Science ST ND
Science ST ND
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these science content standards as the foundation for their work, not as an
additional layer.
Standards are a continuing commitment to excellence.
The adoption of science content standards and the work to align the whole of the
educational system to them have placed our state on the path to success in
science education. The standards have brought certainty of knowledge and
purpose to all. They are comprehensive and specific. They reflect our continuing
commitment to excellence.
Reed Hastings
President, State Board of Education
Jack O'Connell
State Superintendent of Public Instruction
Introduction
Science Content Standards.
The Science Content Standards for California Public Schools, Kindergarten
Through Grade Twelve represents the content of science education and includes
the essential skills and knowledge students will need to be scientifically literate
citizens in the twenty-first century. By adopting these standards, the State Board
of Education affirms its commitment to provide a world-class science education
for all California students. These standards reflect the diligent work and
commitment of the Commission for the Establishment of Academic Content and
Performance Standards (Academic Standards Commission) and the
commission's Science Committee to define the common academic content of
science education at every grade level.
Glenn T. Seaborg, one of the great scientific minds of this time and of all times,
chaired the Academic Standards Commission's Science Committee. In "A Letter
to a Young Scientist," Dr. Seaborg said, "Science is an organized body of
knowledge and a method of proceeding to an extension of this knowledge by
hypothesis and experiment." 1 The National Science Education Standards reflects
this view of science and the balance between the "body of knowledge" and the
"method" of scientific inquiry.2 The standards provide the opportunity to make
substantial and significant improvements in California's education system.
The standards include grade-level specific content for kindergarten through
grade eight. A significant feature is the focus on earth sciences in the sixth grade,
life sciences in the seventh grade, and physical sciences in the eighth grade. The
standards for grades nine through twelve are divided into four content strands:
physics, chemistry, biology/life sciences, and earth sciences. An Investigation
and Experimentation strand describes a progressive set of expectations for each
grade from kindergarten through grade eight, and one set of Investigation and
Experimentation standards is given for grades nine through twelve.
The elementary and middle school standards provide the foundational skills and
knowledge for students to learn core concepts, principles, and theories of
science at the high school level. The standards are organized in sets under
broad concepts. This organization is intended to help the reader move between
topics and follow them as the content systematically increases in depth, breadth,
and complexity through the grade levels.
The Science Content Standards serves as the basis of statewide student
assessments, the science curriculum framework, and the evaluation of
instructional materials. The Science Framework for California Public Schools
aligns with the standards. The framework suggests ways in which to use the
standards and make connections within and across grades; it also provides
guidance for instructional planning. However, the standards do not prescribe the
methods of instruction. Students should have the opportunity to learn science by
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Kindergarten
Science Content Standards.
Physical Sciences
1. Properties of materials can be observed, measured, and predicted. As a
basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know objects can be described in terms of the materials
they are made of (e.g., clay, cloth, paper) and their physical
properties (e.g., color, size, shape, weight, texture, flexibility,
attraction to magnets, floating, sinking).
b. Students know water can be a liquid or a solid and can be made to
change back and forth from one form to the other.
c. Students know water left in an open container evaporates (goes
into the air) but water in a closed container does not.
Life Sciences
2. Different types of plants and animals inhabit the earth. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to observe and describe similarities and
differences in the appearance and behavior of plants and animals
(e.g., seed-bearing plants, birds, fish, insects).
b. Students know stories sometimes give plants and animals
attributes they do not really have.
c. Students know how to identify major structures of common plants
and animals (e.g., stems, leaves, roots, arms, wings, legs).
Earth Sciences
3. Earth is composed of land, air, and water. As a basis for understanding
this concept:
a. Students know characteristics of mountains, rivers, oceans, valleys,
deserts, and local landforms.
b. Students know changes in weather occur from day to day and
across seasons, affecting Earth and its inhabitants.
c. Students know how to identify resources from Earth that are used
in everyday life and understand that many resources can be
conserved.
concept and addressing the content in the other three strands, students
should develop their own questions and perform investigations. Students
will:
a. Observe common objects by using the five senses.
b. Describe the properties of common objects.
c. Describe the relative position of objects by using one reference
(e.g., above or below).
d. Compare and sort common objects by one physical attribute (e.g.,
color, shape, texture, size, weight).
e. Communicate observations orally and through drawings.
