Grade 6
The Amplify Science units can be arranged at the discretion of the individual school, but suggested sequences are available. The grade 6 program in the suggested sequence below progressively builds students’ abilities to meet all the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) grade-level performance expectations through a three-dimensional instructional sequence. The following is an overview of the sample sequence of units, a description of the progression of student learning across the year, and a summary of how the sequence meets all NGSS performance expectations for grade 6.
Scroll down to see the phenomenon, student role, and performance expectations by unit, or click to jump to the Progression and Organization, Disciplinary Core Ideas, Crosscutting Concepts Core Ideas, or Science and Engineering Practices.
Sequence of units
- Microbiome
- Metabolism
- Metabolism Engineering Internship
- Traits and Reproduction
- Thermal Energy
- Ocean, Atmosphere, and Climate
- Weather Patterns
- Earth’s Changing Climate
- Earth’s Changing Climate Engineering Internship
Microbiome
- LS1-1: Living Things Made of Cells
- LS1-2: Cell Parts
- LS1-3: Body Systems
- LS2-1: Resources and Populations
- LS2-2: Ecosystem Relationships
Metabolism
- LS1-1: Living Things Made of Cells
- LS1-2: Cell Parts
- LS1-3: Body Systems
- LS1-7: Cellular Respiration
- LS1-8: Sensory Receptors
Metabolism Engineering Internship
- ETS1-1: Criteria and Constraints
- ETS1-2: Evaluating Solutions
- ETS1-3: Analyzing Results
- ETS1-4: Modeling and Iterative Testing
- LS1-7: Cellular Respiration
Traits and Reproduction
- LS1-2: Cell Parts
- LS1-4: Behaviors and Structures: Reproduction
- LS1-5: Growth
- LS3-1: Gene, Protein, Trait, and Mutations
- LS3-2: Sexual vs. Asexual Reproduction
- LS1-3: Body Systems
- LS4-5: Artificial Selection and Genetic Engineering
Thermal Energy
- PS3-3: Thermal Energy Transfer
- PS3-4: Energy and Temperature
- PS3-5: Motion and Energy Transfer
- PS1-1: Atomic Theory/Molecules
- PS1-4: Phase Change
- PS2-1: Newton's 3rd Law (Equal and Opposite Forces)
Ocean, Atmosphere, and Climate
- ESS2-6: Climate Patterns
- PS1-4: Phase Change
- PS3-3: Thermal Energy Transfer
- ESS2-3: Evidence for Plate Motion
- ESS2-5: Air Masses
- ESS3-2: Natural Hazards
Weather Patterns
- ESS2-4: The Water Cycle
- ESS2-5: Air Masses
- PS1-4: Phase Change
- PS3-3: Thermal Energy Transfer
- ESS2-1: Earth's Materials
- ESS2-6: Climate Patterns
- ESS3-2: Natural Hazards
Earth’s Changing Climate
- ESS3-3: Designs to Minimize Impact
- ESS3-4: Human Population
- ESS3-5: Factors for Global Temperature
- LS2-1: Resources and Populations
- LS2-4: Changes Affect Populations
- ESS3-2: Natural Hazards
- ESS3-4: Human Population
Earth’s Changing Climate Engineering Internship
- ESS3-3: Designs to Minimize Impact
- ETS1-1: Criteria and Constraints
- ETS1-2: Evaluating Solutions
- ETS1-4: Modeling and Iterative Testing
- PS4-2: Waves Interact with Materials
- ESS3-5: Factors for Global Temperature
Progression and organization
The units in grade 6 are designed and sequenced to build students’ expertise with the grade- level disciplinary core ideas (DCIs), science and engineering practices (SEPs) and crosscutting concepts (CCCs). The year begins with a launch unit, Microbiome, where students are introduced to essential practices, routines, and approaches that will serve as touchstones for each following unit. An important example of this is the SEP of Engaging in Argument from Evidence. Students are introduced to the practice of scientific argumentation in the launch unit, then build on this understanding through the year, with each unit focusing more in-depth on one aspect of the practice. The Microbiome unit also has an emphasis on the CCC of Scale, Proportion, and Quantity which students will draw upon in the Metabolism, Metabolism Engineering Internship, Traits and Reproduction, and Thermal Energy units as they make sense of phenomena at the macro scale with causes at a much smaller scale.
