Science and Technology/Engineering

27 High School Overview

High School: Overview of Science and Engineering Practices[1]

The practices in grades 9–12 build on pre-K–8 experiences and progress to more technical and sophisticated applications to the natural and designed world we live in. The integration of science and engineering practices in high school science courses gives students dynamic and relevant opportunities to refine and communicate science understandings to be well prepared for civic life, postsecondary education, and career success.

Essential competencies for students by the end of grade 12 include reading and comprehending relevant issues in science to be informed decision-makers. Accurately using mathematics and computation as it applies to daily life and engaging in the practice of modeling to solve real-world problems enables all students to understand and analyze key scientific and technical issues they will be asked to address throughout their lives. Communicating explanations coherently, with evidence from credible sources, is critical to engaging in public discourse.

Inclusion of science and engineering practices in standards only speak to the types of performances students should be able to demonstrate at the end of instruction of a particular course; the standards do not limit what educators and students should or can be engaged in through a well-rounded curriculum.

By the end of high school, students should have an understanding of and ability to apply each science and engineering practice to understand the world around them. Students should have had many opportunities to immerse themselves in the practices and to explore why they are central to the applications of science and engineering.

Some examples of these science and engineering practices include:

  1. Define a design problem that involves the development of a process or system with interacting components and criteria and constraints that may include social, technical, and/or environmental considerations.
  2. Develop and/or use a model (including mathematical and computational) to generate data to support explanations, predict phenomena, analyze systems, and/or solve problems.
  3. Plan and conduct an investigation, including deciding on the types, amount, and accuracy of data needed to produce reliable measurements, and consider limitations on the precision of the data.
  4. Apply concepts of statistics and probability (including determining function fits to data, slope, intercept, and correlation coefficient for linear fits) to scientific questions and engineering problems, using digital tools when feasible.
  5. Use simple limit cases to test mathematical expressions, computer programs, algorithms, or simulations of a process or system to see if a model “makes sense” by comparing the outcomes with what is known about the real world.

  1. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (2022). SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY / ENGINEERING Grades Pre-Kindergarten to 12 Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworkhttps://www.doe.mass.edu/frameworks/current.html

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High School Overview by The UMass Amherst Libraries is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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