Grade One
Science Content Standards
Physical Sciences
1. Materials come in different forms (states), including solids, liquids, and
gases. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know solids, liquids, and gases have different properties.
b. Students know the properties of substances can change when the
substances are mixed, cooled, or heated.
Life Sciences
2. Plants and animals meet their needs in different ways. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know different plants and animals inhabit different kinds of
environments and have external features that help them thrive in
different kinds of places.
b. Students know both plants and animals need water, animals need
food, and plants need light.
c. Students know animals eat plants or other animals for food and
may also use plants or even other animals for shelter and nesting.
d. Students know how to infer what animals eat from the shapes of
their teeth (e.g., sharp teeth: eats meat; flat teeth: eats plants).
e. Students know roots are associated with the intake of water and
soil nutrients and green leaves are associated with making food
from sunlight.
Earth Sciences
3. Weather can be observed, measured, and described. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to use simple tools (e.g., thermometer, wind
vane) to measure weather conditions and record changes from day
to day and across the seasons.
b. Students know that the weather changes from day to day but that
trends in temperature or of rain (or snow) tend to be predictable
during a season.
c. Students know the sun warms the land, air, and water.
Grade Two
Science Content Standards.
Physical Sciences
1. The motion of objects can be observed and measured. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know the position of an object can be described by
locating it in relation to another object or to the background.
b. Students know an object's motion can be described by recording
the change in position of the object over time.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Life Sciences
2. Plants and animals have predictable life cycles. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know that organisms reproduce offspring of their own kind
and that the offspring resemble their parents and one another.
b. Students know the sequential stages of life cycles are different for
different animals, such as butterflies, frogs, and mice.
c. Students know many characteristics of an organism are inherited
from the parents. Some characteristics are caused or influenced by
the environment.
d. Students know there is variation among individuals of one kind
within a population.
e. Students know light, gravity, touch, or environmental stress can
affect the germination, growth, and development of plants.
f. Students know flowers and fruits are associated with reproduction
in plants.
Earth Sciences
3. Earth is made of materials that have distinct properties and provide
resources for human activities. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to compare the physical properties of different
kinds of rocks and know that rock is composed of different
combinations of minerals.
b. Students know smaller rocks come from the breakage and
weathering of larger rocks.
c. Students know that soil is made partly from weathered rock and
partly from organic materials and that soils differ in their color,
texture, capacity to retain water, and ability to support the growth of
many kinds of plants.
d. Students know that fossils provide evidence about the plants and
animals that lived long ago and that scientists learn about the past
history of Earth by studying fossils.
e. Students know rock, water, plants, and soil provide many
resources, including food, fuel, and building materials, that humans
use.
Grade Three
Science Content Standards.
Physical Sciences
1. Energy and matter have multiple forms and can be changed from one
form to another. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know energy comes from the Sun to Earth in the form of
light.
b. Students know sources of stored energy take many forms, such as
food, fuel, and batteries.
c. Students know machines and living things convert stored energy to
motion and heat.
d. Students know energy can be carried from one place to another by
waves, such as water waves and sound waves, by electric current,
and by moving objects.
e. Students know matter has three forms: solid, liquid, and gas.
f. Students know evaporation and melting are changes that occur
when the objects are heated.
g. Students know that when two or more substances are combined, a
new substance may be formed with properties that are different
from those of the original materials.
h. Students know all matter is made of small particles called atoms,
too small to see with the naked eye.
i. Students know people once thought that earth, wind, fire, and water
were the basic elements that made up all matter. Science
experiments show that there are more than 100 different types of
atoms, which are presented on the periodic table of the elements.
2. Light has a source and travels in a direction. As a basis for understanding
this concept:
a. Students know sunlight can be blocked to create shadows.
b. Students know light is reflected from mirrors and other surfaces.
c. Students know the color of light striking an object affects the way
the object is seen.
d. Students know an object is seen when light traveling from the
object enters the eye.
