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Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 Unit 1: Being an Environmental Scientist 7th Grade Science Unit Overview The purpose of this introductory unit is to establish appropriate classroom procedures for Science instruction through grade appropriate content. Instruction during this unit will provide a foundation for the procedures, policies, and practices necessary to be a scientist in 7th grade. Additionally, students will study the levels of organization and symbiotic relationships within an ecosystem. In 6th grade students learned about the structures, processes, behaviors, and adaptations of living organisms. Additionally, 6 th grade science included instruction on the forms and conservation of energy. This 7 th grade introductory unit serves to establish relevance for students by making connections between 6th grade science content and what they will learn in 7th grade, while establishing appropriate rituals and routines. Effective science instruction involves students actively engaged in asking questions, conducting research, collaborating with peers, planning and conducting scientific tests, constructing evidence based explanations and arguments, and communicating findings. It is essential that students experience opportunities to “practice” these procedures in a grade appropriate and structured manner. This unit requires teachers to explicitly plan and implement instruction that will foster students’ ability to independently use the Science and Engineering Practices (SEP) set forth in the SC Performance Standards and Indicators for Science. The content focus of this unit is the organization and interdependence of organisms in ecosystems. The targeted indicators included in this unit specify end of the year learning outcomes for 7th grade students. This is an introductory unit, and it is not essential that students demonstrate mastery of all aspects of these learning outcomes at this point in the school year. Indicators included in this unit will be revisited during unit 7, when more in-depth instruction on all factors of ecosystems will occur. The instructional sequence of indicators within this unit is left to the teacher’s discretion based on student needs. It is essential for instruction to provide a foundational understanding of each indicator. However, teachers have flexibility as to what aspects of the indicators are emphasized. When planning this unit teachers must be mindful of ensuring that students gain mastery of all indicators by the end of unit 7, and that instruction now should provide a foundation on which the teacher and students can build upon later in the school year. Some teachers may choose to concentrate on students gaining conceptual understanding of all indicators in relation to one specific type of ecosystem. While other teachers may choose to focus on student mastery of limited forms of symbiosis or one type of energy diagram (i.e., food web), with the intent of emphasizing other aspects during unit 7. Each targeted indicator for this unit requires students to develop and use models. Mental and conceptual models are a fundamental component of science. Conceptual models allow scientists and engineers to visually represent ideas and phenomenon. These models could be in the form of simple diagrams, 3-D constructs, computer generated animations/simulations, linguistic analogies and pneumonic devices, mathematical representations, or dramatizations. It will be necessary for students to conduct research through informational text, scientific investigation, and District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 data charts in constructing their models. Instruction in this unit could include students developing three separate models (minimal rigor), one for each indicator, or developing models that demonstrate a combination of the understanding required by the indicators (high rigor). Having students create a model as an engagement at the beginning of instruction on this unit, and allowing them to modify these models to demonstrate new learning as the unit progresses will provide valuable formative assessment data for teachers. Indicator 7.EC.5A.1 requires students be actively engaged in creating original structural models that demonstrate the levels of organization from a species to a biome. Acceptable structural models depict the physical arrangement of the levels and the key characteristics of each level. By the end of this unit students should be able to use their models to describe the hierarchy and characteristics of the levels of organization (species, populations, communities, ecosystems, and biomes). Indicator 7.EC.5B.1 requires students to develop original behavioral models that explain the interrelationships of organisms within an ecosystem. Acceptable behavioral models should demonstrate the symbiotic relationship (competitive or mutually beneficial) of the different organisms within an ecosystem. By the end of this unit students should be able to use their models to explain the cause and effect relationship between organisms as they interact within an ecosystem (competition, mutualism, commensalism, parasitism, and predator-prey relationships). Indicator 7.EC.5B.2 requires students to develop models that demonstrate both the behavioral and structural flow of energy within an ecosystem. Acceptable models will show how energy is transferred from one organism or group of organisms to another and the role (producer, consumer, predator, prey, or decomposer) of each organism in a food web and energy pyramid. By the end of this unit students should be able to use their models to exemplify how energy is conserved within an ecosystem through the transfer of energy from one organism to another. While the specific SEP associated with each of these indicators is to develop and use models, instruction should also include opportunities for students to actively engage in the other SEPS. Instruction should allow students to conduct research through informational texts that can be used in the development of their models. Providing data that students must analyze and interpret will offer students practice with making inferences and predictions and drawing conclusions. This could include, but is not limited to giving students data on all of the organisms in an ecosystem, and having students arrange the organisms based on the levels of organization within an ecosystem. Requiring students to evaluate the effective attributes of models, either their own or those created by someone else, will increase their conceptual understanding of the science content while developing their skills for critiquing. Furthermore, this type of activity presents chances for students to construct explanations and engage in scientific argument from evidence. 