TVO Learn is designed to meet each student where they are on their learning journey. Learning Activities are comprehensive and require guided instruction from an adult, while Resources for Learning, Apply the Learning prompts and Vocabulary lists work well to reinforce specific skills or to enable independent exploration of a subject. Use these helpful tips to get the most from TVO Learn.
How to Use These Resources
Curriculum Overview
Science is a way of knowing which seeks to describe and explain the natural and physical world. An important aspect is making connections between skills and concepts, and the practical applications of science and technology, and learning about life systems, matter and energy, structures and mechanisms, and Earth and space systems. Students develop important scientific literacy and technological skills that will enable them to thrive in today's rapidly changing world, their future professional and personal lives, and to become active problem solvers in their communities. As students engage in STEM education, they develop transferrable skills that they need to meet the demands of today's global economy and society, and to become scientifically and technologically literate citizens.
The science and technology curriculum is divided into five strands:
- STEM Skills and Connections
- Life Systems: Interactions in the Environment
- Matter and Energy: Pure Substances and Mixtures
- Structures and Mechanisms: Form, Function, and Design of Structures
- Earth and Space Systems: Heat in the Environment
Interested in learning more? View Curriculum
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Learning Activities
Learning Activities provide opportunity for deeper exploration of a subject. Learning Activities provide opportunity for deeper exploration of a subject. Organized by grade and topic (or strand), students should be guided through each Learning Activity by an adult. Before clicking on a topic to prepare for or begin this guided instruction, be sure to read these helpful tips about how to get the most out of TVO Learn.
To access this learning activity, please visit this page in a desktop or tablet browser.
Resources for Learning
Chosen by TVO educators, these resources support the curriculum outlined above. Review the below list of options along with the activities. Then, read, watch, listen or play to build understanding and knowledge.
Please be aware by accessing the resources below you will be leaving TVO Learn and entering other TVO domains that are subject to different privacy policies and terms of use.
Complete the suggested activities using these resources and other TVO resources.
Apply the Learning
Choose from the following to consolidate learning across all curriculum strands.
- Using a graphic organizer (table, chart. etc), outlining your ideas about how the Great Lakes Ecosystem is in peril.
- Craft your own news story about the environment and act it out as a skit.
- Research how female Canadian scientists are helping the climate change situation and produce a one-page report summarizing your findings.
- Write a reflection on how your understanding of trash has changed and then, make a poster on how to properly dispose of pure substances and mixtures.
- Write a reflection on how your understanding of trash has changed and then, make a poster on how to properly dispose of pure substances and mixtures.
- How have alternative forms of energy changed since the 1990s? What impacts can be observed today? Write a short simulated blog post on your thoughts.
- Create your own definitions for 20 of the words in the vocabulary list.
Vocabulary
Review this list of vocabulary associated with the curriculum. Practice spelling, research definitions, and find these vocabulary words when engaging with the TVO resources or completing learning activities.
Students should understand and be able to apply these words in context.
- Life Systems
Interactions in the Environment
- Matter and Energy
Pure Substances and Mixtures
- Structures and Mechanisms
Form, Function, and Design of Structures
- Earth and Space Systems
Heat in the Environment
abiotic
adaptations
biodegradable
biome
biosphere
biotic
carnivore
community
consumer
decomposer
ecosystem
food chain
food web
habitat
herbivore
micro-organism
population
producer
species
succession
concentrated
dilute
dissolve
distillation
filtration
homogeneous
heterogeneous
insoluble
manufactured
products
mechanical mixture
particle theory
pollutant
pure substance
raw material saturated
soluble
solute
solution
solvent
unsaturated
WHMIS symbols
force
frame structures
friction
gravity
magnitude
plane of application
point of application
shell structures
solid structures
stability
structure
symmetry
condensation
contraction
convection
conduction
evaporation
expansion
freezing
gas
heat energy
heat capacity
heat transfer
insulator
liquid
melting
particle theory
radiation
solid
states of matter
sublimation
temperature
thermometer