Project GLAD
Salem-Keizer Public Schools - Oregon
WATER: AN ESSENTIAL RESOURCE
(Level 5)
Idea Pages
- UNIT THEME
- Water needs to be conserved because it is essential to life.
- Individual and community based responsibility to take care of water around the world.
- Respect for and responsible use of water as a natural resource.
- FOCUSING/MOTIVATION
- Observation charts
- Inquiry charts
- Picture file cards
- Teacher made Big Book
- Read alouds
- Super scientist awards
- Field trip
- Experiments
- Realia
- Cognitive content dictionary
- Microscopic observation
- Guest speaker
- CLOSURE
- Field trip
- Letters to congress/senate
- Adopt a stream
- Reports
- Presentations
- Exam- student generated or chapter test
- Conservation brochure
- Organized fund-raiser
- Reflective journal on service learning
- Team Exploration
IDEA PAGES
Page 2
- CONCEPTS
- Understand the properties and limited availability of the materials which make up the Earth.
- Understand how people and the environment are interrelated.
- Understand, recognize, and interpret change and continuity over time.
- Recognize that the supply of many resources is limited, and that resources can be extended through recycling and decreased use.
- Identify cause and effect relationships
- Recognize that discarded products contribute to the problem of waste disposal.
- Make observations. Ask questions or form hypotheses based on observations, which can be explored through scientific investigations.
- Recognize the affect of life style choices on availability of resources.
- VOCABULARY
hydrologist / resource / renewable / conservation
reservoir / irrigation / aqueduct / hydroelectric dam
water cycle / water treatment plant / pollutant / sewage
chemical / sediment / silt / pesticide
herbicide / insecticide / citizen / glacier
essential / climate / precipitation / civilization
Fertile Crescent / turbines / intake screen / generator
electricity / responsibility / environment / water quality
aquatic life / representatives / toxin / organic
thermal / fertilizer / eutrophication / evaporate
condense / livestock / algae / contaminant
septic tank / pathogens / bacteria / cholera
dysentery / typhoid / debris / birth defects
flocculation tank / filtration tank / clear well / source
solution / industrial waste / agriculture / acid rain
transportation / global warming / erosion / recreation
nutrients / phosphorous / nitrogen / carbon
waste water / fossil fuels / petroleum / water way
hepatitis / regulations / agencies / arid
IDEA PAGES
Page 3
- STANDARDS
OregonState Standards
Science
Physical Science
- Recognize that a substance can exist in different states of matter (e.g., ice, water, and water vapor).
- Identify ways to produce heat including electricity, and as a by-product of mechanical and electrical machines.
Life Science
- Identify conditions that might cause a species to become endangered or extinct.
Earth/Space Science
- Recognize that the supply of many resources is limited, and that resources can be extended through recycling and decreased use.
- Recognize that discarded products contribute to the problem of waste disposal.
Scientific Inquiry
- Make observations
- Provide some support or background which is relevant to the investigation.
- Ask questions related to observations.
- Form hypotheses using relevant background knowledge.
- Communicate clearly.
- Write observations
- Record reasonable data or observations generally consistent with the planned procedure.
Unifying Concepts and Processes
- Identify interactions among parts of a system.
- Identify systems.
- Understand that something may not work as well (or not at all) if a part of it is missing, broken, worn out, mismatched, or misconnected.
IDEA PAGES
Page 4
History and Nature of Science
- Identify different ways and places in which a variety of people practice science.
- Make challenges to an explanation based on the differences between observation and inference.
Science and Social Perspective
- Recognize the affect of lifestyle choices on availability of resources.
- Give examples in which scientific developments help keep us safe.
- Explain that using technology to solve a problem may create other problems.
Science and Technology
- Design a scientific project with limited time, materials, and information.
Social Sciences
Civics and Government
- Understand how citizens can learn about public issues.
- Identify and give examples of resources that provide information about public issues.
