Standards for TX

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

Alignment to Standards for TX


GradeNumberStandard
1 111.13 (1.1) uses whole numbers to describe and compare quantities.
1 111.13 (1.5) recognizes patterns in numbers and operations.
1 111.13 (1.5) (C) is expected to compare and order whole numbers using place value.
1 112.12 (b) (10) organisms resemble their parents and have structures and processes that help them survive within their environments.
1 112.12 (b) (10) (A) external characteristics of an animal are related to where it lives, how it moves, and what it eats
1 112.12 (b) (10) (C) compare ways that young animals resemble their parents
1 112.12 (b) (10) (D) observe and record life cycles of animals such as a chicken, frog, or fish.
1 112.12 (b) (5) (A) classify objects by observable properties of the materials from which they are made such as larger and smaller, heavier and lighter, shape, color, and texture
1 112.12 (b) (7) the natural world includes rocks, soil, and water that can be observed in cycles, patterns, and systems.
1 112.12 (b) (8) (C) identify characteristics of the seasons of the year and day and night
1 112.12 (b) (9) the living environment is composed of relationships between organisms and the life cycles that occur.
1 113.3. (1.3) The student understands the concepts of time and chronology.
2 112.13. (b) (10) (A) compare how the physical characteristics and behaviors of animals help them meet their basic needs such as fins help fish move and balance in the water
2 112.13. (b) (8) there are recognizable patterns in the natural world and among objects in the sky.
2 112.13. (b) (8) (B) identify the importance of weather and seasonal information to make choices in clothing, activities, and transportation
2 112.13. (b) (9) (B) factors in the environment, including temperature and precipitation, that affect growth and behavior such as migration, hibernation, and dormancy of living things
2 113.4. (2.2) (D) describe and measure calendar time by days, weeks, months, and years.
3 112.14. (b) (10) organisms undergo similar life processes and have structures that help them survive within their environments.
3 112.14. (b) (10) (A) explore how structures and functions of plants and animals allow them to survive in a particular environment
3 112.14. (b) (10) (B) some characteristics of organisms are inherited such as the number of limbs on an animal or flower color and recognize that some behaviors are learned in response to living in a certain environment such as animals using tools to get food
3 112.14. (b) (10) (C) how animals and plants undergo a series of orderly changes in their diverse life cycles such as tomato plants, frogs, and lady bugs.
3 112.14. (b) (8) The student knows there are recognizable patterns in the natural world and among objects in the sky.
3 112.14. (b) (9) organisms have characteristics that help them survive and can describe patterns, cycles, systems, and relationships within the environments.
4 112.15. (b) (10) organisms undergo similar life processes and have structures that help them survive within their environment.
4 112.15. (b) (10) (C) explore, illustrate, and compare life cycles in living organisms such as butterflies, beetles, radishes, or lima beans.
4 112.15. (b) (8) (C) collect and analyze data to identify sequences and predict patterns of change in shadows, tides, seasons, and the observable appearance of the Moon over time.
5 112.16. (b) (10) organisms undergo similar life processes and have structures that help them survive within their environments.
5 112.16. (b) (10) (B) differentiate between inherited traits of plants and animals such as spines on a cactus or shape of a beak and learned behaviors such as an animal learning tricks or a child riding a bicycle
5 112.16. (b) (8) there are recognizable patterns in the natural world and among the Sun, Earth, and Moon system.
5 112.16. (b) (8) (A) differentiate between weather and climate
5 112.16. (b) (9) there are relationships, systems, and cycles within environments.
K 111.12 (K.1) uses numbers to name quantities.
K 111.12 (K.1) (A) is expected to use one-to-one correspondence and language such as more than, same number as, or two less than to describe relative sizes of sets of concrete objects.
K 111.12 (K.11) (C) is expected to read a calendar using days, weeks, and months.
K 112.11 (b) (10) organisms resemble their parents and have structures and processes that help them survive within their environments.
K 112.11 (b) (3) (B) make predictions based on observable patterns in nature such as the shapes of leaves
K 112.11 (b) (8) there are recognizable patterns in the natural world and among objects in the sky.
K 112.11 (b) (8) (A) observe and describe weather changes from day to day and over seasons
K 112.11 (b) (8) (B) identify events that have repeating patterns, including seasons of the year and day and night
PK PK.1. (B) counts by ones to 10 or higher
PK PK.1. (C) counts concrete objects to five or higher
PK PK.1. (D) begins to compare the numbers of concrete objects using language (e.g., ''same'' or ''equal,'' ''one more,'' ''more than,'' or ''less than'')
PK PK.1. (E) begins to name ''how many'' are in a group of up to three (or more) objects without counting (e.g., recognizing two or three crayons in a box)
PK PK.1. (J) compares objects and organisms and identifies similarities and differences
PK PK.1. (K) sorts objects and organisms into groups and begins to describe how groups were organized
PK PK.2. (B) describes properties of objects and characteristics of living things
PK PK.2. (C) begins to recognize patterns in their environment (e.g., day follows night, repeated phrases in storybooks, patterns in carpeting or clothing)
PK PK.2. (H) uses patterns (such as growth and day following night to predict what happens next)
PK PK.2. (I) identifies similarities and differences among objects and organisms



Back to Standards Page





home  |  catalog  |  privacy policy  |  contact us