Free Upper Elementary (3–6) Education Subtest 4: Science and Social Studies (MTTC) 124 Study Guide
Comprehensive study materials covering all MTTC 124 competencies.
What You'll Learn
Free Study Guide - Lesson 1
History and Nature of Science
Science is both a body of knowledge and a dynamic process of discovery. Understanding how scientific ideas develop, change, and are validated helps students appreciate science as a human endeavor shaped by curiosity, evidence, and collaboration across cultures and time.
Historical Development of Major Scientific Ideas
Scientific knowledge has evolved over centuries through observation, experimentation, and revision. Understanding these landmark developments helps students see that science is not a collection of fixed facts but an evolving understanding of natural phenomena.
📜 The Development of Cell Theory
1665 - Robert Hooke
Observed cork under microscope, coined the term "cells" for the small compartments he saw. Published findings in Micrographia.
1674 - Anton van Leeuwenhoek
First to observe living cells (bacteria, protozoa) using his improved microscopes. Called them "animalcules."
1838 - Matthias Schleiden
Concluded that all plants are made of cells—the first half of cell theory.
1839 - Theodor Schwann
Extended the cell concept to animals, establishing that all living things are composed of cells.
1855 - Rudolf Virchow
Added that all cells come from pre-existing cells ("Omnis cellula e cellula"), completing cell theory.
The Three Tenets of Cell Theory:
- All living organisms are composed of one or more cells
- The cell is the basic unit of structure and function in organisms
- All cells arise from pre-existing cells
🌍 The Development of Plate Tectonics Theory
📌 Key Insight: Wegener's continental drift hypothesis was initially rejected because he couldn't explain how continents moved. It took decades of evidence (seafloor spreading, magnetic striping, earthquake patterns) before the theory was accepted. This illustrates how scientific ideas require both observation AND mechanism.
⚡ Newton's Laws of Motion
Isaac Newton (1643-1727) synthesized the work of Galileo, Kepler, and others to create a unified framework for understanding motion. Published in Principia Mathematica (1687).
First Law: Inertia
"An object at rest stays at rest, and an object in motion stays in motion at constant velocity, unless acted upon by an external force."
Building on: Galileo's experiments with rolling balls and inclined planes
Second Law: Force = Mass × Acceleration
"The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force and inversely proportional to its mass."
Formula: F = ma
Third Law: Action-Reaction
"For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction."
Examples: Rocket propulsion, walking, swimming
🍎 Law of Universal Gravitation
The Law
"Every particle of matter attracts every other particle with a force proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them."
F = G(m₁m₂)/r²
Historical Significance
- United terrestrial and celestial mechanics
- Explained planetary orbits (building on Kepler)
- Predicted existence of Neptune (1846)
- Remained unchallenged until Einstein's General Relativity (1915)
📌 The "Apple Story": While likely apocryphal, the famous story of Newton and the falling apple illustrates how observation of everyday phenomena can lead to profound scientific insights when combined with mathematical reasoning.
Contributions from Diverse Cultures and Individuals
Science is a global human endeavor. Important discoveries and innovations have come from people of all backgrounds, genders, and cultures throughout history. Recognizing these contributions provides a more complete picture of how scientific knowledge develops.
🌍 Global Contributions to Science
👩🔬 Pioneering Women in Science
Marie Curie (1867-1934)
Contributions: Discovered polonium and radium; pioneered research on radioactivity
Recognition: First woman to win a Nobel Prize; only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences (Physics 1903, Chemistry 1911)
Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958)
Contributions: X-ray crystallography of DNA; her Photo 51 was crucial to understanding DNA's double helix structure
Note: Her contributions were long underrecognized; Watson and Crick used her data without proper acknowledgment
Barbara McClintock (1902-1992)
Contributions: Discovered genetic transposition ("jumping genes") in maize
Recognition: Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1983), decades after her initial discovery was dismissed
Chien-Shiung Wu (1912-1997)
Contributions: Disproved the law of conservation of parity; "First Lady of Physics"
Note: Her experimental work proved a theory that earned colleagues the Nobel Prize, though she was excluded
🔬 Scientists Who Overcame Barriers
George Washington Carver (1864-1943)
Field: Agricultural chemistry
Contributions: Developed hundreds of products from peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans; promoted crop rotation to restore soil
Mae C. Jemison (b. 1956)
Field: Medicine, astronautics
Contributions: First African American woman in space (1992); physician and engineer
Luis Walter Alvarez (1911-1988)
Field: Physics
Contributions: Nobel Prize in Physics (1968); developed the asteroid impact theory for dinosaur extinction (with son Walter)
Percy Julian (1899-1975)
Field: Chemistry
Contributions: Synthesized physostigmine, cortisone, and hormones; over 130 patents; pioneer in medicinal chemistry
The Scientific Process: Reasoning, Evidence, and Validation
Science is distinguished from other ways of knowing by its reliance on systematic observation, logical reasoning, empirical evidence, and community validation through peer review.
