Connections

Originally Written for Fourth Grade

Explore the interactions and physical properties of a habitat or ecosystem while applying the skills necessary for science investigation of water, nutrient cycles, food webs, and light. 4th grade consists of 8 modules with lab pages in English and Spanish.

View 4th Grade Teacher Guide for a table of contents of all modules, scope & sequence, and gardening appendices.

$2.00 per Module - PDF Download

Life Lab Science was written to align with previous national science standards. We have grouped the following units in their original grade level band. These suggested grade levels may or may not align with your current grade level content.

Each module download includes a letter to parents to prepare for the module, a song, multiple lessons, and appendices/lab pages in English and Spanish.



 

Interactions (Originally Written for Fourth Grade)

Theme: Students practice problem-solving skills as they trace how organisms interact with each other and with their physical surroundings. 

Science Explorations: Students explore the give and take that occurs between humans, living and nonliving things, and all living things as they meet their survival needs. 

Process Skills: Students work cooperatively to observe how people, plants, animals, and their physical surroundings are related and to communicate what they discover. 

Life Science: All living things interact with each other and with their environment to obtain the resources they need to survive. 

Earth Science: Soil, water, air, and light are natural resources that most living things depend on for survival. 

Physical Science: The physical properties of matter can be changed by interactions with living and non living agents and forces. 

Science, Technology, and Society: One way humans interact is through communicating with each other. Scientists depend on good communication to share ideas.

 

Habitats (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students explore how the plants and animals in a habi­tat interact with each other and respond to the conditions of their habitat. 

Science Explorations: Students investigate how factors of tem­perature, moisture, and light determine the conditions of a habitat. 

Process Skills: Students organize measurements and observa­tions to understand the relationships within a habitat.

Life Science: Living things use their habitat's resources in dif­ferent ways and amounts. Organisms within a habitat interact with each other. 

Earth Science: Soil is a habitat. The organisms that live in soil and the nutrient cycles that occur in soil affect the whole habitat. 

Physical Science: The amount of light, moisture, and heat helps to determine what lives in a habitat. Habitat interactions can result in changes in the state or properties of matter. 

Science, Technology, and Society: Human actions can destroy habitats or alter the interactions within them. 

 

Water Interactions (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students construct water's interactions as it cycles through habitats. 

Science Explorations: Students experiment with the properties and states of water and begin to explore the water cycle. 

Process Skills: Students use measuring and organizational skills to relate the properties of water to its role in the environ­ment. 

Life Science: All living things need water. Plants transpire water into the air. 

Earth Science: Water moves through the water cycle. It carries solutes and other materials necessary for life. 

Physical Science: Water's chemical structure determines its unique properties. Water can exist as a solid, liquid, and gas at the temperatures that support life. 

Science-Technology-Society: Humans have a responsibility to consider how their actions and wastes affect the water they and other organisms use. 

 

Nutrient Interactions (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students explore the interactions by which plants obtain the nutrients they need from soil and use these building blocks to create nutrients animals need. 

Science Explorations: Students investigate how dead matter is decomposed and recycled as nutrients for plants and animals. 

Process Skills: Students observe decomposition and test soils and foods for nutrients in order to relate decomposition to plant and human nutrition.

Life Science: All living things need nutrients in order to grow and survive. 

Earth Science: Rocks and dead matter are broken down by weathering and decomposition cycles into substances plants can use as nutrients. 

Physical Science: As organic matter breaks down by decompo­sition, heat energy is given off. 

Science, Technology, and Society: The natural cycle of decom­position is important for plant and human nutrition. If the cycle is broken, the health of living things can suffer.

 

Light Interactions (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students investigate earth as a solar-powered planet, dependent on sunlight for light energy. 

Science Explorations: Students explore properties of light and use the results to investigate how plants and animals use light. 

Process Skills: Students relate properties of light to their inves­tigations into how plants and animals use light.

Life Science: Green plants use light energy to make their food and produce oxygen. Animals' eyes respond to reflected or emitted light, enabling them to see. 

Earth Science: Sunlight interacts with the atmosphere and objects on the earth. 

Physical Science: Light transfers energy from the source that emits it to the object that absorbs it. Most surfaces reflect, trans­mit, and absorb some of the light that hits them. 

Science, Technology, and Society: The study of the properties of light has led to the invention of all kinds of devices, includ­ing eyeglasses, magnifying lenses, microscopes, and telescopes.

 

Food Webs (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students investigate how food webs link organisms within a habitat. 

Science Explorations: Students explore how organisms interact in food webs to transfer food energy. 

Process Skills: Students observe and model food webs in order to relate them to food energy transfer. 

Life Science: Most living things get the energy and nutrients they need in order to survive through food chains consisting of green plants as food producers, animals as consumers, and decomposers as recyclers. 

Earth Science: Food webs rely on decomposers to recycle nutrients. 

Physical Science: In addition to minerals and other building blocks, food contains the sun's stored energy, which is trans­ferred through food webs. With each interaction in a food web, less usable energy is available to the consumer. 

Science, Technology, and Society: Humans can affect food webs with pollution and habitat destruction.

 

Ecosystems (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students explore the patterns of relationships that define systems and ecosystems. 

Science Explorations: Students apply their knowledge of how living things use their habitats to look at how ecosystems work. 

Process Skills: Students organize their knowledge of habi­tat components and interactions to explore the relation­ships in ecosystems. 

Life Science: All living things are connected to their environ­ments by the roles they play in them and the effects they have on their surroundings, as well as the effect their environment has on them. 

Earth Science: In an ecosystem, organisms interact with the physical environment. Water, minerals, and organic matter cycle through ecosystems. 

Physical Science: Energy and matter are transferred among organisms within an ecosystem. Energy from the sun, trans­formed by plants, flows through the food chains of an ecosys­tem and must constantly be renewed. 

Science, Technology, and Society: While human actions can destroy ecosystems and cause the extinction of species, they can also help to preserve biological diversity.

 

Sustainable Systems (Originally Written For Fourth grade)

Theme: Students apply what they have learned throughout the year about how plants and animals interact with each other and their environment. 

Science Explorations: Students relate their knowledge of ecosys­tem parts and interactions to building sustainable systems. 

Process Skills: Students organize data and observations into projects to create a sustainable garden system.

Life Science: A healthy ecosystem has all the necessary inputs and food interactions to be sustained over the long term. 

Earth Science: Nutrients and water cycle through a sustainable system. 

Physical Science: A sustainable system is one in which energy and other losses from the system are minimized. 

Science, Technology, and Society: Resources must be con­served and recycled to maintain a healthy ecosystem. If habitats and ecosystems function well, species will be preserved.