Concepts and practices are connected across grade 6. For example, across the sequence of the Microbiome, Metabolism, and Traits and Reproduction units, students are introduced to cells, and deepen their understanding about cells’ functions and how they get what they need. (They will continue this learning in grade 7.) Across the sequence of the Thermal Energy; Ocean, Atmosphere, and Climate; Weather Patterns; Earth’s Changing Climate; and Earth’s Changing Climate Engineering Internship units, students build a deepening understanding of energy transfer and its effects on Earth systems. The Metabolism Engineering Internship unit follows the Metabolism unit and requires students to apply what they learned in the Metabolism unit to design a solution to an engineering problem. The same is true of the Earth’s Changing Climate Engineering Internship unit and the Earth’s Changing Climate unit.
Each unit has a particular emphasis on certain DCIs, CCC’s, and SEP’s, with combinations that work together to support deep explanations of the anchor phenomena of each unit. For example, in the Weather Patterns unit, investigating the cause of more frequent severe storms leads students to construct ideas about Cycling of Water through Earth’s Systems (DCI ESS2-4) and Air Masses and Weather Patterns (DCI ESS2-5). The use of the SEP of modeling and the CCC of Stability and Change serve to help students better understand something difficult to observe directly: the way energy transfers between air parcels, then reaches equilibrium.
Unit abbreviations: Microbiome (MB), Metabolism (MET), Metabolism Engineering Internship (MET EI), Traits and Reproduction (TR), Thermal Energy (TE), Ocean, Atmosphere, and Climate (OAC), Weather Patterns (WP), Earth’s Changing Climate (ECC), Earth’s Changing Climate Engineering Internship (ECC EI).
Disciplinary core ideas
Focal Other Emphasized
MB | MET | MET EI | TR | TE | OAC | WP | ECC | ECC EI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LS1.A: Structure and Function (MS-LS1-1, MS-LS1-2, MS-LS1-3) | |||||||||
LS1.B: Growth and Development of Organisms (MS-LS1-4, MS-LS3-2) | |||||||||
LS1.D: Information Processing (MS-LS1-8) | |||||||||
LS3.A: Inheritance of Traits (MS-LS3-2) | |||||||||
LS3.B: Variation of Traits (MS-LS3-2) | |||||||||
ESS2.C: The Roles of Water in Earth’s Surface Processes (MS-ESS2-4, MS-ESS2-5, MS-ESS2-6) | |||||||||
ESS2.D: Weather and Climate (MS-ESS2-5, MS-ESS2-6) | |||||||||
ESS3.C: Human Impacts on Earth Systems (MS-ESS3-3) | |||||||||
ESS3.D: Global Climate Change (MS-ESS3–5) | |||||||||
PS3.A: Definitions of Energy (MS-PS3-3, MS-PS3-4) | |||||||||
PS3.B: Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer (MS-PS3-3, MS-PS3-4, MS-PS3–5) | |||||||||
ETS1.A: Defining and Delimiting an Engineering Problem (MS-ETS1-1, MS-PS3-3) | |||||||||
ETS1.B: Developing Possible Solutions (MS-ETS1-4, MS-PS3-3) | |||||||||
ETS1.C: Optimizing the Design Solution (MS-ETS1-3, MS-ETS1-4) |
Crosscutting concepts
Focal Other Emphasized Additional
MB | MET | MET EI | TR | TE | OAC | WP | ECC | ECC EI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Patterns | |||||||||
Cause and Effect | |||||||||
Scale, Proportion, and Quantity | |||||||||
Systems and System Models | |||||||||
Energy and Matter | |||||||||
Stability and Change | |||||||||
Structure and Function |
Science and engineering practices
Focal Other Emphasized Additional
MB | MET | MET EI | TR | TE | OAC | WP | ECC | ECC EI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asking Questions and Defining Problems | |||||||||
Developing and Using Models | |||||||||
Planning and Carrying Out Investigations | |||||||||
Analyzing and Interpreting Data | |||||||||
Using and Mathematics and Computational Thinking | |||||||||
Constructing Explanations and Designing Solutions | |||||||||
Engaging in Argument from Evidence | |||||||||
Obtaining, Evaluating and Communicating Information |