Standards for UT

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Alignment to Standards for UT


GradeNumberStandard
1 CC-1.III.2d. Describe how plants and people need, use, and receive water.
2 CC-2.III.1 Investigate relationships between plants and animals and how living things change during their lives.
2 CC-2.III.1a. Observe and describe relationships between plants and animals.
2 CC-2.III.1b. Describe the life cycle of local plants and animals using diagrams and pictures.
3 SC-3.II organisms depend on living and nonliving things within their environment.
3 SS-3.I.2a. the major world ecosystems: desert, plain, tropic, tundra, grassland, mountain, forest, wetland
4 SC-4.V Students will understand the physical characteristics of Utahs wetlands, forests, and deserts and identify common organisms for each environment.
4 SC-4.V.1b. Describe Utahês wetlands (e.g., river, lake, stream, and marsh areas where water is a major feature of the environment) forests (e.g., oak, pine, aspen, juniper areas where trees are a major feature of the environment), and deserts (e.g., areas where the
4 SC-4.V.2a. Identify common plants and animals that inhabit Utahs forests, wetlands, and deserts.
4 SC-4.V.2b. Cite examples of physical features that allow particular plants and animals to live in specific environments (e.g., duck has webbed feet, cactus has waxy coating).
4 SC-4.V.2c. Describe some of the interactions between animals and plants of a given environment (e.g., woodpecker eats insects that live on trees of a forest, brine shrimp of the Great Salt Lake eat algae and birds feed on brine shrimp).
5 SC-5.V Students will understand that traits are passed from the parent organisms to their offspring, and that sometimes the offspring may possess variations of these traits that may help or hinder survival in a given environment.
5 SC-5.V.1b. Identify similar physical traits of a parent organism and its offspring (e.g., trees and saplings, leopards and cubs, chickens and chicks).
5 SC-5.V.1d. Contrast inherited traits with traits and behaviors that are not inherited but may be learned or induced by environmental factors (e.g., cat purring to cat meowing to be let out of the house; the round shape of a willow is inherited, while leaning away fr
5 SC-5.V.1e. Investigate variations and similarities in plants grown from seeds of a parent plant (e.g., how seeds from the same plant species can produce different colored flowers or identical flowers).
5 SC-5.V.2 Describe how some characteristics could give a species a survival advantage in a particular environment.
5 SC-5.V.2b. some environments give one species a survival advantage over another (e.g., warm water favors fish such as carp, cold water favors fish such as trout, environments that burn regularly favor grasses, environments that do not often burn favor
5 SC-5.V.2c. a particular physical attribute may provide an advantage for survival in one environment but not in another (e.g., heavy fur in arctic climates keep animals warm whereas in hot desert climates it would cause overheating; flippers on such anim
K CC-K.III.2 Observe and describe animals in the local environment.
K CC-K.III.2b. Describe how young animals are different from adult animals.
K CC-K.III.2c. Describe how animals care for their young.
K CC-K.III.2e. Distinguish between real and make-believe animal behaviors.



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