🔍 Components of the Scientific Process
Logical Reasoning
Inductive: Drawing general conclusions from specific observations
Deductive: Testing specific predictions derived from general principles
Verifiable Evidence
Data that can be independently confirmed through observation or experimentation
Key feature: Others can repeat the process and get similar results
Prediction
Scientific theories make testable predictions about future observations
Power: Theories that make accurate predictions gain support
Peer Review
Evaluation of research by qualified experts before publication
Purpose: Quality control, error detection, credibility
📝 The Peer Review Process
Researcher submits manuscript to journal
Initial screening for suitability
2-3 experts evaluate the work
Author addresses feedback
Accepted work is published
Types of Peer Review:
- Single-blind: Reviewers know author identity; author doesn't know reviewers
- Double-blind: Neither author nor reviewers know each other's identity
- Open review: All identities are known; may be published alongside the paper
Principles of Scientific Ethics
Scientific ethics encompasses the moral principles that guide research conduct, data handling, publication, and the broader social responsibilities of scientists.
⚖️ Core Ethical Principles in Science
⚠️ Research Misconduct: The FFP Triad
Fabrication
Making up data or results and recording or reporting them as real
Falsification
Manipulating research materials, equipment, or processes; changing or omitting data
Plagiarism
Using another's ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit
Science Compared to Other Ways of Knowing
Science is one of several methods humans use to understand the world. Understanding its unique characteristics—and how it differs from other approaches—helps students evaluate claims and sources of knowledge.
📚 Comparing Ways of Knowing
✨ Distinguishing Characteristics of Scientific Knowledge
Empirical
Based on observations and experiments that can be measured and recorded
Replicable
Results can be reproduced by independent researchers
Falsifiable
Claims can, in principle, be proven wrong
Quantitative
Often uses numerical data and statistical analysis
Objective
Seeks to minimize personal bias and subjectivity
Cumulative
Builds on previous knowledge; "standing on the shoulders of giants"
The Dynamic Nature of Science: Models, Laws, and Theories
Scientific knowledge is not static—it evolves as new evidence emerges, new technologies enable better observations, and new frameworks provide better explanations.
🔬 Understanding Scientific Models, Laws, and Theories
📌 Common Misconception: "It's just a theory" implies uncertainty. In science, "theory" means a well-tested explanation supported by extensive evidence—not a guess. Theories represent the most robust form of scientific knowledge. They are not promoted to "laws" because laws and theories serve different purposes.
🔄 Characteristics of Scientific Knowledge Over Time
Durability
Well-established scientific knowledge tends to persist because it has withstood extensive testing. Core concepts like atomic theory, germ theory, and evolution are extremely robust.
Example: Cell theory has remained valid since the 1800s, though details have been refined.
Tentativeness
All scientific knowledge is, in principle, open to revision if contradictory evidence emerges. Scientists hold knowledge provisionally.
Example: Newtonian physics was revised (not replaced) by Einstein's relativity for extreme conditions.
Replication
Scientific findings gain credibility when independently replicated by other researchers. Failed replications prompt re-examination.
Example: The "cold fusion" claims of 1989 were rejected when no one could replicate the results.
Reliance on Evidence
Claims require empirical support. The strength of scientific knowledge correlates with the quantity and quality of supporting evidence.
Example: Evolution is supported by fossils, DNA, biogeography, embryology, and direct observation.
💡 Paradigm Shifts in Science
Thomas Kuhn (1962) described how science sometimes undergoes revolutionary changes—"paradigm shifts"—where the fundamental framework of understanding is replaced.
