Kindergarten

In kindergarten, students build on early experiences observing the world around them as they continue to make observations that are more quantitative in nature and help them identify why some changes occur.


Students begin to learn to use these observations as evidence to support a claim through growing language skills. They learn that all animals and plants need food, water, and air to grow and thrive and that the fundamental difference between plants and animals is a plant’s ability to make its own food.


Students build their quantitative knowledge of temperature in relation to the weather and its effect on different kinds of materials. They observe that the amount of sunlight shining on a surface causes a temperature change and they design a structure to reduce the warming effects of sunlight.


They investigate motions of objects by changing the strength and direction of pushes and pulls. They provide examples of plants and animals that can change their environment through their interactions with it. In kindergarten science, students begin to identify reasons for changes in some common phenomena.

Unit 1: Earth Science

Fairy tales, Knights at Dawn, Mummies in the Morning, Pirates Past Noon

Unit 2: Life Science

Night of the Ninjas, Afternoon on the Amazon, Sunset of the Sabertooth, Midnight on the Moon


Unit 3: Physical Science

Dolphins at Daybreak, Ghost Town at Sundown, Lions at Lunchtime