7th grade students should independently plan and conduct scientific investigations. The timing of this introductory unit may involve teacher guided (with students input) planning and implementation of scientific investigations as a means of establishing proper classroom and safety procedures. This should include, but is not limited to, students generating their own questions about ecosystems as their learning progresses in this unit, and guiding students in planning ways of testing those questions. District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 2014 SC Academic Standards 7. EC.5: The student will demonstrate an understanding of how organisms interact with and respond to the biotic and abiotic components of their environments. Targeted Learning Indicators 7. EC.5A.1: Develop and use models to describe the characteristics of the levels of organization within ecosystems (including species, populations, communities, ecosystems, and biomes). 7. EC.5B.1: Develop and use models to explain how organisms interact in a competitive or mutually beneficial relationship for food, shelter, or space (including competition, mutualism, commensalism, parasitism, and predator-prey relationships). 7. EC.5B.2: Develop and use models (food webs and energy pyramids) to exemplify how the transfer of energy in an ecosystem supports the concept that energy is conserved. What students must know, understand, and do Know Understand Do Know: Understand: Do: Create original models that The organization in the natural Each level of an ecosystem is defined by the type and number of demonstrate the levels of environment from most simple to biotic (organisms) and/or the abiotic (non-living) factors present organization and interrelationships most complex includes the as described below: within an ecosystem from research species (individual organisms), Species Structural populations, communities, o The individual living organism ecosystems, and biomes. o Organisms of the same species can reproduce to make more of Behavioral Interrelationships: that species Conduct research to develop models o Example – white tail deer Symbiosis is the interaction Informational text Populations between different organisms in Scientific investigations o All of the individuals of a given species in a specific area or region an environment that results in a Data at a certain time greater number of species having Construct explanations of the levels o Members of a population compete for food, water, space, and access to resources. of organization and mates Symbiotic relationships include interrelationships within an o Example – all of the white tail deer in South Carolina parasitism, mutualism, and ecosystem Communities commensalism. Describe o All the different populations in a specific area or region at a An ecological niche refers to the Exemplify certain time role of an organism in its Compare o Communities involve many types of interactions among the environment including the type of Cause-effect relations District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 food it eats, how it obtains its food and how it interacts with other organisms. Two species with identical ecological niches cannot coexist in the same habitat. Competition usually results in a decrease in the population of a species less adapted to compete for a particular resource. The parasite-host populations that have survived have been those where neither has a devastating effect on the other. Parasitism that results in the rapid death of the host is devastating to both the parasite and the host populations. It is important that the host survive and thrive long enough for the parasite to reproduce and spread. Examples of commensalisms include: barnacles that attach to whales are dispersed to different environments where they can obtain food and reproduce; burdock seeds that attach to organisms and are carried to locations where they can germinate. populations. o Some of these interactions involve the obtaining and use of food, space, or other 61 environmental resources o Example – all of the living organisms (biotic factors) in the environment with the white tail deer, including pine trees, grass, squirrels, moss, mushrooms, and Carolina wrens Ecosystems o One or more communities in an area and the abiotic factors, including water, sunlight, oxygen, temperature, and soil is an ecosystem o Example – all of the living organisms (biotic factors) in the environment with the white tail deer, including pine trees, grass, squirrels, moss, mushrooms, and Carolina wrens as well as all of the abiotic (non-living) factors such as rivers, soil, air, and rocks Biomes o Individual ecosystems grouped together according to the climate, the predominant vegetation, and characterized by adaptations of organisms to that particular environment o Example – the temperate deciduous forest that the white tail deer lives in A symbiotic relationship exists between organisms of two different species that live together in direct contact o If the population of one or other of the symbiotic organisms becomes unbalanced, the populations of both organisms will fluctuate in an uncharacteristic manner The complex symbiotic interactions that exist between organisms in the environment include: Competition Competition