Home
What Is FOSS?
FOSS Components
FOSS K–8 Scope and Sequence
    Middle School
    Grades 5–6
    Grades 3–4
    Grades 1–2
    Kindergarten
    Strand
  Correlation to Standards
Research on FOSS and Ongoing Projects
Newsletters
  Science and Literacy
  FOSS for All
  FOSS Staff

jump to page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


POPULATIONS AND ECOSYSTEMS COURSE MATRIX
SYNOPSIS
SCIENCE CONCEPTS
PROCESSES

1.
Milkweed Bugs (3+ sessions)
In an 8-week investigation, students raise milkweed bugs in a supportive habitat to study the insect’s reproductive biology. The information from this study is used to study milkweed-bug population dynamics in Investigation 6. • An organism is any living thing.
• An organism’s habitat is where it lives—the place where it can meet all of its requirements.
• Milkweed bugs have a predictable life cycle.
• A kind of organism that is different from other kinds is a species.
• Observe milkweed-bug individuals and populations to monitor changes.
• Describe and communicate a sequence of events during a long-term study.

2.
Sorting Out Life (2–3 sessions)
Students use ecosystem sorting cards to reflect on organizing concepts in ecology and develop the vocabulary associated with those concepts. Through a Jane Goodall video, students become familiar with a specific population study of chimpanzees. • A population is all the interacting individuals of one kind in an area.
• A community is all the interacting populations in a specified area.
• An ecosystem is a system of interacting organisms and nonliving factors in a specified area.
• Analyze and sort images on cards to determine which represent individuals, populations, communities, and ecosystems.
• Identify biotic and abiotic elements.
• Relate the characteristics of a population, community, and ecosystem.

3.
Miniecosystems (3+ sessions)
Students construct aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems in the classroom and observe them over time to understand ecosystem interactions. They use a group scientific log to observe, describe, and monitor changes in biotic and abiotic factors. • An aquatic ecosystem functions in water.
• A terrestrial system functions on land.
• An ecosystem is a web of interactions and relationships among the organisms and abiotic factors in an area.
• Use reference information about organisms to construct a classroom ecosystem.
• Observe, describe, and record changes to an ecosystem, using a scientific log.
• Describe the relationships among biotic and abiotic factors.

4.
Mono Lake (3 sessions)
Students use Mono Lake, an important alkaline lake, as a simple ecosystem case study. They study the functional roles of populations to construct a food web. • The sequence of organisms that eat one another is a food chain.
• All the feeding relationships in an ecosystem define the food web for that system.
• The Mono Lake ecosystem is defined by interactions among organisms and physical factors.
• Research the functional roles of organisms in an ecosystem.
• Use data to construct feeding relationships (food web).

5.
Finding the Energy (7 sessions)
Students measure energy in food by burning it. They learn that food is produced by photosynthetic organisms and explore how food energy moves from one trophic level to another through feeding relationships. • Food is energy-rich organic matter that organisms need for life.
• Energy is measured in kilocalories.
• In photosynthesis, food is made from water and carbon dioxide with light.
• Feeding relationships define trophic levels: producers, consumers, and decomposers.
• Investigate and measure the amount of energy from a food source.
• Determine the mass of production needed to support primary, secondary, and third-level consumers.
• Relate food webs to trophic levels.
• Infer how energy moves through an ecosystem.
page 4 of 8

jump to page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

 


Please take our web survey!