Standards for MD

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Alignment to Standards for MD


GradeNumberStandard
1 SC-1.3.0.A.1. Compare and explain how external features of plants and animals help them survive in different environments.
1 SC-1.3.0.A.1.b Compare similar features in some animals and plants and explain how each of these enables the organism to satisfy basic needs.
1 SC-1.3.0.A.1.c an organisms external features contribute to its ability to survive in an environment.
1 SC-1.3.0.A.1.d Classify organisms according to one selected feature, such as body covering, and identify other similarities shared by organisms within each group formed.
1 SC-1.3.0.B.2. Provide evidence that all organisms are made of parts that help them carry out the basic functions of life.
1 SC-1.3.0.B.2.a humans and other animals have different body parts used to seek, find, and take in food.
1 SC-1.3.0.C.2. Recognize that all living things have offspring, usually with two parents involved.
1 SC-1.3.0.C.2.a Examine a variety of living things and their offspring and describe what each parent and offspring looks like.
1 SC-1.3.0.C.2.b Identify similarities and differences among the offspring and between the offspring and each parent.
1 SC-1.3.0.C.2.c Are parents and offspring more similar than they are different?
1 SC-1.3.0.E.1. Describe some of the ways in which animals depend on plants and on each other.
1 SC-1.3.0.E.1.a Examine organisms in a wide variety of environments to gather information on how animals satisfy their need for food.
1 SC-1.3.0.E.1.c Some animals eat only other animals
1 SC-1.6.0.B.1. Recognize that caring about the environment is an important human activity.
1 SC-1.6.0.B.1.b Recognize and describe that individual and group actions, such as littering, harm the environment.
1 SC-1.6.0.B.1.c Give reasons why people should take care of their environments.
1 SS-1.3.0.D.1.a Describe how people in a community modify their environment to meet changing needs for shelter, such as clearing land for a housing community
1 SS-1.3.0.D.1.b Describe why and how people protect the environment
1,2 SS-1-3.3.0.D.1. Explain how people modify, protect and adapt to their environment
2 SC-2.2.0.A.1.d Changes caused by humans and other animals
2 SC-2.3.0.C.1. Explain that there are identifiable stages in the life cycles (growth, reproduction, and death) of plants and animals.
2 SC-2.3.0.C.1.c Given pictures of stages in the life cycle of a plant or an animal, determine the sequence of the stages in the life cycle.
2 SC-2.3.0.C.1.d Provide examples, using observations and information from readings that life cycles differ from species to species.
2 SS-2.3.0.D.1.a Describe ways, such as clearing trees and farming land, that people modify their environment and the impact of those modifications
2 SS-2.3.0.D.1.b Describe how and why people protect or fail to protect the environment
3 SS-3.3.0.D.1.a Describe how people in a community modify their environment to meet changing needs for transportation, shelter and making a living
3 SS-3.3.0.D.1.b Describe why and how people make decisions about protecting the environment
4 SC-4.3.0.A.1. Explain how animals and plants can be grouped according to observable features.
4 SC-4.3.0.A.1.a a variety of animals or plants in both familiar and unfamiliar environments.
4 SC-4.3.0.A.1.b Classify a variety of animals and plants according to their observable features and provide reasons for placing them into different groups.
4 SC-4.3.0.A.1.c Given a list of additional animals or plants, decide whether or not they could be placed within the established groups or does a new group have to be added.
4 SC-4.3.0.A.1.d Describe what classifying tells us about the relatedness among the animals or plants placed within any group.
4 SC-4.3.0.C.1.c some likenesses between parents and offspring are inherited (such as eye color in humans, nest building in birds, or flower color in plants) and other likenesses are learned (such as language in humans )
4 SC-4.3.0.D.1.a Describe ways in which organisms in one habitat differ from those in another habitat and consider how these differences help them survive and reproduce.
4 SC-4.3.0.D.1.b Explain that the characteristics of an organism affect its ability to survive and reproduce.
4 SC-4.3.0.F.1c Identify and describe the interactions of organisms present in a habitat: Beneficial interactions: nesting, pollination, seed dispersal, oysters filtering as in the Chesapeake Bay, etc.
4 SC-4.3.0.F.1d Identify and describe the interactions of organisms present in a habitat: Roles within food chains and webs: scavengers, decomposers, producers, consumers.
4 SC-4.3.0.F.1e Explain that changes in an organisms habitat are sometimes beneficial to it and sometimes harmful.
5 SC-5.3.0.E.1. Recognize that some source of energy is needed for all organisms to grow and survive.
5 SC-5.6.0.B.1.b Identify and describe that individuals and groups assess and manage risk to the environment differently.
5 SC-5.6.0.B.2.b human activities may have a negative consequence on the natural environment: Damage or destruction done to habitats, Air, water, and land pollution
K SC-K.3.0.A.1.a features (observable parts) of animals and plants that make some of them alike in the way they look and the things they do.
K SC-K.3.0.A.1.b features that make some animals and some plants very different from one another.
K SC-K.3.0.A.1.c Identify a feature that distinguishes animals that fly (as an example) from animals that cannot and examine a variety of animals that can fly to discover other similar features they might share.
K SC-K.3.0.A.1.d Compare ideas about how the features of animals and plants affect what these animals are able to do.
K SC-K.3.0.A.2.c similarities in what both humans and other animals are able to do because they possess certain external features.
K SC-K.3.0.C.1. Observe, describe and compare the life cycles of different kinds of animals and plants.
K SC-K.3.0.C.1.a Identify and draw pictures that show what an animal (egg to frog) and a plant (seed to tree) looks like at each stage of its life cycle.
K SC-K.3.0.C.1.b Describe and compare the changes that occur in the life cycle of two different animals, such as a frog and a puppy and two different plants, such as a rosebush and a maple tree.
K SC-K.3.0.D.1.b describe and compare living things found in other states such as Texas and Alaska to those found in Maryland.
K SC-K.3.0.D.1.c Explain that the external features of plants and animals affect how well they thrive in different kinds of places.
K SC-K.3.0.E.1. Develop an awareness of the relationship of features of living things and their ability to satisfy basic needs that support their growth and survival.
K SC-K.3.0.F.1.c Describe ways that animals and plants found in each place interact with each other and with their environment.
K SS-K-3.0.D.1. Describe how people adapt to and modify their immediate environment
K SS-K-3.0.D.1.b ways people change environment to meet their needs: planting crops, cutting forests
PK SC-PK.3.0.A.1.a how some animals are alike in the way they look and in the things they do.
PK SC-PK.3.0.A.1.d Identify some of the things that all animals do, such as eat, move around and explain how their features (observable parts) help them do these things.
PK SC-PK.3.0.C.1. Observe, describe and compare different kinds of animals and their offspring
PK SC-PK.3.0.C.1.a Recognize and describe the similarities and differences among familiar animals and their offspring.
PK SC-PK.3.0.C.1.b Describe how offspring are very much, but not exactly, like their parents and like one another.
PK SS-PK-3.0.D.1. Describe how people adapt to their immediate environment
PK SS-PK-3.6.0.E.1.a Distinguish factual from fictional information (anthropomorphic)



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