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Four Seasons. By Natalie Wey. TEKS Addressed. §112.2. Science, Kindergarten
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Four Seasons By Natalie Wey
TEKS Addressed • §112.2. Science, Kindergarten (2)As students learn science skills, they identify components of the natural world including rocks, soil, and water. Students observe the seasons and growth as examples of change. In addition, Kindergarten science includes the identification of organisms and objects and their parts. Students learn how to group living organisms and nonliving objects and explore the basic needs of living organisms. • (4)A system is a collection of cycles, structures, and processes that interact. Students should understand a whole in terms of its components and how these components relate to each other and to the whole. All systems have basic properties that can be described in terms of space, time, energy, and matter. Change and constancy occur in systems and can be observed and measured as patterns. These patterns help to predict what will happen next and can change over time.
Questions • Essential Question: What are the four Season? • Unit Question: Why is it important to learn the four seasons?
Fall Facts • The first season of the four season cycle. Fall is when the leaves change colors and fall off the trees. It is also when the temperature starts turning cooler and animals prepare for hibernation.
Winter Facts • The second of the 4 seasons. This is when in most places there is snow on the ground and very cold outside. It is during this time that most animals go south for the winter or go into hibernation.
Spring Facts • Spring, The third season in the 4 season cycle. This is when everything comes back to life. The weather starts to turn warm again, there are new plants and the animals have come out of hibernation
Summer Facts • The 4th of the four season cycle. It is the hottest part of the year. School is out, you can go swimming, catch firefly's, or play outside since it is so warm.
References • www.vtliving.com • blissfultravel.files.wordpress.com • www.mountaintimes.com/.../summer_times_cover.jpg • www.google.com • www.tea.state.tx.us/teks/