Grade 05 Science - EC: S5.B.3.1.1
Grade 05 Science - EC: S5.B.3.1.1
Continuum of Activities
The list below represents a continuum of activities: resources categorized by Standard/Eligible Content that teachers may use to move students toward proficiency. Using LEA curriculum and available materials and resources, teachers can customize the activity statements/questions for classroom use.
This continuum of activities offers:
- Instructional activities designed to be integrated into planned lessons
- Questions/activities that grow in complexity
- Opportunities for differentiation for each student’s level of performance
Grade Levels
5th Grade
Course, Subject
Science
Related Academic Standards / Eligible Content
Activities
- Match the ecological word to its definition.
- If an ecosystem is where there are living and non-living organisms, which of these is not an example of an ecosystem? Explain your thoughts for each.
- desert
- mountain goat
- a fish aquarium in a classroom
- Ecosystems transfer energy. In your own words, where do each or these get its energy? Give an example in your response.
- producers
- consumers
- decomposers
- Label the following as a producer, consumer, or decomposer
- Fungus
- Bacteria
- Shark
- Algae
- Redwood tree
- Woodpecker
- Draw a small ecosystem. Label 2 living/biotic things and 2 non-living/abiotic things.
- Use a magazine to create a collage. Have living organisms on one side and non-living on the other.
- A terrarium is “a glass or plastic box that is used for growing plants or keeping small animals indoors.” Explain how a terrarium contains an entire ecosystem.
- Write a creative story about what would happen to the world if there were no consumers in the world.
Here are some questions to get you thinking:
-
- How would producers change, or not change?
- What would it be like if humans and other animals could make their own food?
- Would competition change? Who would complete and what would they compete for?
- Conduct a brief experiment about how decomposers work.
- There are different types of consumers in an ecosystem: herbivores, carnivores and omnivores. TASK: Research each type and give an example. (Be sure to explain the habitat and typical diet.)
Answer Key/Rubric
-
- b
- a
- c
- a. desert- a biome or habitat that does not receive very much rain fall, can be very hot, or cold; could be described as an ecosystem because there are organisms that make its home there
b. mountain goat- a singular organism, it must have a place to live to survive and also organisms to feed on because it is a consumer
c. a fish aquarium in a classroom- would be an example of an ecosystem if there was both living and non-living things
- Producers get energy from the sun, i.e. plants (rare cases- from heat sources, chemosynthesis)
- Consumers get energy from other plants or animals, i.e. humans, bears, bees
- Decomposers get their energy from feeding off of dead organisms, i.e. fungi, bacteria
- Fungus- decomposer
- Bacteria- decomposer
- Shark- consumer
- Algae- producer
- Redwood tree- producer
- Woodpecker- consumer
- Students answers will vary- teacher will evaluate if student correctly labels living things and nonliving
- Students answers will vary- teacher will evaluate if student correctly classifies living things and nonliving
- Students answers will vary- A terrarium contains an entire ecosystem because it has both living and non-living things. For example the plant is living however the non-living things include the air, water cycling through, and the dirt
- Suggested Rubric: This rubric may be used to assess a student’s overall mastery of the standard or eligible content:
- Suggested Rubric: This rubric may be used to assess a student’s overall mastery of the standard or eligible content:
- Suggested Rubric: This rubric may be used to assess a student’s overall mastery of the standard or eligible content: