Quasars
Correlations to Project 2061 Benchmarks in Science Education
The Project 2061 Benchmarks in Science Education is a report,
originally published in 1993 by the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS), that listed what students should know about
scientific literacy. The report listed facts and concepts about science
and the scientific process that all students should know at different
grade levels.
The report is divided and subdivided into different content areas.
Within each subarea, the report lists benchmarks for students completing
grade 2, grade 5, grade 8, and grade 12. The table below shows which
benchmarks are met by which sections of the Quasars project.
This page lists all the Project 2061 Benchmarks met by the Quasars
project. Content headings are listed as Roman numerals, subheadings
as letters, grade levels by numbers, and specific points by numbers after
the hyphen. For example, benchmark IA8-2 means the second benchmark for
eighth grade students in the first content area, first subarea.
The Quasars project meets the following Project 2061 Benchmarks:
IA12-2, IB8-4, IB12-7., IC8-6. IIIA8-2, IVA8-2,
IVA12-3, IVE12-4, IVE12-5, IVF12-5.
Standards
IA12-2. From time to
time, major shifts occur in the scientific view of how the world
works. More often, however, the changes that take place in the body of
scientific knowledge are small modifications of prior knowledge.
Change and continuity are persistent features of science.
IB8-4. New ideas in
science sometimes spring from unexpected findings, and they usually
lead to new investigations.
IB12-7. New ideas in
science are limited by the context in which they are conceived; are
often rejected by the scientific establishment; sometimes spring from
unexpected findings; and usually grow slowly, through contributions
from many investigators.
IC8-6. Computers have
become invaluable in science because they speed up and extend people's
ability to collect, store, compile, and analyze data, prepare research
reports, and share data and ideas with investigators all over the
world.
IIIA8-2. Technology is
essential to science for such purposes as access to outer space and
other remote locations, sample collection and treatment, measurement,
data collection and storage, computation, and communication of
information
IVA8-2. The Sun is
many thousands of times closer to the earth than any other star. Light
from the sun takes a few minutes to reach the earth, but light from
the next nearest star takes a few years to arrive. The trip to that
star would take the fastest rocket thousands of years. Some distant
galaxies are so far away that their light takes several billion years
to reach the earth. People on earth, therefore, see them as they were
that long ago in the past.
IVA12-3. Increasingly
sophisticated technology is used to learn about the universe. Visual,
radio, and x-ray telescopes collect information from across the entire
spectrum of electromagnetic waves; computers handle an avalanche of
data and increasingly complicated computations to interpret them;
space probes send back data and materials from the remote parts of the
solar system; and accelerators give subatomic particles energies that
simulate conditions in the stars and in the early history of the
universe before stars formed.
IVE12-4. Different energy
levels are associated with different configurations of atoms and
molecules. Some changes of configuration require an input of energy
whereas others release energy.
IVE12-5. When energy of an
isolated atom or molecule changes, it does so in a definite jump from
one value to another, with no possible values in between. The change
in energy occurs when radiation is absorbed or emitted, so the
radiation also has distinct energy values. As a result, the light
emitted or absorbed by separate atoms or molecules (as in a gas) can
be used to identify what the substance is.
IVF12-5. The observed
wavelength of a wave depends upon the relative motion of the source
and the observer. If either is moving toward the other, the observed
wavelength is shorter; if either is moving away, the wavelength is
longer. Because the light seen from almost all distant galaxies has
longer wavelengths than comparable light here on earth, astronomers
believe that the whole universe is expanding.
Correlations to NCTM Principles and Standards for School Mathematics
Principles and Standards for School Mathematics was released in 2000 by the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. The standards, a collaboration between
education researchers and school mathematics teachers, lists what concepts students
should understand, and what skills they should possess, at different stages of their
mathematics education.
The report is divided and subdivided into ten different content areas. Within the
first six areas, the report lists benchmarks for students completing grade 2, grade 5,
grade 8, and grade 12. The table below shows which standards are met by
the Spectral Types project.
Content headings are listed as Roman
numerals, subheadings as letters, grade levels as numbers, and specific
points by numbers after the hyphen.
For example, standard IA8-2 means the second benchmark for eighth grade
students in the first content area, first subarea. Content areas VI through X, which
concern skill processes in mathematics, are not divided into subareas or grade
levels. The standards met by the Galaxies project are:
IA8-1, IC8-1, IC12-2, IIB12-3, IIB12-5, IIC12-3, VA8-1, VC8-2, VC8-3, VI-2,
VI-3, VIII-2, X-3.
Standards
IA8-1. Work flexibly with fractions, decimals, and percents to solve problems.
IC8-1. Select appropriate methods and tools for computing with fractions and
decimals from among mental computation, estimation, calculators or computers, and
paper and pencil, depending on the situation, and apply the selected methods.
IC12-2. Judge the reasonableness of numerical computations and their results.
IIB12-3. Write equivalent forms of equations, inequalities, and systems of
equations and solve them with fluency - mentally or with paper and pencil in simple
cases and using technology in all cases.
IIB12-5. Judge the meaning, utility, and reasonableness of the
results of symbol manipulations, including those carried out by technology.
IIC12-3. Draw reasonable conclusions about a situation being modeled.
VA8-1. Formulate questions, design studies, and collect data about a
characteristic shared by two populations or different characteristics within one
population.
VC8-2. Make conjectures about possible relationships between two
characteristics of a sample on the basis of scatterplots of the data and
approximate lines of fit.
VC8-3. Use conjectures to formulate new questions and plan new studies to
answer them.
VI-2. Solve problems that arise in mathematics and other contexts.
VI-3. Adapt and apply a variety of appropriate strategies to solve problems.
VIII-2. Communicate their mathematical thinking coherently and clearly
to peers, teachers, and others.
X-3. Use representations to model and interpret physical, social, and
mathematical phenomena.
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