8th Grade
Weekly Objectives
Week of May 22, 2006
Look
below to review this week's objectives for 8th Grade. In order to obtain
more information about a specific benchmark for the content areas of Science and
Social Studies, please do the
following:
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Remember
the benchmark number (example: Science BM5).
-
Then
click on this link, Middle
School Benchmarks. Next, click on the subject you would
like to view.
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Click
on the desired benchmark number from the list that comes up on the screen.
This
link will provide you with quick and easy access to the MICLiMB (Clarifying the
language in Michigan's benchmarks). You will find an enormous amount of useful
resources. Each benchmark is clarified with an instructional example, key
concepts, real world context, and other web resources.
In order to obtain more
information about a specific benchmark for the content areas of Language Arts
and Math, please do the following:
-
Remember the GLCE
(example: R.WS.08.01).
- Then
click on this link, Grade
Level Curriculum Expectations.
- Next,
select the grade level and content area that you wish to review.
- LANGUAGE
ARTS:
- Research
Report Unit. We will spend time
this week in prewriting mode, investigating the topics, organization and
getting started on the research paper.
- W.GN.8.3
- Formulate
research questions using multiple resources, perspectives, and
arguments/counterarguments to develop a thesis statement that culminates in
a presented, final project.
- W.PR8.1
- Set
a purpose, consider audience, and replicate author's style.
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- MATH:
- A.RP.08.04
- Use the vertical line test to determine if a graph represents
a function in one variable. Understand and represent quadratic functions
- A.FO.08.10
- Understand that to solve the equation f(x) = g(x) means to
find all values of x for which the equation is true, e.g., determine whether
a given value, or values from a given set, is a solution of an equation (0
is a solution of 3x2 + 2 = 4x + 2, but 1 is not a solution).
- A.FO.08.11
- Solve simultaneous linear equations in two variables by
graphing, by substitution, and by linear combination; estimate solutions
using graphs; include examples with no solutions and infinitely many
solutions.
- A.FO.08.12
- Solve linear inequalities in one and two variables, and graph
the solution sets.
- A.FO.08.13
- Set up and solve applied problems involving simultaneous
linear equations and linear inequalities.
- Review for final exam will be the first week of June.
Final Exams will be June 6, 7, 8.
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- SCIENCE:
- (SCI.III.4.HS.1).
- Describe what biologists consider to be evidence for human
evolutionary relationships to selected animal groups
- (SCI.III.4.HS.2).
- Explain
how a new species or variety may originate through the evolutionary process
of natural selection
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- SOCIAL
STUDIES:
- The
students will be discussing the issues that led to the Civil War
- Benchmark SOC.I.1.MS.2
Describe major factors that characterize the following eras in United States
history: The Meeting of Three Worlds (beginnings to 1620), Colonization and
Settlement (1585-1763), Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1815), Expansion
and Reform (1801-1861) and Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877).
Benchmark SOC.I.3.MS.1
Use primary and secondary records to analyze significant events that shaped
the development of Michigan as a state and the United States as a nation
prior to the end of the era of Reconstruction.
Judging Decisions from the Past
Standard SOC.I.4 All
students will evaluate key decisions made at critical turning points in
history by assessing their implications and long-term consequences.
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