• Scientific and engineering practices (1)
    • Ask questions and define problems based on observations or information from text, phenomena, models, or investigations.

    • Use scientific practices to plan and conduct simple descriptive investigations and use engineering practices to design solutions to problems.

    • Identify, describe, and demonstrate safe practices during classroom and field investigations as outlined in Texas Education Agency-approved safety standards.

    • Use tools, including hand lenses, goggles, heat-resistant gloves, trays, cups, bowls, beakers, sieves/sifters, tweezers, primary balance, notebooks, terrariums, aquariums, stream tables, soil samples (loam, sand, gravel, rocks, and clay), seeds, plants, windsock, pinwheel, student thermometer, demonstration thermometer, rain gauge, straws, ribbons, non-standard measuring items, flashlights, sandpaper, wax paper, items that are magnetic, non-magnetic items, a variety of magnets, hot plate, aluminum foil, Sun-Moon-Earth model, and plant and animal life cycle models to observe, measure, test, and compare.

    • Collect observations and measurements as evidence.

    • Record and organize data using pictures, numbers, words, symbols, and simple graphs.

    • Develop and use models to represent phenomena, objects, and processes or design a prototype for a solution to a problem.

  • Scientific and engineering practices (2)
    • Identify basic advantages and limitations of models such as their size, properties, and materials.

    • Analyze data by identifying significant features and patterns.

    • Use mathematical concepts to compare two objects with common attributes.

    • Evaluate a design or object using criteria to determine if it works as intended.

  • Scientific and engineering practices (3)
    • Develop explanations and propose solutions supported by data and models.

    • Communicate explanations and solutions individually and collaboratively in a variety of settings and formats.

    • Listen actively to others' explanations to identify important evidence and engage respectfully in scientific discussion.

  • Scientific and engineering practices (4)
    • Explain how science or an innovation can help others.

    • Identify scientists and engineers such as Katherine Johnson, Sally Ride, and Ernest Just and explore what different scientists and engineers do.

  • Recurring themes and concepts (5)
    • Identify and use patterns to describe phenomena or design solutions.

    • Investigate and predict cause-and-effect relationships in science.

    • Describe the properties of objects in terms of relative size (scale) and relative quantity.

    • Examine the parts of a whole to define or model a system.

    • Identify forms of energy and properties of matter.

    • Describe the relationship between structure and function of objects, organisms, and systems.

    • Describe how factors or conditions can cause objects, organisms, and systems to either change or stay the same.

  • Matter and its properties (6)
    • Classify objects by observable physical properties, including, shape, color, and texture, and attributes such as larger and smaller and heavier and lighter.

    • Explain and predict changes in materials caused by heating and cooling.

    • Demonstrate and explain that a whole object is a system made of organized parts such as a toy that can be taken apart and put back together.

  • Force, motion, and energy (7)
    • Explain how pushes and pulls can start, stop, or change the speed or direction of an object's motion.

    • Plan and conduct a descriptive investigation that predicts how pushes and pulls can start, stop, or change the speed or direction of an object's motion.

  • Force, motion, and energy (8)
    • Investigate and describe applications of heat in everyday life such as cooking food or using a clothes dryer.

    • Describe how some changes caused by heat may be reversed such as melting butter and other changes cannot be reversed such as cooking an egg or baking a cake.

  • Earth and space (9)
    • Describe and predict the patterns of seasons of the year such as order of occurrence and changes in nature.

  • Earth and space (10)
    • Investigate and document the properties of particle size, shape, texture, and color and the components of different types of soils such as topsoil, clay, and sand.

    • Investigate and describe how water can move rock and soil particles from one place to another.

    • Compare the properties of puddles, ponds, streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans, including color, clarity, size, shape, and whether it is freshwater or saltwater.

    • Describe and record observable characteristics of weather, including hot or cold, clear or cloudy, calm or windy, and rainy or icy, and explain the impact of weather on daily choices.

  • Earth and space (11)
    • Identify and describe how plants, animals, and humans use rocks, soil, and water.

    • Explain why water conservation is important.

    • Describe ways to conserve water such as turning off the faucet when brushing teeth and protect natural sources of water such as keeping trash out of bodies of water.

  • Organisms and environments (12)
    • Classify living and nonliving things based upon whether they have basic needs and produce young.

    • Describe and record examples of interactions and dependence between living and nonliving components in terrariums or aquariums.

    • Identify and illustrate how living organisms depend on each other through food chains.

  • Organisms and environments (13)
    • Identify the external structures of different animals and compare how those structures help different animals live, move, and meet basic needs for survival.

    • Record observations of and describe basic life cycles of animals, including a bird, a mammal, and a fish.

    • Compare ways that young animals resemble their parents.