Attitudes and Dispositions Underlying Scientific Thinking
Effective scientists—and scientifically literate citizens—share certain habits of mind that enable productive inquiry and critical evaluation of claims.
🧪 Scientific Habits of Mind
Curiosity
A genuine desire to understand how the world works; asking "why" and "how" questions; finding phenomena interesting rather than accepting them at face value.
Openness to New Ideas
Willingness to consider alternative explanations; avoiding premature closure; being receptive to evidence that challenges current beliefs.
Appropriate Skepticism
Questioning claims until sufficient evidence is provided; distinguishing between healthy doubt and cynical dismissal; demanding evidence proportional to claims.
Cooperation
Science is collaborative; sharing data, methods, and findings; building on others' work; subjecting ideas to community scrutiny.
Intellectual Humility
Recognizing the limits of one's own knowledge; being willing to say "I don't know"; acknowledging when evidence requires changing one's mind.
Persistence
Continuing investigation despite setbacks; viewing failed experiments as learning opportunities; maintaining effort over long periods.
Ethical Communication in Science
Scientists have responsibilities when producing, sharing, and representing their work through written, oral, and multimedia formats.
📢 Ethical Considerations in Science Communication
Science as a Human Endeavor, Process, and Career
Understanding science as something done by real people—with motivations, limitations, and career paths—makes science more accessible and relevant to students.
👤 Science as a Human Endeavor
Science is Done by People
- Scientists come from all backgrounds, cultures, and walks of life
- Personal experiences can influence what questions scientists ask
- Collaboration and communication are essential
- Scientists make mistakes; science is self-correcting over time
Science is a Process
- Inquiry-based: driven by questions about the natural world
- Iterative: hypotheses are tested, revised, retested
- Collaborative: builds on the work of others
- Self-correcting: errors are eventually identified and fixed
Science as a Career
- Research scientists (universities, government, industry)
- Applied scientists (engineering, medicine, technology)
- Science educators and communicators
- Policy advisors and science journalists
- Technicians, lab managers, and support roles
Using Resources and Research Materials in Science
Students and teachers must be able to locate, evaluate, and use scientific information from various sources.
📖 Types of Information Sources in Science
🔍 Evaluating Scientific Sources: The CRAAP Test
C - Currency
When was it published? Is it up-to-date for the topic?
R - Relevance
Does it relate to your question? Is it at the right level?
A - Authority
Who is the author? What are their credentials?
A - Accuracy
Is it supported by evidence? Can it be verified?
P - Purpose
Why was it created? Is there bias?
📚 Strategies for Helping Students Construct Meaning from Science Texts
Before Reading
- Activate prior knowledge
- Preview text features (headings, diagrams)
- Set purpose for reading
- Introduce key vocabulary
During Reading
- Monitor comprehension ("Does this make sense?")
- Make connections to prior learning
- Annotate and take notes
- Ask questions about confusing parts
After Reading
- Summarize key ideas
- Discuss with peers
- Apply to new situations
- Evaluate the source critically
Promoting Scientific Literacy
Scientific literacy enables citizens to understand scientific issues, evaluate claims, and make informed decisions. It goes beyond knowing facts to include understanding the nature and processes of science.
🎓 Components of Scientific Literacy
Content Knowledge
Understanding key scientific concepts, facts, and vocabulary across disciplines (life science, physical science, Earth science)
Process Skills
Ability to design investigations, collect data, analyze results, and draw evidence-based conclusions
Nature of Science
Understanding how science works: its methods, values, limitations, and relationship to society
Critical Evaluation
Ability to assess the credibility of scientific claims, identify bias, and distinguish science from pseudoscience
📊 Effective Strategies for Promoting Scientific Literacy
Differentiation Strategies
For English Language Learners (ELLs)
- Visual timelines and graphic organizers: The visual history timelines help ELLs process chronological development of scientific ideas
- Vocabulary development: Pre-teach key terms (hypothesis, theory, evidence, peer review) with definitions and examples
- Cognates: Leverage Spanish cognates (hipótesis, teoría, evidencia, ética) for Spanish-speaking ELLs
- Sentence frames: Provide structures for scientific discussion ("The evidence suggests..." "This theory explains...")
