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  1. 5th Grade Science
  2. Science Solutions for Our Communities

5TH GRADE SCIENCE • EARTH AND HUMAN ACTIVITY

Science Solutions for Our Communities

Discover how a small town used science to clean up its polluted lake — and how communities everywhere use scientific ideas to protect the environment.

Section 1

The Phenomenon: Greenfield Lake's Big Comeback

Anchoring Phenomenon

The community worked with environmental scientists and engineers to develop a plan. They planted buffer zones — strips of native grasses and shrubs — along the lake's shoreline. They built rain gardens in parking lots to filter runoff before it reached the lake. Farmers switched to precision fertilizer application so less fertilizer washed away. Within three years, the algae blooms shrank dramatically, fish populations recovered, and families could enjoy the lake again.

How did science knowledge help Greenfield's community solve this environmental problem? And could these same ideas help other communities facing different environmental challenges?

Thinking Questions
Greenfield Lake: Before & After Science Solutions❌ BEFOREFarm FieldExcess fertilizerRunoffRunoffLawnFertilizer applied🟢 Algal Bloom!Thick green algae🐟☠🐟☠Low oxygen → Fish dyingBad smell → No swimmingNutrients flow directly into lake✅ AFTERFarm FieldPrecision fertilizerLawnLess fertilizerBuffer Zone🌿 Native plantsRain Garden🌧 Filters waterFilteredFiltered🔵 Clean Water!Clear, healthy lake🐟🐟🐟Healthy oxygen → Fish thrivingClean water → Swimming is back!Science solutions filter nutrients
Greenfield Lake: Before & After Science Solutions
Section 2

What Scientists Know: Science Ideas That Protect Our Environment

When communities face environmental problems — like polluted water, too much waste in landfills, or air that's unhealthy to breathe — they can use scientific knowledge to understand the problem and find solutions. Science doesn't just explain how nature works; it gives us the tools to reduce our environmental impact, which means lowering the harm that human activities cause to the natural world. Here are the key ideas that help communities take action.

1

Understanding Cause and Effect in Ecosystems

Scientists study how human activities — like farming, manufacturing, and building cities — affect natural systems such as water, soil, and air. When a community understands what is causing an environmental problem, they can target the cause directly instead of just dealing with the symptoms. Greenfield learned that fertilizer runoff caused their algae problem, so they targeted the runoff.
2

Using Data to Make Decisions

Scientists collect data (measurements and observations) to figure out how serious a problem is and whether a solution is working. Communities use this data to decide which solutions to try first, how much to invest, and when to adjust their approach. Without data, a community might spend time and money on solutions that don't actually work.
3

Engineering Solutions Based on Science

Once scientists understand the cause of a problem, engineers design solutions. A rain garden isn't just a pretty garden — it's an engineered system designed using knowledge of how water flows, how soil filters pollutants, and how plant roots absorb nutrients. Science knowledge is the foundation that makes engineering solutions effective.
4

Protecting Resources for the Future

Every community depends on natural resources — clean water, healthy soil, clean air, and biodiversity. Science helps communities understand that these resources are limited and interconnected. Protecting one resource often helps protect others. For example, planting buffer zones near lakes also prevents soil erosion, supports wildlife habitats, and helps filter air.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Key Takeaway
Section 3

Let's Investigate: Testing Filtration Solutions

Investigation Spotlight

Question: Which natural material — sand, gravel, or soil with plant roots — is most effective at filtering nutrients from polluted water?

Procedure: Set up three identical plastic bottles with the bottoms cut off, inverted to act as funnels. Fill each with a different material: (1) sand only, (2) gravel only, (3) soil with grass growing in it. Prepare "polluted water" by dissolving a small amount of plant fertilizer in water until it turns slightly green (or add a few drops of food coloring to represent the nutrients). Pour the same amount of polluted water through each filter and collect what comes through. Observe the color and clarity of the filtered water.

What scientists would observe: The soil-with-roots filter typically produces the clearest water because plant roots actively absorb the nutrients. This is exactly why Greenfield's buffer zones — strips of land with native plants and deep root systems — were so effective at cleaning runoff water naturally.

