Ngss 3-ls4-1
Ngss 3-ls4-1
Ngss 3-ls4-1
Performance Expectation: Analyze and interpret data from fossils to provide evidence of
3-LS4-1 the organisms and the environments in which they lived long
ago.
[Clarification Statement: Examples of data could include type, size, and
distributions of fossil organisms. Examples of fossils and environments could
include marine fossils found on dry land, tropical plant fossils found in Arctic
areas, and fossils of extinct organisms.]
[Assessment Boundary: Assessment does not include identification of specific
fossils or present plants and animals. Assessment is limited to major fossil types
and relative ages.]
Prior Student Knowledge: From the standards within 2-LS4 Biological Evolution: Unity and
What do you expect students to
Diversity, students should have an understanding of different
already know before starting this
Unit? organisms and their unique habitats. From this they should also
know that many organisms live in the same area. Also, from the
standards within 2-ESS1 Earth’s Place in the Universe, students
should know that processes on Earth occur over varying lengths of
time.
Unit Development- For each section include lesson/activity titles, description of each activity to include details on what
students will be doing. Include reference link. If it is your own idea, then indicate. There may be more than one
activity/lesson per E section!
ENGAGE: Opening What activity or activities will access prior knowledge, stimulate interest, and
generate questions? How will you hook them?
Activity/Activities
EXPLAIN: Concepts How will you provide experiences to allow student to explain and clarify their
thinking. What might you do to help them further understand core ideas and
Explained and Vocabulary
crosscutting concepts?
Defined
ELABORATE: What else might students do to further develop their final ability to be successful
with their performance expectation?
Applications and
Extensions
Overarching Question:
Materials for Elaborate: How can fossils be used to tell the history of a species?
-Continental Drift Activity (Looking back at our same first overarching question)
-Paleontologist!
Activity: Fossils & Environments
➢ Where was this fossil found? VS. Where did this species live?
● Find activity that introduces the idea that fossils are not
always found in the habitat where they lived.
● Students explore different ways a fossil or remains of a
species might be transported. Then they look to explain why
the specific fossils we found ended up in a place we did not
expect them to.
○ Evidence of continental drift and migration; climate
change (ice age, etc.)
Reference: Continental Drift Activity! Includes fossils.
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Plate-Tectonics-2-S
URFFDOGGY-43347
● Crosscutting Concepts: cause & effect - provides clues about
the history of life on Earth.
● Evidence of Common Ancestry
http://www.bozemanscience.com/ngs-ls4a-evidence-of-comm
on-ancestry-diversity
● Some kinds of plants and animals that once lived on
Earth no longer exist → fossils provide evidence about
the types of organisms that lived long ago and the
nature of their environments
○ Examples of fossils and environments could include marine
fossils found on dry land, tropical plant fossils found in Arctic
areas, and fossils of extinct organisms.
EVALUATE: How will you have students show their mastery and understanding of the
performance expectation you chose?
Presentation
● Students can present what they know about their own fossil
and incorporate everything we went over during the unit
applied specifically to their own fossil (could bring in
technology here as well)
○ Video, PPT, drawing, poster board, etc. The students
should be provided options to encourage creativity!
CCSS Connections!
❖ RI.3.1 Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly
to the text as the basis for the answers. (3-LS4-1),(3-LS4-2),(3-LS4-3) (3-LS4-4)
❖ RI.3.3 Describe the relationship between a series of historical events, scientific ideas
or concepts, or steps in technical procedures in a text, using language that pertains to
time, sequence, and cause/effect. (3-LS4-1),(3-LS4-2),(3-LS4-3),(3-LS4-4)
❖ W.3.8 Recall information from experiences or gather information from print and digital
sources; take brief notes on sources and sort evidence into provided categories. (3-LS4-1)
❖ 3.MD.B.4 Generate measurement data by measuring lengths using rulers marked with halves
and fourths of an inch. Show the data by making a line plot, where the horizontal scale is
marked off in appropriate units—whole numbers, halves, or quarters. (3-LS4-1)