Description
Course Details
| Course Code | SNC2D |
| Course Type | Academic |
| Format | Online School Course |
| Prerequisite | SNC1D |
Overall Curriculum Expectations
By the end of this course, students will:
Scientific Investigation Skills and Career Exploration
- Demonstrate scientific investigation skills (related to both inquiry and research) in the four areas of skills (initiating and planning, performing, and recording, analyzing, and interpreting, and communicating)
- Identify and describe a variety of careers related to the fields of science under study, and identify scientists, including Canadians, who have made contributions to those fields.
Biology: Tissues, Organs, and Systems of Living Things
- Evaluate the importance of medical and other technological developments related to systems biology and analyze their societal and ethical implications.
- Investigate cell division, cell specialization, organs, and systems in animals and plants, using research and inquiry skills, including various laboratory techniques.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the hierarchical organization of cells, from tissues, to organs, to systems in animals and plants.
Chemistry: Chemical Reactions
- Analyse a variety of safety and environmental issues associated with chemical reactions, including the ways in which chemical reactions can be applied to address environmental challenges.
- Investigate, through inquiry, the characteristics of chemical reactions.
- Demonstrate an understanding of the general principles of chemical reactions, and various ways to represent them.
Earth and Space Science: Climate Change
- Analyse some of the effects of climate change around the world and assess the effectiveness of initiatives that attempt to address the issue of climate change.
- Investigate various natural and human factors that influence Earth’s climate and climate change.
- Demonstrate an understanding of natural and human factors, including the greenhouse effect, that influence Earth’s climate and contribute to climate change.
Physics: Light and Geometric Optics
- Evaluate the effectiveness of technological devices and procedures designed to make use of light and assess their social benefits.
- Investigate, through inquiry, the properties of light, and predict its behaviour, particularly with respect to reflection in plane and curved mirrors and refraction in converging lenses.
- Demonstrate an understanding of various characteristics and properties of light, particularly with respect to reflection in mirrors and reflection and refraction in lenses.
Outline of Course Content
| Unit | Title | Time |
| 1 | Physics: Light and Geometric Optics | 27 hours |
| 2 | Chemistry: Chemical Reactions | 27 hours |
| 3 | Earth and Space Science: Climate Change | 27 hours |
| 4 | Biology: Tissues, Organs and Systems of Living Things | 27 hours |
| Final Examination (A proctored two-hour exam worth 30% of the student’s final mark administered at the end of the course.) | 2 hours | |
| Total | 110 hours |





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