

STANDARD COURSE OF STUDY
GRADE SEVEN
It is important that the nature of the adolescent be at the core of all curricula. Middle school students are undergoing extensive psychological, physiological, and social changes, which make them curious, energetic, and egocentric. Middle school science provides opportunities to channel the interests and concerns of adolescents, provided it maximizes their exposure to high interest topics. Middle school learners need to see a direct relationship between science education and daily life. Investigations designed to help students learn about themselves and their world motivate them.
Designing technological solutions and pondering benefits and risks should be an integral part of the middle school science experience. As students take the initiative to learn science and technology, they will learn about themselves, their community and potential career paths. The confidence to pursue such personal goals can be instilled through successful science experience.
Many of science's universal laws are very old ideas that still apply today. In addition, using history to trace the technology evolution that led us from an agricultural to an industrial to an information and communication-based society exemplifies the nature of science. Public acceptance of modified or new ideas exemplifies the struggle of scientists who attempt to advance scientific knowledge or make breakthroughs. The learner should appreciate the efforts of past scientists that have given rise to modern science and technology.
A solid conceptual base of scientific principles, as well as knowledge of science safety, is necessary for inquiry. Students should be given a supportive learning environment based on how scientists and engineers work. Adherence to all science safety criteria and guidelines for classroom, field, and laboratory experiences is imperative. Contact the Science Section at DPI for information and professional development opportunities regarding North Carolina specific Science Safety laws, codes, and standards. The Science Section is spearheading a statewide initiative entitled NC-The Total Science Safety System.
- Structure questions that can be answered through scientific investigations.
- Clarify ideas that guide and influence the inquiry.
- Design and conduct scientific investigations to test ideas.
- Apply safe and appropriate abilities to manipulate materials, equipment, and technologies.
- Control and manipulate variables.
- Use appropriate resources and tools to gather, analyze, interpret, and communicate data.
- Use mathematics to gather, organize, and present data.
Students should:
- Make inferences from data .
- Use evidence to offer descriptions, predictions and models.
- Think critically and logically to bridge the relationships between evidence and explanations.
- Recognize and evaluate alternative explanations.
- Review experimental procedures.
- Communicate scientific procedures, results, and explanations.
- Formulate questions leading to further investigations.
A single problem often has both scientific and technological aspects. For example, investigating the salinity of the water in North Carolina's sounds is the pursuit of science, while creating a way to make this salt water drinkable is the pursuit of technology. In other words, while science tries to understand the natural world, technology tries to solve practical problems. Technology expands our capacity to understand the world and to control the natural and human-made environment. Technology asks questions like "How does this work?" and "How can it be improved?"
The word "technology" has many definitions. It may, for example, mean a particular way of doing things, and or it may denote a specific object. Stephen Kiln, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University has four definitions of technology (Kiln, 1985):
- artifact or hardware. (e.g., an aspirin, chair, computer, or video tape)
- methodology or technique. (e.g., painting, using a microscope or calculator)
- system of production. (e.g., the automobile assembly line, a process for manufacturing a product or an entire industry)
- social-technical system. (an airplane, for example, suggests a plethora of interrelated devices, human resources, and artifacts such as airports, passengers and pilots, fuel, regulations and ticketing).
Technology provides tools for understanding natural phenomena and often sparks scientific advances. It has always played a role in the growth of scientific knowledge. The techniques for shaping, producing or manufacturing tools, for example, are seen as the primary evidence of the beginning of human culture. Applying scientific knowledge of materials and processes to the benefit of people has been a determining factor in shaping our culture.
While understanding the connection of science and technology is critical, the ability to distinguish between the work of engineers and scientists also should be explored. Scientists propose explanations for questions about the natural world, and engineers propose solutions relating to human problems, needs, and aspirations. Technology design skills are parallel to inquiry skills in science. It is critical that students understand that technology enables us to design adaptations to the natural world but not without both positive and negative consequences. The limits on science's ability to answer all questions, and on technology's ability to design solutions for all adaptive problems, also must be stressed. Design requires that technological solutions adhere to the universal laws of nature. Constraints such as gravity or the properties of the materials to be used are critical to the success of a technological solution. Other constraints, including cost, time, politics, society, ethics, and aesthetics, also define parameters and limit choices. Students should analyze benefits and costs of technological solutions. Fundamental abilities of technological design include the ability to:
- Identify problems appropriate for technological design.
