St.
Rose School
Science Curriculum Standards
June 2003
Grade
2
Physical Sciences
- The motion of objects can be observed
and measured. As a basis for understanding this concept, students know:
- The position of an object
can be described by locating it relative to another object or the background
- An object's motion can be
described by recording the change in its position over time
- The way to change how something
is moving is to give it a push or a pull. The size of the change is related
to the strength, or the amount of "force" of the push or pull.
- Tools and machines are used
to apply pushes and pulls (forces) to make things move
- Objects near the Earth fall
to the ground unless something holds them up
- Magnets
can be used to make some objects move without being touched
- Sound is made by vibrating
objects and can be described by its pitch and volume
Life Sciences
- Plants and animals have predictable
life cycles. As a basis for understanding this concept, students know:
- Organisms reproduce offspring
of their own kind. The offspring resemble their parents and each other.
- The sequential stages of life
cycles are different for different animals, for example butterflies, frogs,
and mice.
- Any characteristics of an
organism are inherited from the parents - Some characteristics are caused
by or influenced by the environment
- There is variation among individuals
of one kind within a population
- The germination, growth, and
development of plants can be affected by light, gravity, touch, or environmental
stress
- In plants flowers and fruits
are associated with reproduction
Earth Sciences
- Earth is made of different kinds
of materials that have distinct properties and provide resources for human
activities. As the basis for understanding this concept, students know:
- How to compare the physical
properties of different kinds of rocks and that rock is composed of different
combinations of minerals
- Smaller rocks come from the
breakage and weathering of larger rocks
- Soil is made partly from weathered
rock and partly from organic materials, and that soils differ in their
color, texture, capacity to retain water, and ability to support the growth
of many kinds of plants
- Fossils provide evidence about
the plants and animals that lived long ago and that scientists learn about
the past history of Earth by studying fossils
- Rock, water, plants and soil
provide many resources including food, fuel, and building materials that
humans use