The
subject of Science plays an important role in developing well-defined
abilities in cognitive, affective and psychomotor domains in children.
It augments the spirit of enquiry, creativity, objectivity and aesthetic
sensibility.
Upper
primary stage demands that a number of opportunities should be provided
to the students to engage them with the processes of Science like
observing, recording observations, drawing, tabulation, plotting graphs,
etc., whereas the secondary stage also expects abstraction and
quantitative reasoning to occupy a more central place in the teaching
and learning of Science. Thus, the idea of atoms and molecules being the
building blocks of matter makes its appearance, as does Newton’s law of
gravitation.
The
present syllabus has been designed around seven broad themes viz. Food;
Materials; The World of The Living; How Things Work; Moving Things,
People and Ideas; Natural Phenomenon and Natural Resources. Special care
has been taken to avoid temptation of adding too many concepts than can
be comfortably learnt in the given time frame. No attempt has been made
to be comprehensive.
At
this stage, while science is still a common subject, the disciplines of
Physics, Chemistry and Biology begin to emerge. The students should be
exposed to experiences based on hands on activities as well as modes of
reasoning that are typical of the subject.