- Develop criteria for evaluating the product or solution.
- Identify constraints that must be taken into consideration
- Design a product or solution.
- Apply safe and appropriate abilities to manipulate materials, equipment, and technologies.
- Implement a proposed design.
- Evaluate completed design or product.
- Analyze the risks and benefits of the solution.
- Communicate the process of technological design.
- Review the process of technological design.
- analyze the role of humans in the natural world using issues that concern the lithosphere.
- interpret the interconnectedness of all organisms in an ecosystem and the effect of disturbing parts of a system.
- evaluate the benefits and knowledge gained from space exploration.
- investigate the importance of soil quality.
Strands: The Nature of Science, Science as Inquiry, Science and Technology, Science in Personal and Social Perspectives Strands provide the context for content goals.
| Competency Goal 1: The learner will design and conduct investigations to demonstrate an understanding of scientific inquiry.. |
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| Objectives 1.01 Identify and create questions and hypotheses that can be answered through scientific investigations. 1.02 Develop appropriate experimental procedures for:
1.03 Apply safety procedures in the laboratory and in field studies:
1.04 Analyze variables in scientific investigations:
1.05 Analyze evidence to:
1.06 Use mathematics to gather, organize, and present quantitative data resulting from scientific investigations:
1.07 Prepare models and/or computer simulations to:
1.08 Use oral and written language to:
1.09 Use technologies and information systems to:
1.10 Analyze and evaluate information from a scientifically literate viewpoint by reading, hearing, and/or viewing:
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| Competency Goal 2: The learner will demonstrate an understanding of technological design. |
| Objectives 2.01 Explore evidence that "technology" has many definitions.
2.02 Use information systems to:
2.03 Evaluate technological designs for:
2.04 Apply tenets of technological design to make informed consumer decisions about:
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| Competency Goal 3: The learner will conduct investigations and utilize appropriate technologies and information systems to build an understanding of the atmosphere. |
| Objectives 3.01 Explain the composition, properties and structure of the atmosphere:
3.02 Describe properties that can be observed and measured to predict air quality:
3.03 Conclude that the good health of environments and organisms requires:
3.04 Evaluate how humans impact air quality including:
3.05 Examine evidence that atmospheric properties can be studied to predict atmospheric conditions and weather hazards:
3.06 Assess the use of technology in studying atmospheric phenomena and weather hazards:
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| Competency Goal 4: The learner will conduct investigations, use models, simulations, and appropriate technologies and information systems to build an understanding of the complementary nature of the human body system. |
| Objectives 4.01 Analyze how human body systems interact to provide for the needs of the human organism:
4.02 Describe how systems within the human body are defined by the functions it performs. 4.03 Explain how the structure of an organ is adapted to perform specific functions within one or more systems.
4.04 Evaluate how systems in the human body help regulate the internal environment. 4.05 Analyze how an imbalance in homeostasis may result from a disruption in any human system. 4.06 Describe growth and development of the human organism. 4.07 Explain the effects of environmental influences on human embryo development and human health including:
4.08 Explain how understanding human body systems can help make informed decisions regarding health. |
| Competency Goal 5: The learner will conduct investigations and utilize appropriate technologies and information systems to build an understanding of heredity and genetics. |
| Objectives 5.01 Explain the significance of genes to inherited characteristics:
5.02 Explain the significance of reproduction:
5.03 Identify examples and patterns of human genetic traits:
5.04 Analyze the role of probability in the study of heredity:
5.05 Summarize the genetic transmittance of disease. 5.06 Evaluate evidence that human characteristics are a product of:
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| Competency Goal 6: The learner will conduct investigations, use models, simulations, and appropriate technologies and information systems to build an understanding of motion and forces. |
| Objectives 6.01 Demonstrate ways that simple machines can change force. 6.02 Analyze simple machines for mechanical advantage and efficiency. 6.03 Evaluate motion in terms of Newton's Laws:
6.04 Analyze that an object's motion is always judged relative to some other object or point. 6.05 Describe and measure quantities that characterize moving objects and their interactions within a system:
6.06 Investigate and analyze the real world interactions of balanced and unbalanced forces:
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