CONTENT STANDARD D: Earth and
Space Science
As a result of their activities in grades K-4, all students should
develop an understanding of
Properties of earth materials
Objects in the sky
Changes in earth and sky
DEVELOPING STUDENT UNDERSTANDING
Young children are naturally interested in everything they see around
them--soil, rocks, streams, rain, snow, clouds, rainbows, sun, moon,
and stars. During the first years of school, they should be encouraged
to observe closely the objects and materials in their environment,
note their properties, distinguish one from another and develop their
own explanations of how things become the way they are. As children
become more familiar with their world, they can be guided to observe
changes, including cyclic changes, such as night and day and the seasons;
predictable trends, such as growth and decay, and less consistent
changes, such as weather or the appearance of meteors. Children should
have opportunities to observe rapid changes, such as the movement
of water in a stream, as well as gradual changes, such as the erosion
of soil and the change of the seasons.
Children come to school aware that earth's surface is composed of
rocks, soils, water, and living organisms, but a closer look will
help them identify many additional properties of earth materials.
By carefully observing and describing the properties of many rocks,
children will begin to see that some rocks are made of a single substance,
but most are made of several substances. In later grades, the substances
can be identified as minerals. Understanding rocks and minerals should
not be extended to the study of the source of the rocks, such as sedimentary,
igneous, and metamorphic, because the origin of rocks and minerals
has little meaning to young children.
Playgrounds and nearby vacant lots and parks are convenient study
sites to observe a variety of earth materials. As students collect
rocks and observe vegetation, they will become aware that soil varies
from place to place in its color, texture, and reaction to water.
By planting seeds in a variety of soil samples, they can compare the
effect of different soils on plant growth. If they revisit study sites
regularly, children will develop an understanding that earth's surface
is constantly changing. They also can simulate some changes, such
as erosion, in a small tray of soil or a stream table and compare
their observations with photographs of similar, but larger scale,
changes.
See the example entitled "Weather"
By observing the day and night sky regularly, children in grades
K-4 will learn to identify sequences of changes and to look for patterns
in these changes. As they observe changes, such as the movement of
an object's shadow during the course of a day, and the positions of
the sun and the moon, they will find the patterns in these movements.
They can draw the moon's shape for each evening on a calendar and
then determine the pattern in the shapes over several weeks. These
understandings should be confined to observations, descriptions, and
finding patterns. Attempting to extend this understanding into explanations
using models will be limited by the inability of young children to
understand that earth is approximately spherical. They also have little
understanding of gravity and usually have misconceptions about the
properties of light that allow us to see objects such as the moon.
(Although children will say that they live on a ball, probing questions
will reveal that their thinking may be very different.)
Students can discover patterns of weather changes during the year
by keeping a journal. Younger students can draw a daily weather picture
based on what they see out a window or at recess; older students can
make simple charts and graphs from data they collect at a simple school
weather station.
Emphasis in grades K-4 should be on developing observation and description
skills and the explanations based on observations. Younger children
should be encouraged to talk about and draw what they see and think.
Older students can keep journals, use instruments, and record their
observations and measurements.
GUIDE TO THE CONTENT STANDARD
Fundamental concepts and principles that underlie this standard include
PROPERTIES OF EARTH MATERIALS
Earth materials are solid rocks and soils, water, and the gases
of the atmosphere. The varied materials have different physical and
chemical properties, which make them useful in different ways, for
example, as building materials, as sources of fuel, or for growing
the plants we use as food. Earth materials provide many of the resources
that humans use.
Soils have properties of color and texture, capacity to retain
water, and ability to support the growth of many kinds of plants,
including those in our food supply.
Fossils provide evidence about the plants and animals that lived
long ago and the nature of the environment at that time.
OBJECTS IN THE SKY
The sun, moon, stars, clouds, birds, and airplanes all have properties,
locations, and movements that can be observed and described.
The sun provides the light and heat necessary to maintain the temperature
of the earth.
CHANGES IN THE EARTH AND SKY
The surface of the earth changes. Some changes are due to slow
processes, such as erosion and weathering, and some changes are due
to rapid processes, such as landslides, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes.
Weather changes from day to day and over the seasons. Weather can
be described by measurable quantities, such as temperature, wind direction
and speed, and precipitation.
Objects in the sky have patterns of movement. The sun, for example,
appears to move across the sky in the same way every day, but its
path changes slowly over the seasons. The moon moves across the sky
on a daily basis much like the sun. The observable shape of the moon
changes from day to day in a cycle that lasts about a month.