- Carthage Intermediate Center
- Curriculum
Introduction to Curriculum at the CIC
4th Grade Priority Standards
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Mathematics
By the end of the year, the students will...
- Understand that in a multi-digit number, a digit represents 10 times what it would represent in the place to its right.
- Multiply a whole number of up to four digits by a one-digit whole number and multiply two two-digit numbers, and justify the solution.
- Solve multi-step whole number problems involving the four operations and variables and using estimation to interpret the reasonableness of the answer.
- Find whole-number quotients and remainders with up to four-digit dividends and one-digit divisors, and justify the solution.
- Solve problems involving adding and subtracting fractions and mixed numbers with like denominators.
- Solve problems involving multiplication of a fraction by a whole number
- Compare two decimals to the hundredths place using the symbols >, = or <, and justify the solution.
- Analyze data in frequency tables, line plots, bar graphs or picture graphs (fractions with line plots).
- Draw and identify points, lines, line segments, rays, angles, perpendicular lines and parallel lines.
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Reading
By the end of the year, the students will...
- Summarize and sequence the events/plot, explain how past events impact future events, and identify the theme.
- Develop an understanding of vocabulary by determining the meaning of academic English words derived from Latin, Greek, or other linguistic root words and their prefixes and suffixes.
- Explain relevant connections between text-to-text (ideas and information in various fiction and nonfiction works, using compare and contrast.
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Science
By the end of the year, students will...
- Plan and carry out fair tests in which variables are controlled and failure points are considered to identify aspects of a model or prototype that can be improved.
- Predict how changes in either the amount of force applied to an object or the mass of the object affects the motion (speed and direction) of the object.
- Generate and compare multiple possible solutions to a problem based on how well each is likely to meet the criteria and constraints of the problem.
- Apply scientific ideas to design, test, and refine a device that converts energy from one form to another (clarification: examples of devices could include electric circuits that convert electrical energy into motion energy of a vehicle, light or sound, and a passive solar heater that converts light into heat; examples of constraints could include the materials, cost, or time to design the device).
- Plan and conduct scientific investigations or simulations to provide evidence how natural processes (e.g., weathering and erosion) shape Earth’s surfaces.
- Construct an argument that plants and animals have internal and external structures that function to support survival, growth, behavior, and plant reproduction (clarification: examples of structures could include thorns, stems, roots, colored petals, heart, stomach, lung, brain, and skin).
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Social Studies
By the end of the year, the students will...
- Analyze how people are affected by, depend on, adapt to, and change their physical environments in the past and in the present
- Describe the character traits and civic attitudes of historically significant individuals in American history prior to c. 1800
- Analyze the preservation of cultural life, celebrations, traditions, and commemorations over time
- Explain how the purpose and roles of government were debated from early settlements to c. 1800
- Describe the character traits and civic attitudes of historically significant individuals in American history prior to c. 1800
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Writing
By the end of the year, students will...
- Develop a draft from prewriting by categorizing, organizing, and sequencing facts, details, and/or events into a text (from sources when appropriate) into clear introductory, supporting, and concluding paragraphs.
- Write opinion texts that state an opinion or establish a position and provide reasons for the opinion/position supported by facts and details.
- Write fiction or non-fiction narratives and poems that use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, motivation, and descriptions.
- Apply research process to present and evaluate how completely, accurately, and efficiently the research question was explored or answered using previously established teacher/student criteria.
- Write informative/explanatory texts that develop the topic into supporting paragraphs from sources, using topic sentences with facts, details, examples, and quotations.
5th Grade Priority Standards
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Mathematics
By the end of the year, students will...
- Compare and order fractions (and/or decimals to the thousandths place) using the symbols >,=,<, and justify the solution.
- Solve problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions and mixed numbers with unlike denominators, and justify the solution.
- Solve and justify multi-step problems involving variables, whole numbers, fractions, and decimals.
- Extend the concept of multiplication to multiply a fraction or whole number by a fraction.
- Extend the concept of division to divide unit fractions and whole numbers by using visual fraction models and equations.
- Add and subtract multi-digit whole numbers and decimals to the thousandths place, and justify the solution
- Multiply multi-digit whole numbers and decimals to the hundredths place, and justify the solution.
- Divide multi-digit whole numbers and decimals to the hundredths place using up to two-digit divisors and four-digit dividends, and justify the solution.
- Investigate the relationship between two numeric patterns
- Create a line graph to represent a data set, and analyze the data to answer questions and solve problems
- Create a line plot to represent a given or generated data set, and analyze the data to answer questions and solve problems, recognizing the outliers and generating the median
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Reading
By the end of the year, students will...
- Draw conclusions, infer by referencing textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
- Develop an understanding of vocabulary by using context to determine the meaning of unfamiliar words or multiple-meaning words.
- Read independently for multiple purposes over sustained periods of time by producing evidence of reading.
- Explain and use the 8 parts of speech: noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection.
- Develop an understanding of vocabulary by determining the meaning of academic English words derived from Latin, Greek, or other linguistic root words and their prefixes and suffixes through context.
- Develop and apply effective listening skills and strategies in informal settings by listening for a speaker’s message and summarizing main points based on evidence.
- Explain the theme or moral lesson, conflict and resolution in a story or novel.
- In speech and written form, apply standard English grammar to produce a variety of complex sentences in writing.
- Integrate information from several texts on the same topic in order to write or speak about the subject knowledgeably.
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Science
By the end of the year, students will...
- Measure and graph quantities to provide evidence that regardless of the type of change that occurs when heating, cooling, or mixing substances, the total weight of matter is conserved
- Plan and conduct investigations to separate the components of a mixture/solution by their physical properties
- Conduct an investigation to determine whether the combining of two or more substances results in new substances.
- Plan and carry out fair tests in which variables are controlled and failure points are considered to identify aspects of a model or prototype that can be improved.
- Develop a model using an example to describe ways the geosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and/or atmosphere interact
- Use models to describe that energy stored in food
- Develop a model to describe the movement of matter among plants, animals, decomposers, and the environment
- Compare and contrast the major organs/organ systems
- Develop a model to describe that objects can be seen only when light is reflected off them or when they produce their own light.
- Support an argument that relative distances from Earth affect the apparent brightness of the sun compared to other stars.
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Social Studies
By the end of the year, students will...
- Use geography to interpret the past, explain the present, and plan for the future as appropriate to topics or eras discussed.
- Explain factors, past and present, that influence changes in our nation’s economy.
- Explain how the purpose and roles of government have been debated across historical time periods to current times.
- Analyze ways by which citizens have effectively voiced opinions, monitored government, and brought about change both past and present
- Explain the causes and consequences of major political developments and reform in U.S. history from c.1800-2000.
- Compare cultural characteristics across historical time periods in the U.S. post c. 1800
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Writing
By the end of the year, students will...
- Write informative/explanatory paragraphs.
- Write fiction or non-fiction narratives and poems that organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally to establish a beginning/middle/end.
- Write opinion texts that organize the supporting details/reasons into introductory, supporting, and concluding paragraphs.
Encore Class Priority Standards
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Computer Science
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Digital Art
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General Music
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Physical Education
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SPIRIT
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Studio Art