- UNIT 3 – LOCAL ECOSYSTEM STUDIES
- UNIT 4 – COSMETICS / VEHICLES AND DRIVERS
1
Week / Central Ideas / Content / Text and Problem Sets / AssessmentUNIT 3 – LOCAL ECOSYSTEMS STUDIES
1 February
(1.1) /
- Characteristics of different ecosystems found in a local community
- Features of natural, urban, agricultural, aquacultural, freshwater and marine ecosystems
- differences in geographical and physical conditions result in a wide variety of ecosystems
5 February
(1.2) /
- Abiotic factors of a local ecosystem
- Impacts of temperature, pH, salinity, light, water and atmospheric gases on the survival of organisms living in that ecosystem
- abiotic factors, including temperature, pH, salinity, light, water and atmospheric gases, impact on the survival of organisms within the environment
12February
(1.3) /
- Abiotic factors and their interaction with biotic factors
- The sun as the original source of energy for ecosystems
- Transfer of energy through food webs
- there is interaction between organisms, biological communities and the abiotic environment in which they live
- the biotic components of an ecosystem transfer and transform energy, originating primarily from the sun, into biomass
19 February
(1.4) /
- Role of producers, consumers and decomposers in ecosystems
- Transfer of energy through ecosystems
- Food chains and food webs
- producers, consumers and decomposers have a role in the transfer of energy in an ecosystem
- food chains and food webs show the feeding relationships between organisms within a community
26 February
(1.5) /
- Pyramids of numbers and biomass
- Trophic levels and diminishing energy transfer
- the amount of energy transferred between trophic levels in food chains and food webs diminishes as the trophic level increases
5 March
(1.6) /
- Competition, predation, symbiosis, mutualism, commensalism and parasitism
- modes of interactions between species in ecosystems include competition, predation and symbiosis (mutualism, commensalism and parasitism)
12 March
(1.7) /
- Population density
- Factors affecting population density
- Factors affecting community structure and composition
- species interactions affect population densities and are important in determining community structure and composition
19 March
(1.8) /
- Biogeochemical cycles as a natural circulation of essential elements
- The flow of elements from the abiotic to the biotic components of the biosphere and back again
- Examples of gaseous and sedimentary biogeochemical cycles, including carbon, nitrogen, water and phosphorus
- biotic components interact with abiotic components to facilitate biogeochemical cycling
- scientific knowledge can enable scientists to offer valid explanations and make reliable predictions
26 March
(1.9) /
- Carrying capacity of an ecological population
- Factors affecting carrying capacity
- changes to abiotic and biotic factors, including climatic events, impact on the carrying capacity of ecosystems
- scientific knowledge can be used to develop and evaluate projected economic, social and environmental impacts, and to design action for sustainability
2 April
(1.10) / YEAR 12 RETREAT
9 April
(1.11) /
- Comparison of biodiversity between endemic and urban ecosystems
- Comparison of biodiversity between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems
- biodiversity includes the diversity of genetics, species and ecosystems; biodiversity changes naturally over time, and varies due to differences in location
30April
(2.1) /
- Urban sprawl and the effects on ecosystems and biodiversity
- Extinction of flora and fauna in built-up areas
- Human impact in ecosystems and the effect on biodiversity
- human interference is threatening biodiversity through deterioration of ecosystems and diminishing habitat areas
- the use of scientific knowledge is influenced by social, economic, cultural and ethical considerations
- the use of scientific knowledge may have beneficial and/or harmful and/or unintended consequences
7 May
(2.2) /
- Natural selection, including: variation, changes in the environment, selection pressures, survival and change in characteristics
- Behavioural, functional and structural adaptations of endemic flora and fauna
- changes in ecosystems affect the survival of organisms within the ecosystem; individual variation assists survival, which over time results in changes in characteristics of the species
14 May
(2.3) /
- Behavioural, functional and structural adaptations of invasive species (case study: cane toad)
- variation in the form of suitable characteristics assists survival of individuals
- environmental changes may lead to selection of advantageous biological characteristics within a species
21 May
(2.4) / Task 6: Test – Ecosystems, sustainability and species continuity and change [4%]
UNIT 4 – COSMETICS / VEHICLES AND DRIVERS
28May
(2.5) /
- Chemical change
- Physical change
- rearrangement of reactant components occurs during chemical reactions to form new substances
4 June
(2.6) / YR11-12 EXAMINATIONS
11 June
(2.7)
18 June
(2.8) /
- Extended Response Continued
25 June
(2.9) /
- Types of chemical reactions
- chemical reactions, including combustion and reactions of acids, involve taking in or giving out energy; different types of reactions are used to produce a variety of products
16 July
(3.1 & 3.2) /
- Mixtures, emulsions, emulsifiers
- Separation techniques
- mixtures, including solutions, contain a combination of pure substances that can be separated using a range of techniques
30 July
(3.3) /
- Distance, displacement
- Speed, Velocity, Acceleration
- Vectors and Scalars
- motion of an object is directional and is a vector quantity that can be determined mathematically
6 August
(3.4) /
- Inertia
- Momentum
- Force and Acceleration
- the Laws of Motion can assist in predicting the motion of objects
13 August
(3.5 & 3.6) /
- Primary and Secondary safety features in a vehicle
- Resultant force
- Braking Force
- multiple forces can act on objects by direct contact, or from a distance, when the object is in motion
27 August
(3.7) /
- Energy transformation
- Efficiency
- kinetic, potential and heat energy can cause change within systems that can be measured
3 September
(3.8) /
- Energy degradation
- energy in any system remains constant; it cannot be created or destroyed, just transformed
10 September
(3.9) / Task 12 : Test – Motion, Forces and Energy [4%]
17 September
(3.10) / RESERVE
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