Life Sciences
3. Adaptations in physical structure or behavior may improve an organisms
chance for survival. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know plants and animals have structures that serve
different functions in growth, survival, and reproduction.
b. Students know examples of diverse life forms in different
environments, such as oceans, deserts, tundra, forests, grasslands,
and wetlands.
c. Students know living things cause changes in the environment in
which they live: some of these changes are detrimental to the
organism or other organisms, and some are beneficial.
d. Students know when the environment changes, some plants and
animals survive and reproduce; others die or move to new
locations.
Earth Sciences
4. Objects in the sky move in regular and predictable patterns. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know the patterns of stars stay the same, although they
appear to move across the sky nightly, and different stars can be
seen in different seasons.
b. Students know the way in which the Moon's appearance changes
during the four-week lunar cycle.
c. Students know telescopes magnify the appearance of some distant
objects in the sky, including the Moon and the planets. The number
of stars that can be seen through telescopes is dramatically greater
than the number that can be seen by the unaided eye.
d. Students know that Earth is one of several planets that orbit the
Sun and that the Moon orbits Earth.
e. Students know the position of the Sun in the sky changes during
the course of the day and from season to season.
Grade Four
Science Content Standards
Physical Sciences
1. Electricity and magnetism are related effects that have many useful
applications in everyday life. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to design and build simple series and parallel
circuits by using components such as wires, batteries, and bulbs.
b. Students know how to build a simple compass and use it to detect
magnetic effects, including Earth's magnetic field.
c. Students know electric currents produce magnetic fields and know
how to build a simple electromagnet.
d. Students know the role of electromagnets in the construction of
electric motors, electric generators, and simple devices, such as
doorbells and earphones.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Life Sciences
2. All organisms need energy and matter to live and grow. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know plants are the primary source of matter and energy
entering most food chains.
b. Students know producers and consumers (herbivores, carnivores,
omnivores, and decomposers) are related in food chains and food
webs and may compete with each other for resources in an
ecosystem.
c. Students know decomposers, including many fungi, insects, and
microorganisms, recycle matter from dead plants and animals.
3. Living organisms depend on one another and on their environment for
survival. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know ecosystems can be characterized by their living and
nonliving components.
b. Students know that in any particular environment, some kinds of
plants and animals survive well, some survive less well, and some
cannot survive at all.
c. Students know many plants depend on animals for pollination and
seed dispersal, and animals depend on plants for food and shelter.
d. Students know that most microorganisms do not cause disease and
that many are beneficial.
Earth Sciences
4. The properties of rocks and minerals reflect the processes that formed
them. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to differentiate among igneous, sedimentary,
and metamorphic rocks by referring to their properties and methods
of formation (the rock cycle).
b. Students know how to identify common rock-forming minerals
(including quartz, calcite, feldspar, mica, and hornblende) and ore
minerals by using a table of diagnostic properties.
5. Waves, wind, water, and ice shape and reshape Earth's land surface. As a
basis for understanding this concept:
Grade Five
Science Content Standards.
Physical Sciences
1. Elements and their combinations account for all the varied types of matter
in the world. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know that during chemical reactions the atoms in the
reactants rearrange to form products with different properties.
b. Students know all matter is made of atoms, which may combine to
form molecules.
c. Students know metals have properties in common, such as high
electrical and thermal conductivity. Some metals, such as aluminum
(Al), iron (Fe), nickel (Ni), copper (Cu), silver (Ag), and gold (Au),
are pure elements; others, such as steel and brass, are composed
of a combination of elemental metals.
d. Students know that each element is made of one kind of atom and
that the elements are organized in the periodic table by their
chemical properties.
e. Students know scientists have developed instruments that can
create discrete images of atoms and molecules that show that the
atoms and molecules often occur in well-ordered arrays.
Life Sciences
2. Plants and animals have structures for respiration, digestion, waste
disposal, and transport of materials. As a basis for understanding this
concept:
a. Students know many multicellular organisms have specialized
structures to support the transport of materials.
b. Students know how blood circulates through the heart chambers,
lungs, and body and how carbon dioxide (CO2) and oxygen (O2) are
exchanged in the lungs and tissues.
c. Students know the sequential steps of digestion and the roles of
teeth and the mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large
intestine, and colon in the function of the digestive system.
d. Students know the role of the kidney in removing cellular waste
from blood and converting it into urine, which is stored in the
bladder.
e. Students know how sugar, water, and minerals are transported in a
vascular plant.
f. Students know plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) and energy from
sunlight to build molecules of sugar and release oxygen.
g. Students know plant and animal cells break down sugar to obtain
energy, a process resulting in carbon dioxide (CO 2) and water
(respiration).
