Standards for DC

× Home eBook Access Store All Books eBooks Latest News Support Login Contact Us

Alignment to Standards for DC


GradeNumberStandard
1 SC.1.1.7. Describe and compare objects in terms of number, shape, texture, size, mass, color, and motion.
1 SC.1.4. Different types of plants and animals inhabit the Earth.
1 SC.1.4.5. Identify the external features that local plants and animals have (such as those found in schoolyards or in city neighborhoods) that enable them to survive in their environment.
2 SC.2.6. Plants and animals have structures that serve different functions in growth, survival, and reproduction.
2 SC.2.6.1. visible, external features of plants and animals and describe how these features help them live in different environments.
2 SC.2.7.1. Observe and describe how animals may use plants, or even other animals, for shelter and nesting.
2 SC.2.7.4. materials in nature, such as grass, twigs, sticks, and leaves, can be recycled and used again, sometimes in different forms, as birds do in making their nests.
2 SC.2.8. Many different types of plants and animals inhabit the Earth.
2 SC.2.9.1. people are more like one another than they are like other animals. Each type of animal is more like its relatives (family) than it is like the animals of other types (or families).
2 SC.2.9.2. Explain that humans, like all living things, reproduce offspring of their own kind.
2 SC.2.9.3. Observe that and describe how offspring are very much, but never exactly, like their parents and like other offspring of the same parents.
3 SC.3.5. Plants/animals classified by the physical characteristics that they share.
3 SC.3.5.1. living things can be sorted into groups in many ways using various properties, such as how they look, where they live, and how they act, in order to decide which things belong to which group.
3 SC.3.5.2. Explain that characteristics used for classification depend on the purpose of the grouping.
3 SC.3.6. Plants and animals have predictable life cycles.
3 SC.3.6.1. Recognize that plants and animals go through predictable life cycles that include birth, growth, development, reproduction, and death.
3 SC.3.6.2. Describe the life cycle of some living things, such as the frog and butterfly, including how they go through striking changes of body shape and function as they go through metamorphosis.
3 SC.3.6.3. Compare and contrast how life cycles vary for different living things.
4 SC.4.7.1. Explain that organisms interact with one another in various ways, such as providing food, pollination, and seed dispersal.
4 SC.4.7.7. Explain how in all environments, organisms grow, die, and decay, as new organisms are produced by the older ones.
5 SC.5.8. Many characteristics of an organism are inherited from the parents, but others result from the influence of the environment.
5 SC.5.8.2. List some characteristics of plants and animals that are fully inherited (e.g., form of flower, shape of leaves) and others that are affected by the climate or environmental conditions (e.g., browning of leaves from too much sun, language spoken).
5 SC.5.9.7. Recognize that some behaviors are instinctive (turtles burying their eggs) and others learned (wolfês hunting skills).



Back to Standards Page





home  |  catalog  |  privacy policy  |  contact us