1 ) Analyze patterns within the periodic table to construct models (e.g.,
molecular-level models, including drawings; computer representations) that
illustrate the structure, composition, and characteristics of atoms and molecules.
2 ) Plan and carry out investigations to generate evidence supporting the claim
that one pure substance can be distinguished from another based on
characteristic properties.
3 ) Construct explanations based on evidence from investigations to
differentiate among compounds, mixtures, and solutions.
a. Collect and analyze information to illustrate how synthetic materials
(e.g., medicine, food additives, alternative fuels, plastics) are derived from
natural resources and how they impact society.
4 ) Design and conduct an experiment to determine changes in particle motion, temperature, and
state of a pure substance when thermal energy is added to or removed from a system.
5 ) Observe and analyze characteristic properties of substances (e.g., odor,
density, solubility, flammability, melting point, boiling point) before and
after the substances combine to determine if a chemical reaction has occurred.
6 ) Create a model, diagram, or digital simulation to describe conservation of mass in a chemical reaction and explain the resulting differences between products and reactants.
7 ) Design, construct, and test a device (e.g., glow stick, hand warmer, hot or
cold pack, thermal wrap) that either releases or absorbs thermal energy by
chemical reactions (e.g., dissolving ammonium chloride or calcium chloride in
water) and modify the device as needed based on criteria (e.g.,
amount/concentration, time, temperature).*
8 ) Use Newton's first law to demonstrate and explain that an object is either at rest or moves at a constant velocity unless acted upon by an external force (e.g., model car on a table remaining at rest until pushed).
9 ) Use Newton's second law to demonstrate and explain how changes in an object's motion depend on the sum of the external forces on the object and the mass of the object (e.g., billiard balls moving when hit with a cue stick).
10 ) Use Newton's third law to design a model to demonstrate and explain the
resulting motion of two colliding objects (e.g., two cars bumping into each
other, a hammer hitting a nail).*
11 ) Plan and carry out investigations to evaluate how various factors (e.g., electric force produced between two charged objects at various positions; magnetic force produced by an electromagnet with varying number of wire turns, varying number or size of dry cells, and varying size of iron core) affect the strength of electric and magnetic forces.
12 ) Construct an argument from evidence explaining that fields exist between
objects exerting forces on each other (e.g., interactions of magnets,
electrically charged strips of tape, electrically charged pith balls,
gravitational pull of the moon creating tides) even when the objects are not in
contact.
13 ) Create and analyze graphical displays of data to illustrate the
relationships of kinetic energy to the mass and speed of an object (e.g., riding
a bicycle at different speeds, hitting a table tennis ball versus a golf ball,
rolling similar toy cars with different masses down an incline).
14 ) Use models to construct an explanation of how a system of objects may contain varying types and amounts of potential energy (e.g., observing the movement of a roller coaster cart at various inclines, changing the tension in a rubber band, varying the number of batteries connected in a series, observing a balloon with static electrical charge being brought closer to a classmate's hair).
15 ) Analyze and interpret data from experiments to determine how various
factors affect energy transfer as measured by temperature (e.g., comparing final
water temperatures after different masses of ice melt in the same volume of
water with the same initial temperature, observing the temperature change of
samples of different materials with the same mass and the same material with
different masses when adding a specific amount of energy).
16 ) Apply the law of conservation of energy to develop arguments supporting
the claim that when the kinetic energy of an object changes, energy is
transferred to or from the object (e.g., bowling ball hitting pins, brakes being
applied to a car).
NAEP Framework
Alabama Alternate Achievement Standards
Waves and Their Applications in Technologies for Information Transfer
17 ) Create and manipulate a model of a simple wave to predict and describe the
relationships between wave properties (e.g., frequency, amplitude, wavelength)
and energy.
a. Analyze and interpret data to illustrate an electromagnetic spectrum.
19 ) Integrate qualitative information to explain that common communication
devices (e.g., cellular telephones, radios, remote controls, Wi-Fi components,
global positioning systems [GPS], wireless technology components) use
electromagnetic waves to encode and transmit information.