The document provides the syllabus format for the 7th grade Science year-end exam at the Aga Khan Academy in Hyderabad. The exam will be 1 hour and 30 minutes long. It will assess students across 3 criteria: knowledge and understanding, inquiry and design, and processing and evaluation. The syllabus covers 4 units: Things Around Us, Energy Transfer, Substances Around Us. Key topics include ecosystems, waves, photosynthesis, the periodic table and atomic structure. Structured and application based questions will be asked to evaluate students' comprehension and ability to design scientific investigations.
The document provides the syllabus format for the 7th grade Science year-end exam at the Aga Khan Academy in Hyderabad. The exam will be 1 hour and 30 minutes long. It will assess students across 3 criteria: knowledge and understanding, inquiry and design, and processing and evaluation. The syllabus covers 4 units: Things Around Us, Energy Transfer, Substances Around Us. Key topics include ecosystems, waves, photosynthesis, the periodic table and atomic structure. Structured and application based questions will be asked to evaluate students' comprehension and ability to design scientific investigations.
The document provides the syllabus format for the 7th grade Science year-end exam at the Aga Khan Academy in Hyderabad. The exam will be 1 hour and 30 minutes long. It will assess students across 3 criteria: knowledge and understanding, inquiry and design, and processing and evaluation. The syllabus covers 4 units: Things Around Us, Energy Transfer, Substances Around Us. Key topics include ecosystems, waves, photosynthesis, the periodic table and atomic structure. Structured and application based questions will be asked to evaluate students' comprehension and ability to design scientific investigations.
The document provides the syllabus format for the 7th grade Science year-end exam at the Aga Khan Academy in Hyderabad. The exam will be 1 hour and 30 minutes long. It will assess students across 3 criteria: knowledge and understanding, inquiry and design, and processing and evaluation. The syllabus covers 4 units: Things Around Us, Energy Transfer, Substances Around Us. Key topics include ecosystems, waves, photosynthesis, the periodic table and atomic structure. Structured and application based questions will be asked to evaluate students' comprehension and ability to design scientific investigations.
Criteria Information for students. A: Knowing and Unit-1(Things around us) Criterion; A Understanding Unit 1: Ecosystem and interdependency; the role of Structured questions producer, primary, secondary, and tertiary on knowledge, Things B: Inquiring and understanding, and around us) designing consumers, and scavengers in the circle of life. real-life applications Analysis of ecosystem. C: Processing and Criterion: B Evaluating. Unit – 3 Energy Transfer Waves: Classification of waves, Electromagnetic Questions based on waves, Mechanical waves, the ability to design Longitudinal waves & transverse waves, Energy scientific investigations. It transport, comprises framing Properties of waves, and explaining the research question, Unit 2: Characteristics of waves; wavelength, amplitude, developing testable Energy frequency, period, wave speed, hypotheses, changing Transfer and measuring variables, and Effects of waves; reflection and refraction, designing safe, logical Dispersion of light Application of Electromagnetic methods using Unit 4; Waves. appropriate materials Substances Electromagnetic Spectrum. and equipment. around us Energy generation in plants; Photosynthesis; Criterion: C definition, word equation, leaf structure, factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis. Questions on collecting, organizing, and presenting data Unit – 4 Substances around us reliably, interpreting the data and graphs, Periodic table, Elements, Compounds, and evaluating the Mixtures, alloys: investigation to Atomic structure, electron configuration, and determine how it could be improved or valency of first twenty elements. extended. Modern periodic table and Mendeleev’s periodic table