Learning Resource Type

Classroom Resource

Can You Dig It? | PLUM LANDING

Subject Area

Science

Grade(s)

3

Overview

Players take on the role of bilbies, rabbit-sized Australian marsupials, as they race through the landscape looking for food and avoiding predators—and trying not to run into rocks—in this interactive game from PLUM LANDING™. They also learn about the bilby’s life cycle and the plants and animals that share its ecosystem.

    Science (2015) Grade(s): 3

    SC15.3.5

    Obtain and combine information to describe that organisms are classified as living things, rather than nonliving things, based on their ability to obtain and use resources, grow, reproduce, and maintain stable internal conditions while living in a constantly changing external environment.

    Unpacked Content

    UP:SC15.3.5

    Vocabulary

    • Organisms
    • Living things
    • Nonliving things
    • Growth
    • Resources
    • Reproduce
    • Stable conditions
    • Internal conditions
    • External environment

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • Resources obtained and used by living things.
    • Organisms can be classified as living things based on the following: their ability to obtain and use resources, grow, reproduce, and maintain stable internal conditions while living in a constantly changing external environment.
    • The life cycles of different organisms can look different, but all follow a pattern.

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Obtain information from a variety of resources to describe organisms that are classified as living things, rather than nonliving things.
    • Combine information to describe that organisms are classified as living things, rather than nonliving things.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • Patterns can be used when determining that organisms are living things.

    Scientific and Engineering Practices

    Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information

    Crosscutting Concepts

    Patterns
    Science (2015) Grade(s): 3

    SC15.3.6

    Create representations to explain the unique and diverse life cycles of organisms other than humans (e.g., flowering plants, frogs, butterflies), including commonalities such as birth, growth, reproduction, and death

    Unpacked Content

    UP:SC15.3.6

    Vocabulary

    • Create
    • Explain
    • Representations
    • Unique
    • Diverse
    • Commonalities
    • Life cycles
    • Organisms
    • Birth
    • Growth
    • Reproduction
    • Death

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • Organisms are born, grow, reproduce and die in a pattern known as a life cycle.
    • Organisms have unique and diverse life cycles.
    • An organism can be classified as either a plant or an animal.
    • There is a causal direction of the cycle (e.g., without birth, there is no growth; without reproduction, there are no births).

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Create representations to describe that organisms have unique and diverse life cycles but all have in common birth, growth, reproduction, and death.
    • Explain the unique and diverse life cycles of organisms other than humans.
    • Explain commonalities of organisms such as birth, growth, reproduction, and death.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • Patterns of change can be used to make predictions about the unique life cycles of organisms.

    Scientific and Engineering Practices

    Developing and Using Models

    Crosscutting Concepts

    Patterns
    Link to Resource

    CR Resource Type

    Interactive/Game

    Resource Provider

    PBS
    Accessibility
    License

    License Type

    Custom
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