St.
Rose School
Science Curriculum Standards
June 2003
Kindergarten
Physical Sciences
Properties of materials can be
observed, measured and predicted. As a basis for understanding this concept,
students know:
Objects can be described in
terms of the materials they are made of (clay, cloth, paper, etc.) and
their physical properties (color, size, shape, weight, texture, flexibility,
attraction to magnets, floating and sinking etc.)
Water can be a liquid or a
solid and can be made to change back and forth from one form to the other
Water left in an open container
evaporates (goes into the air), but water in a closed container does not
Life Sciences
Different types of plants and
animals inhabit the Earth. As a basis for understanding this concept, students
know:
How to observe and describe
similarities and differences in the appearance and behavior of plants
and of animals (e.g., seed-bearing plants, birds, fish, insects)
Stories sometimes give plants
and animals attributes they do not really have
How to identify major structures
of common plants and animals (e.g., stems, leaves, roots, arms, wings,
legs)
Earth Sciences
The Earth is composed of land,
air and water. As a basis for understanding this concept, students know:
Characteristics of mountains,
rivers, oceans, valleys, deserts, and local landforms
Changes in weather occur from
day to day and over seasons, affecting the Earth and its inhabitants
How to identify resources
from the Earth that are used in everyday life and know that many of them
can be conserved