A K-12 LEARNING PROGRESSION TO SUPPORT UNDERSTANDING OF WATER IN THE ENVIRONMENT
We administered assessments to 500 students, grades 4-10. Questions were designed to elicit understanding of physical changes to water, watersheds, groundwater, water pollution, and human water use. The tests explore how students make sense of water-related concepts as a basis for building more coherent learning progressions. Results show that
Elementary students understand water topics as separate, rather than connected concepts. They do not grasp connections between water in human systems and natural systems.
Younger students have difficulty understanding invisible water. Many have trouble explaining where water comes from when it condenses on the outside of a cold glass of water or how water exists and moves underground.
Secondary students have better understanding of invisible water, but have trouble applying knowledge of the water cycle to questions about movement of water in the environment and impacts on human health or ecosystem quality.
Based on results, we are developing a K-12 learning progression articulating knowledge and practices essential for water literacy. Our progression expands on previous education standards for water through greater emphasis on:
Connecting different scales from atomic-molecular, to personal experiences, through global systems
Using physical and chemical properties of water to explain how water moves through and between systems
Connecting human and natural water systems
Examining implications of water movement through systems for issues of human and ecosystem health