Earth Sciences
3. Water on Earth moves between the oceans and land through the
processes of evaporation and condensation. As a basis for understanding
this concept:
a. Students know most of Earth's water is present as salt water in the
oceans, which cover most of Earth's surface.
b. Students know when liquid water evaporates, it turns into water
vapor in the air and can reappear as a liquid when cooled or as a
solid if cooled below the freezing point of water.
c. Students know water vapor in the air moves from one place to
another and can form fog or clouds, which are tiny droplets of water
or ice, and can fall to Earth as rain, hail, sleet, or snow.
d. Students know that the amount of fresh water located in rivers,
lakes, under-ground sources, and glaciers is limited and that its
availability can be extended by recycling and decreasing the use of
water.
e. Students know the origin of the water used by their local
communities.
4. Energy from the Sun heats Earth unevenly, causing air movements that
result in changing weather patterns. As a basis for understanding this
concept:
a. Students know uneven heating of Earth causes air movements
(convection currents).
b. Students know the influence that the ocean has on the weather and
the role that the water cycle plays in weather patterns.
c. Students know the causes and effects of different types of severe
weather.
d. Students know how to use weather maps and data to predict local
weather and know that weather forecasts depend on many
variables.
e. Students know that the Earth's atmosphere exerts a pressure that
decreases with distance above Earth's surface and that at any point
it exerts this pressure equally in all directions.
5. The solar system consists of planets and other bodies that orbit the Sun in
predictable paths. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know the Sun, an average star, is the central and largest
body in the solar system and is composed primarily of hydrogen
and helium.
b. Students know the solar system includes the planet Earth, the
Moon, the Sun, eight other planets and their satellites, and smaller
objects, such as asteroids and comets.
c. Students know the path of a planet around the Sun is due to the
gravitational attraction between the Sun and the planet.
Grade Six
Science Content Standards.
Grade Seven
Science Content Standards.
Grade Eight
Science Content Standards.
1. The velocity of an object is the rate of change of its position. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know position is defined in relation to some choice of a
standard reference point and a set of reference directions.
b. Students know that average speed is the total distance traveled
divided by the total time elapsed and that the speed of an object
along the path traveled can vary.
c. Students know how to solve problems involving distance, time, and
average speed.
d. Students know the velocity of an object must be described by
specifying both the direction and the speed of the object.
e. Students know changes in velocity may be due to changes in
speed, direction, or both.
f. Students know how to interpret graphs of position versus time and
graphs of speed versus time for motion in a single direction.
Forces
2. Unbalanced forces cause changes in velocity. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know a force has both direction and magnitude.
b. Students know when an object is subject to two or more forces at
once, the result is the cumulative effect of all the forces.
c. Students know when the forces on an object are balanced, the
motion of the object does not change.
d. Students know how to identify separately the two or more forces
that are acting on a single static object, including gravity, elastic
forces due to tension or compression in matter, and friction.
e. Students know that when the forces on an object are unbalanced,
the object will change its velocity (that is, it will speed up, slow
down, or change direction).
f. Students know the greater the mass of an object, the more force is
needed to achieve the same rate of change in motion.
g. Students know the role of gravity in forming and maintaining the
shapes of planets, stars, and the solar system.
Structure of Matter
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
3. Each of the more than 100 elements of matter has distinct properties and
a distinct atomic structure. All forms of matter are composed of one or
more of the elements. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know the structure of the atom and know it is composed
of protons, neutrons, and electrons.
b. Students know that compounds are formed by combining two or
more different elements and that compounds have properties that
are different from their constituent elements.
c. Students know atoms and molecules form solids by building up
repeating patterns, such as the crystal structure of NaCl or longchain polymers.
d. Students know the states of matter (solid, liquid, gas) depend on
molecular motion.
e. Students know that in solids the atoms are closely locked in
position and can only vibrate; in liquids the atoms and molecules
are more loosely connected and can collide with and move past
one another; and in gases the atoms and molecules are free to
move independently, colliding frequently.
f. Students know how to use the periodic table to identify elements in
simple compounds.