is a relationship that occurs when two or more organisms need the same resource at the same time. Use models to support Explanations Arguments Critique models Personal models Those created by others Analyze and interpret data Make predictions Make inferences Draw conclusions Engage in scientific argument using evidence Critique Support claims Ask questions about ecosystems to Generate hypotheses Refine models or explanations Construct arguments or challenge claims Plan scientific investigations Communicate information about the levels of organization and interrelationships within ecosystems Written Oral GT Requirements: Develop and use models to demonstrate how the niche of one organism impacts other organisms District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 Fluctuations in predator–prey populations are predictable. At some point the prey population grows so numerous that they are easy to find. A graph of predator–prey density over time shows how the cycle of fluctuations results in a stable ecosystem. As the prey population increases, the predator population increases. As the predator population increases, the prey population decreases. Energy Flow: Organisms have energy roles in their environments. The energy role of an organism is determined by how the organism obtains its energy and how they interact with other organisms in the environment. The flow of energy in an environment can be represented using a food web or an energy pyramid. Competition can be among the members of the same or different species and usually occurs with organisms that share the same niche. Parasitism Parasitism is a symbiotic relationship in which one organism (the parasite) benefits at the expense of the other organism (the host). In general, the parasite does not kill the host. Some parasites live within the host, such as tape worms, heartworms, or bacteria. Some parasites feed on the external surface of a host, such as aphids, fleas, or mistletoe. Mutualism Mutualism is a symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit. Because the two organisms work closely together, they help each other survive. For example, bacteria, which have the ability to digest wood, live within the digestive tracts of termites; plant roots provide food for fungi that break down nutrients the plant needs. Commensalism Commensalism is a symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the organism is not affected. Predator- Prey Relationships Predation is an interaction between species in which one species (the predator) hunts, kills, and eats the other (prey). This interaction helps regulate the population within an ecosystem thereby causing it to become stable. The energy within an ecosystem is transformed and transferred between organisms of the ecosystem, but is never lost. Food webs describe the organisms in a particular ecosystem found in interconnecting food chains using pictures or words and arrows. Food webs describe the complex patterns of energy flow in a specific ecosystem. Use mathematical and computational thinking to demonstrate how energy moves through an ecosystem Predict what will happen to the ecosystem if various organisms are lost (through any of the other means mentioned in this standard). District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 in an ecosystem by modeling who consumes whom or what. Energy pyramids is a graphical representation of the energy flow in an ecosystem. The amount of energy that moves from one trophic level to another in an energy pyramid is not the same. Energy availability decreases as it moves up the energy pyramid. The most energy is available at the producer level of the pyramid. GT Requirements: Within an ecosystem, organisms have specific places where their needs are met and specific roles within the ecosystem. The place where an organism lives in order to obtain its food, water, shelter, and other things needed for survival is called its habitat. The particular role of an organism in its environment including type of food it eats, how it obtains its food, and how it interacts with other organisms is called its niche. For example, the niche of a bee is to pollinate flowers as it gathers nectar for its food. With regard to energy flow with in an ecosystem, the sun produces 100% of the energy but only 10% is used by producers during photosynthesis. The other 90% is lost to heat in the environment. At each trophic level, only 10% of available energy from the previous level is transferred. Enduring Understanding Organisms in all ecosystems interact with and depend upon each other. Organisms with similar needs compete for limited resources. Food webs and energy pyramids are models that demonstrate how energy is transferred within an ecosystem. Overarching Essential Questions The overarching questions are based on the targeted learning indicators for this unit. Students should be able to answer these questions by the end of this instructional unit. Overarching Questions: How are the organisms within an ecosystem organized into hierarchal District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 levels? How do the interrelationships of organisms within an ecosystem help maintain survival of all organisms? How is energy conserved within an ecosystem? ecosystem communities environment food region mutualism parasitism predation energy pyramid trophic primary consumer Domain - Specific Vocabulary organisms species biomes biotic climate interactions water space adaptations characteristics competition niche commensalism predator prey density fluctuate energy flow availability producer consumer secondary consumer tertiary consumer GT Vocabulary populations abiotic resources mates relationships symbiosis prey food webs consume herbivore Carnivore niche Cross Cutting Concepts (CCCs) Cross Cutting Concepts (CCCs) are reoccurring themes that are evident in all domains of science and engineering. They transcend the boundaries of disciplines and serve to help students create a framework for connecting knowledge across disciplines. Instruction