- Identify and give examples of how individuals can influence the actions of government.
- Identify and give examples of actions citizens can take to influence government policy and decision making.
- Recognize and give examples of how nations interact with one another through trade, diplomacy, cultural contacts, treaties, and agreements.
Economics
- Know that whenever a choice is made, there is a cost.
- Recognize examples of how nations interact economically.
Geography
- Define basic geography vocabulary such as concepts of location, direction, distance, scale, movement, and region using appropriate words and diagrams.
- Know and use basic map elements to answer geographic questions or display geographic information.
- Examine and understand how to prepare maps, charts, and other visual representations to locate places and interpret geographic information.
- Use maps and charts to interpret geographical information.
- Understand how physical geography affects the routes, flow, and destinations of migration.
IDEA PAGES
Page 5
- Identify and give examples of issues related to population increases and decreases.
- Understand how physical environments are affected by human activities.
- Understand how and why people alter the physical environment.
- Describe how human activity can impact the environment.
- Understand how human activities are affected by the physical environment.
History
- Interpret data and chronological relationships presented in timelines and narratives.
- Identify cause and effect relationships in a sequence of events.
- Understand how history can be organized using themes, geography, or chronology.
Social Science Analysis
- Examine an event, issue, or problem through inquiry and research.
- Gather, use, and document information from multiple sources.
- Identify and study two or more points of view of an event, issue, or problem.
- Identify characteristics of an event, issue, or problem, suggesting possible causes and results.
- Identify a response or solution and explain why it makes sense, using support from research.
Health Education
- Identify and access resources at home, at school, and in the community for health and safety information.
- Analyze influences on health and well being.
- Advocate for the benefits of safe and healthy actions and environments at home, at school, and in the community.
English Language Arts
Writing
- Use a variety of strategies to prepare for writing, such as brainstorming, making lists, mapping, outlining, grouping related ideas, using graphic organizers, and taking notes.
- Write for different purposes and to a specific audience or person,
adjusting tone and style as appropriate.
- Spell correctly roots or bases of words.
IDEA PAGES
Page 6
- Use correct capitalization.
- Write summaries using formal paragraph structure.
- Write business letters to request information.
- Spell prefixes correctly.
- Discuss ideas for writing with classmates, teachers, and other writers, and develop drafts alone and collaboratively.
- Identify audience and purpose.
- Spell suffixes correctly.
- Ensure that verbs agree with their subjects.
- Use the writing process—prewriting, drafting, revising, editing, and publishing.
Fictional Narratives
- Show through description rather than tell events
of the story.
Responses to Literature
- Support interpretations through references to the text and prior knowledge.
- Develop interpretations that exhibit careful reading and understanding.
- Write research reports about issues, ideas, or events.
- Use a variety of information sources.
Persuasive Compositions
- State a clear position in support of a proposal.
- Support a position with relevant evidence.
- Follow a simple organizational pattern.
- Address reader concerns.
Expository: Research Reports/Multimedia Presentations
- Create simple documents using a computer.
- Use a thesaurus to identify alternative word choices
and meanings.
- Use organizational features of printed text to locate
relevant information.
Reading
Decoding and Word Recognition
- Read aloud grade-level narrative text and informational text
fluently and accurately
- Read or demonstrate progress toward reading at an independent and
instructional level appropriate to grade level.
IDEA PAGES
Page 7
Listen to and Read Informational and Narrative Text
- Listen to, read, and understand a wide variety of informational and
narrative text, including classic and contemporary literature, poetry,
magazines, newspapers, reference materials, and online information.
- Make connections to text, within text, and among texts across the subject
areas.
- Understand and draw upon a variety of comprehension strategies as needed.
Vocabulary
- Understand, learn, and use new vocabulary that is introduced and taught
directly through informational text, literary text, and instruction across
the subject areas.
- Develop vocabulary by listening to and developing both familiar and
conceptually challenging selections read aloud across the subject areas.