Earth in the Solar System (Earth Sciences)
4. The structure and composition of the universe can be learned from
studying stars and galaxies and their evolution. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know galaxies are clusters of billions of stars and may
have different shapes.
b. Students know that the Sun is one of many stars in the Milky Way
galaxy and that stars may differ in size, temperature, and color.
c. Students know how to use astronomical units and light years as
measures of distances between the Sun, stars, and Earth.
d. Students know that stars are the source of light for all bright objects
in outer space and that the Moon and planets shine by reflected
sunlight, not by their own light.
e. Students know the appearance, general composition, relative
position and size, and motion of objects in the solar system,
including planets, planetary satellites, comets, and asteroids.
Reactions
5. Chemical reactions are processes in which atoms are rearranged into
different combinations of molecules. As a basis for understanding this
concept:
a. Students know reactant atoms and molecules interact to form
products with different chemical properties.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Waves
4. Waves have characteristic properties that do not depend on the type of
wave. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know waves carry energy from one place to another.
b. Students know how to identify transverse and longitudinal waves in
mechanical media, such as springs and ropes, and on the earth
(seismic waves).
c. Students know how to solve problems involving wavelength,
frequency, and wave speed.
d. Students know sound is a longitudinal wave whose speed depends
on the properties of the medium in which it propagates.
e. Students know radio waves, light, and X-rays are different
wavelength bands in the spectrum of electromagnetic waves whose
speed in a vacuum is approximately 3108 m/s (186,000
miles/second).
f. Students know how to identify the characteristic properties of
waves: interference (beats), diffraction, refraction, Doppler effect,
and polarization.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
Chemical Bonds
2. Biological, chemical, and physical properties of matter result from the
ability of atoms to form bonds from electrostatic forces between electrons
and protons and between atoms and molecules. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know atoms combine to form molecules by sharing
electrons to form covalent or metallic bonds or by exchanging
electrons to form ionic bonds.
b. Students know chemical bonds between atoms in molecules such
as H2 , CH4 , NH3 , H2 CCH2 , N2 , Cl2 , and many large biological
molecules are covalent.
c. Students know salt crystals, such as NaCl, are repeating patterns
of positive and negative ions held together by electrostatic
attraction.
d. Students know the atoms and molecules in liquids move in a
random pattern relative to one another because the intermolecular
forces are too weak to hold the atoms or molecules in a solid form.
e. Students know how to draw Lewis dot structures.
f. * Students know how to predict the shape of simple molecules and
their polarity from Lewis dot structures.
Solutions
6. Solutions are homogeneous mixtures of two or more substances. As a
basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know the definitions of solute and solvent.
b. Students know how to describe the dissolving process at the
molecular level by using the concept of random molecular motion.
c. Students know temperature, pressure, and surface area affect the
dissolving process.
d. Students know how to calculate the concentration of a solute in
terms of grams per liter, molarity, parts per million, and percent
composition.
e. * Students know the relationship between the molality of a solute in
a solution and the solution's depressed freezing point or elevated
boiling point.
f. * Students know how molecules in a solution are separated or
purified by the methods of chromatography and distillation.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Chemical Thermodynamics
7. Energy is exchanged or transformed in all chemical reactions and physical
changes of matter. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to describe temperature and heat flow in terms
of the motion of molecules (or atoms).
b. Students know chemical processes can either release (exothermic)
or absorb (endothermic) thermal energy.
c. Students know energy is released when a material condenses or
freezes and is absorbed when a material evaporates or melts.
d. Students know how to solve problems involving heat flow and
temperature changes, using known values of specific heat and
latent heat of phase change.
e. * Students know how to apply Hess's law to calculate enthalpy
change in a reaction.
f. * Students know how to use the Gibbs free energy equation to
determine whether a reaction would be spontaneous.