- Bilingual glossaries: Create science vocabulary lists with translations
- Visual representations: Use the tables, diagrams, and flowcharts extensively
For Struggling Learners
- Chunked content: Break the material into smaller sections with frequent checks for understanding
- Concrete examples: Connect abstract concepts (like "falsifiability") to everyday examples
- Mnemonic devices: Use FFP for research misconduct, CRAAP for evaluating sources
- Compare-contrast organizers: Help distinguish models vs. laws vs. theories
- Repeated exposure: Revisit key concepts (evidence, peer review, tentativeness) across different contexts
- Study guides: Provide simplified summaries of each major section
For Advanced Learners
- Primary source analysis: Read excerpts from original scientific papers (Wegener, Darwin, Einstein)
- Case studies: Analyze historical cases of scientific controversy (cold fusion, continental drift rejection)
- Philosophy of science: Explore Kuhn's paradigm shifts, Popper's falsificationism, the demarcation problem
- Ethics debates: Discuss complex cases (dual-use research, publication of dangerous findings)
- Research projects: Investigate underrepresented scientists or scientific developments in non-Western cultures
- Peer review simulation: Students review each other's lab reports using actual peer review criteria
For Students with Special Needs
- Multiple modalities: The visual timelines, tables, and text explanations support different learning preferences
- Reduced cognitive load: Focus on core concepts (evidence-based, tentative, replicable) before details
- Predictable structure: Consistent formatting with clear headings helps students navigate
- Extended time: Allow additional time for processing complex concepts like paradigm shifts
- Assistive technology: Ensure compatibility with screen readers; provide text alternatives for visual elements
- Hands-on activities: Connect abstract concepts to concrete experiences when possible
Assessment Strategies
Formative Assessment
- Exit tickets: "Name one way science differs from other ways of knowing" or "Why is peer review important?"
- Card sorts: Students categorize examples as models, laws, or theories
- Think-pair-share: Discuss what makes a claim "scientific" vs. "non-scientific"
- Timeline construction: Students create timelines for scientific developments (cell theory, plate tectonics)
- Misconception probes: True/false questions addressing common misconceptions (e.g., "A theory becomes a law when proven")
- Concept maps: Students diagram relationships between evidence, hypotheses, theories, and laws
- Quick-writes: "Why was Wegener's idea rejected? What changed?"
Summative Assessment
- Research paper: Investigate a scientist's contributions and the cultural/historical context of their work
- Source evaluation: Given a set of sources, students apply CRAAP criteria and justify reliability ratings
- Case study analysis: Analyze a historical scientific controversy using concepts from the lesson
- Constructed response: Explain why "It's just a theory" reflects a misunderstanding of science
- Scientific literacy assessment: Evaluate a news article about scientific research for accuracy and bias
- Ethics scenario: Given a research ethics dilemma, students identify issues and propose solutions
- Comparison essay: Compare and contrast science with another way of knowing
Key Takeaways
Historical Development
- Major scientific ideas (cell theory, plate tectonics, laws of motion, universal gravitation) developed over time through cumulative contributions
- Scientists from diverse cultures, backgrounds, and genders have contributed to scientific knowledge
- Scientific ideas can be initially rejected and later accepted as evidence accumulates
Nature of Science
- Science relies on logical reasoning, verifiable evidence, prediction, and peer review
- Scientific knowledge is empirical, replicable, falsifiable, and open to revision
- Models simplify, laws describe, and theories explain natural phenomena
- Theories are well-substantiated explanations, not uncertain guesses
Scientific Ethics
- Core principles: honesty, objectivity, integrity, openness, proper credit
- Research misconduct includes fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism (FFP)
- Ethical communication requires accuracy, attribution, and transparency
Scientific Habits of Mind
- Key attitudes: curiosity, openness to new ideas, appropriate skepticism, cooperation
- Science is a human endeavor influenced by culture, history, and individual scientists
- Science is both a process of inquiry and a body of knowledge
Resources and Literacy
- Sources include experiments, primary literature, textbooks, tables, graphics, and trade books
- Use CRAAP criteria (Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose) to evaluate sources
- Scientific literacy includes content knowledge, process skills, and critical evaluation
Science vs. Other Ways of Knowing
- Science is distinguished by empirical evidence, testability, and openness to revision
- Religion, philosophy, art, and traditional knowledge serve different purposes
- Pseudoscience claims scientific status without following scientific methods