- Determine meanings of words using contextual and structural clues.
- Use word origins to determine the meaning of unknown words and phrases
Read to Perform a Task
- Read textbooks, biographical sketches, letters, diaries, directions,
procedures, magazines, news stories, and almanacs.
- Use the features of informational texts to find information and support
understanding.
- Find information in specialized materials.
- Follow multiple-step directions.
Informational Text: Demonstrate General Understanding
- Recognize and/or summarize sequence of events and main ideas presented in informational texts, identifying evidence that supports those ideas.
- Identify key facts and information after reading several passages or articles on the same topic.
Informational Text: Develop an Interpretation
- Predict future outcomes supported by the text.
- Draw inferences, conclusions, or generalizations about main ideas in text, and support them with textual evidence and prior knowledge.
- Determine unstated ideas and concepts.
IDEA PAGES
Page 8
Informational Text: Examine Content and Structure
- Determine the author’s purpose and relate it to specific details in the
text.
- Draw conclusions about whether portions of the passage are facts or
opinions.
- Recognize and analyze characteristics of persuasive text.
- Evaluate new information and ideas by testing them against known information and ideas.
Listen to and Read Literary Text
- Listen to text and read text to make connections and respond to a wide
variety of significant works of literature.
- Demonstrate listening comprehension of more complex text through class and/or small group interpretive discussion.
Literary Text: Demonstrate General Understanding
- Identify and/or summarize sequence or events, main ideas, and
supporting details.
- Identify the main events of the plot, their causes, and the influence of
- Specific events on future actions.
Literary Text: Develop an Interpretation
- Predict future outcomes supported by the text.
- Identify the qualities of the character and analyze the effect of these
qualities on the plot and the resolution of the conflict.
- Identify the theme.
- Draw inferences, conclusions, or generalizations about text, and support them with textual evidence and prior knowledge.
English Language Proficiency
Decoding and Word Recognition
Beginning
- Recognizes sound/symbol relationships in own writing.
- Recognizes English phonemes that correspond to phonemes students
already hear and produce while reading aloud.
- Reads aloud simple words in stories or games.
Early Intermediate
- Recognizes common English morphemes in phrases and simple
sentences.
- While reading orally, recognizes and produces common English
phonemes that do not correspond to phonemes students already hear
and produce.
IDEA PAGES
Page 9
- Reads aloud own writing of narrative and expository text with some
pacing, intonation, and expression.
Intermediate
- Use common English morphemes in oral and silent reading.
- Pronounces most English phonemes correctly while reading aloud.
- Reads aloud narrative and expository texts with appropriate pacing,
intonation, and expression.
Early Advanced
- Applies knowledge of common English morphemes in oral and silent
reading to derive meaning from literature and texts in content areas.
- Demonstrates progress towards reading at an independent reading
level.
- Reads aloud increasingly complex narrative and expository texts with appropriate pacing, intonation, and expression.
Advanced
- Demonstrates progress towards reading at an independent and
instructional reading level.
- Reads aloud grade level narrative and informational text with
appropriate pacing, intonation, and expression.
Vocabulary
Beginning
- Uses appropriate familiar vocabulary in reading
- Uses pictures and observations to meet basic needs in social and
academic settings.
- Demonstrates comprehension of simple vocabulary with an appropriate action.
Early Intermediate
- Uses appropriately familiar and content-related vocabulary in
reading.
- Uses knowledge of English morphemes, phonics, and syntax to
decode and determine the meaning of unfamiliar words in simple
sentences.
- Recognizes some common roots and affixes when attached to known
vocabulary.
Intermediate
- Uses appropriate content-related vocabulary in discussions and
reading. Uses expanded vocabulary and descriptive words and
paraphrasing.
- Uses reading knowledge of English morphemes, phonics, and syntax
to decode, determine, and interpret the meaning of unfamiliar words
in written texts.