Reaction Rates
8. Chemical reaction rates depend on factors that influence the frequency of
collision of reactant molecules. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know the rate of reaction is the decrease in concentration
of reactants or the increase in concentration of products with time.
b. Students know how reaction rates depend on such factors as
concentration, temperature, and pressure.
c. Students know the role a catalyst plays in increasing the reaction
rate.
d. * Students know the definition and role of activation energy in a
chemical reaction.
Chemical Equilibrium
9. Chemical equilibrium is a dynamic process at the molecular level. As a
basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to use Le Chatelier's principle to predict the
effect of changes in concentration, temperature, and pressure.
b. Students know equilibrium is established when forward and reverse
reaction rates are equal.
c. * Students know how to write and calculate an equilibrium constant
expression for a reaction.
Nuclear Processes
11. Nuclear processes are those in which an atomic nucleus changes,
including radioactive decay of naturally occurring and human-made
isotopes, nuclear fission, and nuclear fusion. As a basis for understanding
this concept:
a. Students know protons and neutrons in the nucleus are held
together by nuclear forces that overcome the electromagnetic
repulsion between the protons.
b. Students know the energy release per gram of material is much
larger in nuclear fusion or fission reactions than in chemical
reactions. The change in mass (calculated by E = mc2 ) is small but
significant in nuclear reactions.
c. Students know some naturally occurring isotopes of elements are
radioactive, as are isotopes formed in nuclear reactions.
d. Students know the three most common forms of radioactive decay
(alpha, beta, and gamma) and know how the nucleus changes in
each type of decay.
e. Students know alpha, beta, and gamma radiation produce different
amounts and kinds of damage in matter and have different
penetrations.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Cell Biology
1. The fundamental life processes of plants and animals depend on a variety
of chemical reactions that occur in specialized areas of the organism's
cells. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know cells are enclosed within semi permeable
membranes that regulate their interaction with their surroundings.
b. Students know enzymes are proteins that catalyze biochemical
reactions without altering the reaction equilibrium and the activities
of enzymes depend on the temperature, ionic conditions, and the
pH of the surroundings.
c. Students know how prokaryotic cells, eukaryotic cells (including
those from plants and animals), and viruses differ in complexity and
general structure.
d. Students know the central dogma of molecular biology outlines the
flow of information from transcription of ribonucleic acid (RNA) in
the nucleus to translation of proteins on ribosomes in the
cytoplasm.
e. Students know the role of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi
apparatus in the secretion of proteins.
f. Students know usable energy is captured from sunlight by
chloroplasts and is stored through the synthesis of sugar from
carbon dioxide.
g. Students know the role of the mitochondria in making stored
chemical-bond energy available to cells by completing the
breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide.
Genetics
2. Mutation and sexual reproduction lead to genetic variation in a population.
As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know meiosis is an early step in sexual reproduction in
which the pairs of chromosomes separate and segregate randomly
during cell division to produce gametes containing one
chromosome of each type.
b. Students know only certain cells in a multi cellular organism
undergo meiosis.
c. Students know how random chromosome segregation explains the
probability that a particular allele will be in a gamete.
d. Students know new combinations of alleles may be generated in a
zygote through the fusion of male and female gametes
(fertilization).
e. Students know why approximately half of an individual's DNA
sequence comes from each parent.
f. Students know the role of chromosomes in determining an
individual's sex.
g. Students know how to predict possible combinations of alleles in a
zygote from the genetic makeup of the parents.
3. A multi cellular organism develops from a single zygote, and its phenotype
depends on its genotype, which is established at fertilization. As a basis
for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how to predict the probable outcome of phenotypes
in a genetic cross from the genotypes of the parents and mode of
inheritance (autosomal or X-linked, dominant or recessive).
b. Students know the genetic basis for Mendel's laws of segregation
and independent assortment.
c. * Students know how to predict the probable mode of inheritance
from a pedigree diagram showing phenotypes.
d. * Students know how to use data on frequency of recombination at
meiosis to estimate genetic distances between loci and to interpret
genetic maps of chromosomes.