of CCCs should not be isolated, but rather teachers must plan to include intentional references to the CCCs within their science instruction. The following Cross Cutting Concepts and a description of their relevance to this unit of study have been identified: Patterns: Patterns can be used to identify cause and affect relationships. Patterns of the symbiotic interactions among organisms in an environment present patterns that can be studied to predict effects on an ecosystem. Cause and Effect: The symbiotic relationships among organisms in an ecosystem present clear cause and effect relationships. These cause and effect relationships may be used to predict effects to the ecosystems. District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 Scale, Quantity, and Proportion: Models and graphs can be used to demonstrate scale cause and effect relationships among organisms within an ecosystem. Systems and system models: Ecosystems are composed of the interactions of the biotic and abiotic factors in a given area. Energy and Matter: Flows, cycles, and conservation: Energy in an ecosystem is conserved. Energy flow within an ecosystem can be tracked with food webs and energy pyramids. Structure and Function: Not applicable for this unit of instruction. Stability and Change: Small changes in on factor of an ecosystem might cause large changes to other factors in the ecosystem or to the ecosystem at large. Resources Content Resources: Levels of organization: http://eschooltoday.com/ecosystems/levels-of-organisation-in-an-ecosystem.html Informational text Energy Flow: http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/food-web/?ar_a=1 informational text http://www.ecokids.ca/pub/eco_info/topics/frogs/chain_reaction/play_chainreaction.cfm simulation http://educators.brainpop.com/lesson-plan/food-chains-and-food-webs-lesson-plan/ Create dramatization model of food web Literature: Breining, G. (1999). The northern forest. NewYork: Marshall Cavendish Corporation ISBN 0-7614-0901-7Lexile Level: 1110L This book focuses on the interaction of the organisms within the northern forest. Emphasis is placed on the energy flow of the various ecosystems and on how abiotic factors, such as fire and acid water, affecting the habitat. Burnie, D. (2004) Kingfisher knowledge: Endangered planet. New York: Kingfisher Books ISBN 0-7534-5776-8 This book describes the impact humans have on the environment and how living things change and adapt. District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 Crensen, V. (2003). Horseshoe crabs and shorebirds: the story of a food web. Ann Arbor, MI: Cavendish Press ISBN 0-7614-5115-3 This book illustrates a shoreline food web involving the journey of the horseshoe crab. Dobson, C., & Beck, G. (1999). Watersheds: a practical handbook for healthy water. Toronto, Ontario, BC: Firefly Books Inc. ISBN 1-55209-330-1 This book provides information about watersheds and its impact upon the environment. Other topics include bioregions and aquatic habitats, water and nutrient cycles, water and air pollution, invasions of exotic species, habitat loss, and ecological restoration. Hamilton, G. (2005). Frog rescue: changing the future for endangered wildlife. Toronto, Ontario, BC: Firefly Books Inc ISBN 1552975975 This book addresses the declining frog population and scientists work to save the frog population. Topics include the frog dependency on water and land food chains, how other organisms are in turn dependent upon the frog and the effects of pollution, disease, droughts, and bush fires on biodiversity in frog habitats. Johnson, R. (2001). A walk in the desert. Minneapolis, MN: Lerner Publications Co. ISBN 1-57505-152-4 This book provides information about the interrelationships of plants and animals that live in the desert. Mastro, J. & Wu, N. (2003). Antarctic ice. NewYork: Henry Holt and Co. ISBN 0-8050-6517-2 This book provides information about Antarctic food webs and the importance of phytoplankton and algae. Nardi, J. (2003). World beneath our feet: a guide to life in the soil. New York: Oxford Press. ISBN 0195139909 This book describes the organisms in the soil ecosystem. It also includes general information about soil, how it is formed, what kinds of microbial interactions nourish it, a discussion of human misuse of the soil as a natural resource, and how composting can help soil quality. Wallace, M. (2001). America's prairies and grasslands: guide topPlants and animals. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Publishing. ISBN 1-55591-992-8 Readers of this book will gain insight about the types of plants and animals that reside within these habitats. District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society. Aiken County Public Schools Division of Instruction and Accountability Version 1.0 Winner, C. (2003). Life in the tundra. Minneapolis, MN: Lerner Publications Co. ISBN 0822546868 This book provides information on the ecosystem of the tundra. Maps, diagrams, and color photographs are included as well. Career Connections Ecological Modeler Ecological modelers study ecosystems, the control of environmental pollution, and the management of resources. Environmental Consultant Environmental Consultants look at ecological impacts of conservation and development. They also recommend different methods to solve ecological problems. Environmental Chemist Environmental chemists may study the toxicity of various chemicals—how those chemicals affect plants, animals, and people. Environmental Ecologist Environmental ecologists study the relationships between organisms and their environments and the effects of influences such as population size, pollutants, rainfall, temperature, and altitude. Hydrologists Hydrologists study the quantity, distribution, circulation, and physical properties of underground and surface waters. District Purpose The mission of the Aiken County Public School District is to create in students a passion for learning and achievement that will serve them as they compete and contribute in a global society.