, such as evolution, heredity,
the cell, the biosphere, interdependence, the behavior of organisms,
and matter and energy in living systems.
Children's ideas about the characteristics of organisms develop from
basic concepts of living and nonliving. Piaget noted, for instance,
that young children give anthropomorphic explanations to organisms.
In lower elementary grades, many children associate "life"
with any objects that are active in any way. This view of life develops
into one in which movement becomes the defining characteristic. Eventually
children incorporate other concepts, such as eating, breathing, and
reproducing to define life. As students have a variety of experiences
with organisms, and subsequently develop a knowledge base in the life
sciences, their anthropomorphic attributions should decline.
In classroom activities such as classification, younger elementary
students generally use mutually exclusive rather than hierarchical
categories. Young children, for example, will use two groups, but
older children will use several groups at the same time. Students
do not consistently use classification schemes similar to those used
by biologists until the upper elementary grades.
As students investigate the life cycles of organisms, teachers might
observe that young children do not understand the continuity of life
from, for example, seed to seedling or larvae to pupae to adult. But
teachers will notice that by second grade, most students know that
children resemble their parents. Students can also differentiate learned
from inherited characteristics. However, students might hold some
naive thoughts about inheritance, including the belief that traits
are inherited from only one parent, that certain traits are inherited
exclusively from one parent or the other, or that all traits are simply
a blend of characteristics from each parent.
Young children think concretely about individual organisms. For example,
animals are associated with pets or with animals kept in a zoo. The
idea that organisms depend on their environment (including other organisms
in some cases) is not well developed in young children. In grades
K-4, the focus should be on establishing the primary association of
organisms with their environments and the secondary ideas of dependence
on various aspects of the environment and of behaviors that help various
animals survive. Lower elementary students can understand the food
link between two organisms.
GUIDE TO THE CONTENT STANDARD
Fundamental concepts and principles that underlie this standard include
THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ORGANISMS
Organisms have basic needs. For example, animals need air, water,
and food; plants require air, water, nutrients, and light. Organisms
can survive only in environments in which their needs can be met.
The world has many different environments, and distinct environments
support the life of different types of organisms.
Each plant or animal has different structures that serve different
functions in growth, survival, and reproduction. For example, humans
have distinct body structures for walking, holding, seeing, and talking.
The behavior of individual organisms is influenced by internal
cues (such as hunger) and by external cues (such as a change in the
environment). Humans and other organisms have senses that help them
detect internal and external cues.
LIFE CYCLES OF ORGANISMS
Plants and animals have life cycles that include being born, developing
into adults, reproducing, and eventually dying. The details of this
life cycle are different for different organisms.
Plants and animals closely resemble their parents.
Many characteristics of an organism are inherited from the parents
of the organism, but other characteristics result from an individual's
interactions with the environment. Inherited characteristics include
the color of flowers and the number of limbs of an animal. Other features,
such as the ability to ride a bicycle, are learned through interactions
with the environment and cannot be passed on to the next generation.
ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENTS
All animals depend on plants. Some animals eat plants for food.
Other animals eat animals that eat the plants.
An organism's patterns of behavior are related to the nature of
that organism's environment, including the kinds and numbers of other
organisms present, the availability of food and resources, and the
physical characteristics of the environment. When the environment
changes, some plants and animals survive and reproduce, and others
die or move to new locations.[
See
Content Standard F (grades K-4)]
All organisms cause changes in the environment where they live.
Some of these changes are detrimental to the organism or other organisms,
whereas others are beneficial.
Humans depend on their natural and constructed environments. Humans
change environments in ways that can be either beneficial or detrimental
for themselves and other organisms.