- Uses some less common roots and affixes when attached to known
vocabulary.
IDEA PAGES
Page 10
Early Advanced
- Recognizes words that sometimes have multiple meanings in literature and texts in content areas.
- Uses reading knowledge of English morphemes, phonics, and syntax to decode, determine, and interpret the meaning of unfamiliar words with 50% accuracy.
- Applies knowledge of less common roots and affixes when attached to known vocabulary and analyzes meaning of complex words.
Advanced
- Recognizes that words sometimes have multiple meanings and applies this knowledge consistently.
- Determines meaning of words using knowledge of root words, affixes, suffixes, and contextual clues with 75% accuracy.
- Applies knowledge of less common roots and affixes and analyzes the meaning of complex words with teacher support.
Listen to and Read Informational and Narrative Text
Beginning
- Listens to, reads, and retells simple stories from a variety of
informational and narrative text using drawings, words, or
phrases.
- Listens to familiar texts and makes personal connections.
- Demonstrates listening comprehension of familiar text using
drawings, words, or phrases.
Early Intermediate
- Listens to, reads, and retells simple stories from a variety of
informational and narrative text.
- Listens to, reads text, and makes connections to self and to text.
- Demonstrates listening comprehension of familiar text across
the subject areas.
Intermediate
- Listens to and reads text from a variety of informational and
narrative text.
- Makes connections to text and within texts across the subject
areas with teacher support.
- Demonstrates listening comprehension of text through class and/or small group discussions across the subject areas.
IDEA PAGES
Page 11
Early Advanced
- Listens to, reads, and understands text from a variety of informational and narrative text with teacher support.
- Makes connections to text and within texts across the subject areas.
- Demonstrates listening comprehension of text through class and/or
small group interpretive discussions across the subject areas with teacher support.
Read to perform a task
Beginning
- Identifies relationship between simple text read to them and their own experiences. Responses may be non verbal.
- Responds to stories read to them using nonverbal communications.
- Reads simple text supported by pictures, photographs, illustrations, and teacher-developed guides that support text.
Early Intermediate
- Reads and identifies relationships between written text and their own
experiences using key words and simple phrases.
- Responds to stories read to them by answering factual comprehension questions using one or two-word responses.
- Reads text supported by pictures, photographs, illustrations, and teacher developed guides that support text.
Intermediate
- Reads and uses sentences to describe relationships between text and
their own experiences.
- Reads and listens to simple stories and demonstrates understanding
by using simple sentences to respond to explicit detailed questions.
- Reads textbooks, biographical sketches, letters, diaries, directions, procedures, magazines, news stories, and almanacs supported by illustrations and teacher developed guides that support text.
Early Advanced
- Compares relationships between text and their experience using
detailed sentences.
- Use detailed sentences to respond to comprehension questions with
teacher support.
- Reads textbooks, biographical sketches, letters, diaries, directions, procedures, magazines, news stories, and almanacs supported by illustrations and teacher developed guides that support text.
IDEA PAGES
Page 12
Advanced
- Compares and contrasts relationships between texts and their
experiences. Fluency approximates that of non-ELL peers.
- Uses detailed sentences to respond to comprehension questions about written text.
- Reads textbooks, biographical sketches, letters, diaries, directions, procedures, magazines, news stories, and almanacs supported by illustrations and teacher developed guides that support text.
Informational Text: Demonstrate General Understanding
Beginning
- Identifies the basic sequences of events or main ideas in stories read to them, using key words, phrases, and pictures.
- Defines and identifies key facts using a familiar sentence
Early Intermediate
- Identifies or summarizes the basic sequence of written text or main
ideas of informational text using simple sentences.
- Identifies key facts using several passages on a familiar topic.
Intermediate
- Reads and uses detailed sentences to identify or summarize sequences of events or main ideas of informational text and provides supporting details.
- Identifies key facts and information using several passages on the same topic.
Early Advanced