Filter MaterialWater Color BeforeWater Color AfterClarity Rating (1–5)
Sand onlyDark greenLight green2 / 5
Gravel onlyDark greenMedium green1 / 5
Soil with plant rootsDark greenMostly clear4 / 5
No filter (control)Dark greenDark green0 / 5

Notice how the investigation includes a control group (no filter) so scientists can compare how much each material actually helped. This is a key part of planning and carrying out investigations — one of the most important practices scientists use. The data clearly shows that the soil-with-roots material filtered the most nutrients, giving the community evidence to support building buffer zones with deep-rooted plants.

Section 4

What We Discovered: How Science Ideas Drive Environmental Solutions

The investigation shows us something powerful: when we understand the science behind a problem, we can design solutions that work. The community of Greenfield didn't just guess that plants might help — scientists knew that plant roots absorb dissolved nutrients from water, that soil microorganisms break down pollutants, and that slowing water flow gives natural processes more time to clean the water. Each of these ideas came from scientific research.

But Greenfield's story is just one example. Communities around the world use science ideas to reduce their environmental impact in many different ways. The key pattern is always the same: identify the problem → understand the science → design a solution → collect data to check if it's working → improve the solution over time. This is the engineering design process, and it depends on solid scientific knowledge at every step.

How Communities Use Science to Solve Environmental ProblemsSTEP 1Observe the Problem🔍STEP 2Investigate with Science🔬STEP 3Understand the Cause💡STEP 4Design & Build a Solution🛠STEP 5Test, Collect Data, Improve📊Improve & repeatExamples of Science Ideas• Plants absorb nutrients• Soil filters pollutants• Recycling conserves resources• Renewable energy reduces CO₂Examples of Solutions• Buffer zones & rain gardens• Recycling programs• Solar panels & wind turbinesScience knowledge powers every step of this cycle.
How Communities Use Science to Solve Environmental Problems

Let's look at the data from our investigation more closely. The control group (no filter) showed that polluted water stays polluted on its own — the nutrients don't just disappear. The gravel filtered very little because water passes through large gaps between rocks too quickly for much absorption to happen. Sand did better because its smaller particles trap more pollutants. But the soil-with-roots filter performed best because it combined physical filtration (soil particles trapping pollutants) with biological absorption (plant roots actively taking in nutrients). This is why real-world solutions like buffer zones work so well — they use multiple science ideas working together.

The data also shows why scientists test solutions before communities invest in them. If Greenfield had only used gravel (clarity rating: 1/5), they would have spent money on a solution that barely helped. By testing first and analyzing the results, they chose the most effective approach — saving both money and the environment.

Section 5

Patterns and Connections: Cause and Effect Everywhere

The Crosscutting Concept at the heart of this lesson is Cause and Effect. Scientists look for causes that explain effects they observe in the natural world. When communities understand the cause of an environmental problem, they can design solutions that target that specific cause. This pattern — identify the cause, then address it — shows up across all areas of science, not just environmental protection.

Science AreaObserved Effect (Problem)Identified CauseScience-Based Solution
Water Quality (Earth Science)Algal blooms in lake; fish dyingExcess fertilizer nutrients in runoff waterBuffer zones with native plants filter nutrients before they reach the lake
Air Quality (Earth Science)Smog over city; respiratory illness increasingBurning fossil fuels releases pollutants into the airSwitch to renewable energy sources (solar, wind) that don't produce air pollution
Waste (Physical Science)Landfills overflowing; plastic in oceansMany materials used once and thrown away don't decomposeRecycling programs and biodegradable materials reduce waste entering landfills
Soil Health (Life Science)Crops producing less food each yearSame crop planted year after year depletes specific soil nutrientsCrop rotation: planting different crops each year lets the soil recover its nutrients
Wildlife (Life Science)Bee populations decliningPesticides kill bees along with harmful insectsTargeted pest management uses science to control pests without harming pollinators

Do you see the pattern? In every example, the process is the same: scientists observe an effect (the environmental problem), investigate to find the cause, and then design a solution that addresses that specific cause. This cause-and-effect thinking is one of the most powerful tools scientists have — and it's a pattern you can use in your own thinking too. When you see an environmental problem, ask yourself: "What is causing this?" That question is the first step toward finding a real solution.

