Alignment to Standards for TX
Grade | Number | Standard |
---|---|---|
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) (9) | the living environment is composed of relationships between organisms and the life cycles that occur. |
1 | 112.12 (b) (9) (C) | interdependence among living organisms such as energy transfer through food chains and animals using plants for shelter. |
1 | 113.3. (1.5) | The student understands the purpose of maps and globes. |
2 | 111.14 (2.11) (B) | is expected to draw conclusions and answer questions based on picture graphs and bar-type graphs. |
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) (9) (C) | ways living organisms depend on each other and on their environments such as food chains |
2 | 113.4. (2.5) | uses simple geographic tools such as maps, globes, and photographs. |
2 | 113.4. (2.5) (A) | use symbols, find locations, and determine directions on maps and globes; and |
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) (7) | Earth consists of natural resources and its surface is constantly changing. |
3 | 112.14. (b) (7) (B) | rapid changes in Earths surface such as volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and landslides |
3 | 112.14. (b) (9) | organisms have characteristics that help them survive and can describe patterns, cycles, systems, and relationships within the environments. |
3 | 112.14. (b) (9) (C) | describe environmental changes such as floods and droughts where some organisms thrive and others perish or move to new locations. |
3 | 113.5. (3.5) (A) | use cardinal and intermediate directions to locate places such as the Amazon River, Himalayan Mountains, and Washington D.C. on maps and globes; |
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) (A) | explore how adaptations enable organisms to survive in their environment such as comparing birds beaks and leaves on plants |
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) (9)(A) | most producers need sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to make their own food, while consumers are dependent on other organisms for food |
4 | 113.6. (4.6) (A) | apply geographic tools, including grid systems, legends, symbols, scales, and compass roses, to construct and interpret maps; and |
5 | 111.17 (5.9) (A) | is expected to locate and name points on a coordinate grid using ordered pairs of whole numbers. |
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) (A) | compare the structures and functions of different species that help them live and survive such as hooves on prairie animals or webbed feet in aquatic animals |
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) (7) | Earths surface is constantly changing and consists of useful resources. |
5 | 112.16. (b) (9) | there are relationships, systems, and cycles within environments. |
5 | 112.16. (b) (9) (C) | predict the effects of changes in ecosystems caused by living organisms, including humans, such as the overpopulation of grazers or the building of highways |
5 | 113.7. (5.25) (F) | use appropriate mathematical skills to interpret social studies information such as maps and graphs. |
5 | 113.7. (5.6) (A) | apply geographic tools, including grid systems, legends, symbols, scales, and compass roses, to construct and interpret maps; and |
K | 111.12 (K.11) | uses time to describe, compare, and order events and situations. |
K | 111.12 (K.11) (B) | is expected to sequence events (up to three). |
K | 112.11 (b) (10) | organisms resemble their parents and have structures and processes that help them survive within their environments. |
K | 113.2. (K.16) (B) | create and interpret visuals including pictures and maps. |
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. (I) | identifies similarities and differences among objects and organisms |