Each force acts on one particular object and has both strength and a direction. An object at rest typically has multiple forces acting on it, but they add to give zero net force on the object. Forces that do not sum to zero can cause changes in the object's speed or direction of motion. (Boundary: Qualitative and conceptual, but not quantitative addition of forces are used at this level.)
Standard detail
DCI.PS2.A.3-5.1
Depth 2Parent ID: C99B4420B22D492EB06B269C0A9F4D7AStandard set: Grade 3
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- DCI.PS2.A.3-5.1
- Standard ID
- EA6AD805FCAD483DBDDD147715660A5C
- ASN identifier
- S21342580
- Subject
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)
- Grades
- 03
- Ancestor IDs
- C99B4420B22D492EB06B269C0A9F4D7A02EF7248C87747C4AD2B2C04A1CCB2B2
- Source document
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)