Standard #: SC.68.CS-CS.2.14 (Discontinued after 2024-2025)


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Perform program tracing to predict the behavior of programs.


General Information

Subject Area: Science
Grade: 68
Body of Knowledge: Computer Science - Communication Systems and Computing (Discontinued after 2024-2025)
Date Adopted or Revised: 05/16
Status: State Board Approved

Related Courses

Course Number1111 Course Title222
0200000: M/J Computer Science Discoveries (Specifically in versions: 2018 - 2022, 2022 - 2024, 2024 and beyond (current))
0200020: M/J Computer Science Discoveries 2 (Specifically in versions: 2018 - 2022, 2022 - 2024, 2024 and beyond (current))


Related Resources

Lesson Plans

Name Description
Slope Intercept - Lesson #3

This is lesson 3 of 3 in the Slope Intercept unit. This lesson introduces similar triangles to explain why slope is the same between any two points on a non-vertical line. In this lesson students perform an activity to determine that slope is constant throughout a line and students will discover the slope for vertical and horizontal lines.

Slope Intercept - Lesson #2

This is lesson 2 of 3 in the Slope Intercept unit. This lesson introduces graphing non-proportional linear relationships. In this lesson students will perform an activity to collect data to derive y = mx + b and will use a Scratch program to plot the graph of the data, as well as check for proportional and/or linear relationships.

Logical Bodies of Water and Algorithms

This lesson will allow students to understand Florida landforms as systems and identify their characteristics. This lesson will also give understanding of how computers take input, give output, take commands, and execute an action from a user. Lastly this lesson will use different graphical representations, like tables and flowcharts to understand how computers think, while students create origami to review their science concepts. This is lesson 2 in a 4-lesson unit on Florida Landforms and Water.

Radioactive Dating Lesson 2

Students will learn about the importance of using multiple radioactive dating methods to date an artifact as well as learn about the if programming control structure. This is Lesson 2 in the Radioactive Dating Unit and will begin the experience in coding a program to illustrate student understanding of radioactive dating.

Brr! How Cold is the Antarctic?

In this PBL activity, students use online data to determine the extent of temperature changes in the Antarctic. They will analyze their data using measures of central tendency as well as measuring its variability. They will also use scratch to assist them in the calculations. These lesson will take two 50-minute periods.

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