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Key Takeaway
Section 6

Real-World Connections: Communities Taking Action

Around the world, communities are using science ideas to reduce their environmental impact right now. These aren't just ideas in a textbook — they're real solutions that real people have put into practice. Let's look at how the engineering design process helps communities turn scientific knowledge into action.

1

Community Composting Programs

Science idea: Microorganisms break down organic matter into nutrient-rich soil. Many communities have started composting programs where food scraps are collected and turned into compost instead of going to landfills. This reduces methane gas (a pollutant) from landfills and creates healthy soil for local gardens.
2

Solar-Powered Schools

Science idea: Solar panels convert sunlight into electricity without producing air pollution. Schools across the country are installing solar panels on their roofs, reducing their need for electricity from fossil fuels. Students learn about renewable energy while their school demonstrates the solution in action.
3

Oyster Reef Restoration

Science idea: Oysters naturally filter water — a single oyster can filter up to 50 gallons of water per day. Communities near coastal waters are rebuilding oyster reefs that were destroyed by overharvesting. The restored reefs clean the water, reduce erosion, and provide habitat for fish and crabs.
4

Bike Lane Networks

Science idea: Burning gasoline in cars releases carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the air. Cities that build protected bike lanes give people a safe alternative to driving. Data shows that cities with good bike infrastructure have measurably cleaner air and lower carbon emissions in those areas.
Engineering Design Challenge
Section 7

Key Vocabulary Review

  • Environmental Impact — The effect that human activities have on the natural world, including pollution, habitat destruction, and resource depletion. Communities aim to reduce their environmental impact.
  • Runoff — Water that flows over the land surface, picking up pollutants like fertilizers, oil, and trash, and carrying them into streams, rivers, and lakes.
  • Buffer Zone — A strip of land planted with native grasses, shrubs, or trees between a human-use area (like a farm) and a body of water. Buffer zones filter pollutants from runoff.
  • Algal Bloom — A rapid overgrowth of algae in water, often caused by excess nutrients from fertilizers. Algal blooms reduce oxygen levels in water and harm fish and other aquatic life.
  • Renewable Energy — Energy from sources that are naturally replenished, such as sunlight, wind, and flowing water. Unlike fossil fuels, renewable energy sources produce little or no air pollution.
  • Engineering Design Process — A step-by-step method engineers use to solve problems: define the problem, research, brainstorm, choose a solution, build, test, and improve.
  • Data — Measurements, observations, and facts collected during an investigation. Scientists use data as evidence to support claims and evaluate whether solutions are working.
  • Cause and Effect — A relationship where one event (the cause) leads to another event (the effect). Scientists identify causes of environmental problems to design targeted solutions.
Section 8

Practice: Test Your Understanding

PROBLEM 1 — PROBLEM 1
A farm near a bay is losing soil every time it rains. Scientists explain that when rainwater flows over bare soil, it carries dirt and fertilizer into the bay, which harms fish and other living things. Which solution best uses this science idea to reduce the farm's environmental impact?
PROBLEM 2 — PROBLEM 2
A school uses a large amount of water to keep its grass green during hot, dry summers. Scientists share data showing that native plants need far less water than grass because they are adapted to the local climate. Which action best uses this science idea to reduce the school's water use?
PROBLEM 3 — PROBLEM 3
A town learns from scientists that when food scraps and yard waste break down inside a landfill, they produce methane — a gas that contributes to climate change. The town wants to reduce its environmental impact. Which action best uses this science idea?
PROBLEM 4 — PROBLEM 4
A coastal community notices that big storms are washing away the sandy beach and damaging nearby buildings. Scientists explain that sand dunes — hills of sand held together by the roots of special grasses — act as natural barriers that absorb wave energy during storms. Which community action best uses this science idea to reduce damage?
PROBLEM 5 — PROBLEM 5
A city has a problem with air pollution from cars and trucks. Scientists share research showing that trees absorb many common air pollutants through their leaves and also provide shade that keeps streets cooler, reducing the need for air conditioning in nearby buildings. The city council wants to use this science idea to help the community. Which plan best applies the research?
Section 9

What's Next?

What's Next?
Summary

What We Learned

Varsity Tutors • 5th Grade Science (NGSS) • Science Solutions for Our Communities