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BENCHMARKS
FOR SCIENCE LITERACY
NOTE: Bold print indicates essential Benchmarks or part of Benchmark.
Chapter 1 — The Nature of Science
B. Scientific Inquiry – Grades 6-8
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Scientists differ greatly in what phenomena
they study and how they go about their work.
Although there is no fixed set of steps that
all scientists follow, scientific investigations
usually involve the collection of relevant
evidence, the use of logical reasoning, and
the application of imagination in devising
hypotheses and explanations to make sense
of the collected evidence. 1B/1 (6-8)
- If more than one variable changes at the
same time in an experiment, the outcome of
the experiment may not be clearly attributable
to any one of the variables. It may not always
be possible to prevent outside variables
from influencing the outcome of an investigation
(or even to identify all of the variables),
but collaboration among investigators can
often lead to research designs that are able
to deal with such situations. 1B/2 (6-8)
B. Scientific Inquiry – Grades 9-12
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Investigations are conducted
for different reasons, including to explore
new phenomena, to check on previous results,
to test how well a theory predicts, and to
compare different theories. 1B/1 (9-12)
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Sometimes scientists can
control conditions in order to focus on the
effect of a single variable. When that is
not possible for practical or ethical reasons,
they try to observe as wide a range of natural
occurrences as possible to be able to discern
patterns. 1B/3 (9-12)
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Chapter 3 — The Nature of Technology
A. Technology and Science – Grades 6-8
- Technology is essential to science
for such purposes as access to outer space
and other remote locations , sample collection
and treatment, measurement, data collection
and storage, computation and communication
of information. 3A/2 (6-8)
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Chapter 4 — The Physical Setting
A. The Universe – Grades 9-12
- The stars differ from each other
in size, temperature, and age, but they appear
to be made up of the same elements that are
found on the Earth and to behave according
to the same physical principles. Unlike
the Sun, most stars are in systems of two
or more stars orbiting around one another.
- Increasingly sophisticated technology
is used to learn about the universe. Visual,
radio, and x-ray telescopes collect information
from across the entire spectrum of electromagnetic
waves; computers handle an avalanche
of data and increasingly complicated computations
to interpret them; space probes send back
data and materials from the remote parts
of the solar system; and accelerators give
subatomic particles energies that simulate
conditions in the stars and in the early
history of the universe before stars formed.
4A/3(9-12)
E. Energy Transformation – Grades 9-12
- When energy of an isolated atom or molecule
changes, it does so in a definite jump from
one value to another, with no possible values
in between. The change in energy occurs when
radiation is absorbed or emitted, so the radiation
also has distinct energy values. As a result, the
light emitted or absorbed by separate atoms
or molecules (as in a gas) can be used to identify
what the substance is. 4E/5 (9-12)
F. Motion – Grades 6-8
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Light from the sun is made
up of a mixture of many different colors
of light, even though to the eye the light
looks almost white. Other things
that give off or reflect light have a different
mix of colors. 4F/1 (6-8)
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Something can be "seen" when light
waves emitted or reflected by it enter
the eye—just as something
can be "heard" when sound waves from it
enter the ear. 4F/2 (6-8)
- Human eyes respond to only a narrow
range of wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation—visible
light. Differences of wavelength within that
range are perceived as differences in color. 4F/5
(6-8)
F. Motion – Grades 9-12
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Accelerating electric charges produce electromagnetic
waves around them. A great variety
of radiations are electromagnetic waves:
radio waves, microwaves, radiant heat, visible
light, ultraviolet radiation, x rays, and
gamma rays. These wavelengths vary
from radio waves, the longest, to gamma rays,
the shortest. In empty space, all electromagnetic
waves move at the same speed—the "speed
of light." 4F/3 (9-12)
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