LS1.B: Growth And Development Of Organisms
Maybe your like
Grade Band Endpoints for LS1.B
from A Framework for K-12 Science Education: Practices, Crosscutting Concepts, and Core Ideas (pages 146-147)
By the end of grade 2. Plants and animals have predictable characteristics at different stages of development. Plants and animals grow and change. Adult plants and animals can have young. In many kinds of animals, parents and the offspring themselves engage in behaviors that help the offspring to survive. By the end of grade 5. Reproduction is essential to the continued existence of every kind of organism. Plants and animals have unique and diverse life cycles that include being born (sprouting in plants), growing, developing into adults, reproducing, and eventually dying. By the end of grade 8. Organisms reproduce, either sexually or asexually, and transfer their genetic information to their offspring. Animals engage in characteristic behaviors that increase the odds of reproduction. Plants reproduce in a variety of ways, sometimes depending on animal behavior and specialized features (such as attractively colored flowers) for reproduction. Plant growth can continue throughout the plant’s life through production of plant matter in photosynthesis. Genetic factors as well as local conditions affect the size of the adult plant. The growth of an animal is controlled by genetic factors, food intake, and interactions with other organisms, and each species has a typical adult size range. (Boundary: Reproduction is not treated in any detail here; for more specifics about grade level, see LS3.A.) By the end of grade 12. In multicellular organisms individual cells grow and then divide via a process called mitosis, thereby allowing the organism to grow. The organism begins as a single cell (fertilized egg) that divides successively to produce many cells, with each parent cell passing identical genetic material (two variants of each chromosome pair) to both daughter cells. As successive subdivisions of an embryo’s cells occur, programmed genetic instructions and small differences in their immediate environments activate or inactivate different genes, which cause the cells to develop differently—a process called differentiation. Cellular division and differentiation produce and maintain a complex organism, composed of systems of tissues and organs that work together to meet the needs of the whole organism. In sexual reproduction, a specialized type of cell division called meiosis occurs that results in the production of sex cells, such as gametes in animals (sperm and eggs), which contain only one member from each chromosome pair in the parent cell.
Tag » How Does An Organism Grow
-
Growth | Biology - Britannica
-
Growth, Development, And Reproduction
-
Cell Division And Organism Growth (video) | Khan Academy
-
Growth And Reproduction - Earthguide
-
Biology, Answering The Big Questions Of Life/cell Division - Wikibooks
-
Grow And Develop — Characteristics Of Life - Expii
-
How Does Growth In An Organism Occur By Growth In The Size Of Cells ...
-
[PDF] Growth And Development Of Organisms
-
How Cells And Tissues Grow | Cancer Research UK
-
Chapter 7: Producing Form: Development - Milne Publishing
-
Khan Academy - Organism Growth And The Environment - YouTube
-
Cell Division And Organism Growth | High School Biology - YouTube
-
What Makes Something Living? – Principles Of Biology
-
Cell Differentiation - How Do Organisms Grow And Develop? - OCR 21C