Ecology
6. Stability in an ecosystem is a balance between competing effects. As a
basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know bio diversity is the sum total of different kinds of
organisms and is affected by alterations of habitats.
b. Students know how to analyze changes in an ecosystem resulting
from changes in climate, human activity, introduction of nonnative
species, or changes in population size.
c. Students know how fluctuations in population size in an ecosystem
are determined by the relative rates of birth, immigration,
emigration, and death.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Evolution
7. The frequency of an allele in a gene pool of a population depends on
many factors and may be stable or unstable over time. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know why natural selection acts on the phenotype rather
than the genotype of an organism.
b. Students know why alleles that are lethal in a homozygous
individual may be carried in a heterozygote and thus maintained in
a gene pool.
c. Students know new mutations are constantly being generated in a
gene pool.
d. Students know variation within a species increases the likelihood
that at least some members of a species will survive under
changed environmental conditions.
e. * Students know the conditions for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in a
population and why these conditions are not likely to appear in
nature.
f. * Students know how to solve the Hardy-Weinberg equation to
predict the frequency of genotypes in a population, given the
frequency of phenotypes.
8. Evolution is the result of genetic changes that occur in constantly
changing environments. As a basis for understanding this concept:
a. Students know how natural selection determines the differential
survival of groups of organisms.
b. Students know a great diversity of species increases the chance
that at least some organisms survive major changes in the
environment.
c. Students know the effects of genetic drift on the diversity of
organisms in a population.
d. Students know reproductive or geographic isolation affects
speciation.
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998
Physiology
9. As a result of the coordinated structures and functions of organ systems,
the internal environment of the human body remains relatively stable
(homeostatic) despite changes in the outside environment. As a basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know how the complementary activity of major body
systems provides cells with oxygen and nutrients and removes
toxic waste products such as carbon dioxide.
b. Students know how the nervous system mediates communication
between different parts of the body and the body's interactions with
the environment.
c. Students know how feedback loops in the nervous and endocrine
systems regulate conditions in the body.
d. Students know the functions of the nervous system and the role of
neurons in transmitting electrochemical impulses.
e. Students know the roles of sensory neurons, interneurons, and
motor neurons in sensation, thought, and response.
f. * Students know the individual functions and sites of secretion of
digestive enzymes (amylases, proteases, nucleases, lipases),
stomach acid, and bile salts.
g. * Students know the homeostatic role of the kidneys in the removal
of nitrogenous wastes and the role of the liver in blood
detoxification and glucose balance.
h. * Students know the cellular and molecular basis of muscle
contraction, including the roles of actin, myosin, Ca +2 , and ATP.
i. * Students know how hormones (including digestive, reproductive,
osmoregulatory) provide internal feedback mechanisms for
homeostasis at the cellular level and in whole organisms.
10. Organisms have a variety of mechanisms to combat disease. As a basis
for under-standing the human immune response:
a. Students know the role of the skin in providing nonspecific
defenses against infection.
Processes
3. Plate tectonics operating over geologic time has changed the patterns of
land, sea, and mountains on Earth's surface. As the basis for
understanding this concept:
a. Students know features of the ocean floor (magnetic patterns, age,
and sea-floor topography) provide evidence of plate tectonics.
b. Students know the principal structures that form at the three
different kinds of plate boundaries.
c. Students know how to explain the properties of rocks based on the
physical and chemical conditions in which they formed, including
plate tectonic processes.
d. Students know why and how earthquakes occur and the scales
used to measure their intensity and magnitude.
e. Students know there are two kinds of volcanoes: one kind with
violent eruptions producing steep slopes and the other kind with
voluminous lava flows producing gentle slopes.
Biogeochemical Cycles
7. Each element on Earth moves among reservoirs, which exist in the solid
earth, in oceans, in the atmosphere, and within and among organisms as
part of biogeochemical cycles. As a basis for understanding this concept
a. Students know the carbon cycle of photosynthesis and respiration
and the nitrogen cycle.
b. Students know the global carbon cycle: the different physical and
chemical forms of carbon in the atmosphere, oceans, biomass,
fossil fuels, and the movement of carbon among these reservoirs.
c. Students know the movement of matter among reservoirs is driven
by Earth's internal and external sources of energy.
d. * Students know the relative residence times and flow
characteristics of carbon in and out of its different reservoirs.
California Geology
9. The geology of California underlies the state's wealth of natural resources
as well as its natural hazards. As a basis for understanding this concept:
Adopted by the California State Board of Education
October 1998