As they should. This is one of our kindergarten units on plants and seeds:
We had a FOSS science lab that accompanied this, but apparently I didn't take pictures of that. She always has fun with the labs.
I understand the concern for promoting math and science. I simply disagree with the idea that to promote math or science, the school should allow more time for just math or science and segregate them from other subjects. IMO, that type of thinking is part of the reason our school system is a failed model. Children are complex social creatures whose minds are spinning quickly in many directions at one time. It's so much easier to use that to one's advantage than it is to try to change it.
Yesterday, my daughter was giving me some grief about an assignment. I suggested she
could be at school with her nose in a textbook. She, uh, asked me what a textbook is. I had to look. I pulled out my one textbook and asked her to read the first two pages of chapter one. She decided that I was right. It was not the most exciting way to spend one's day. It was a 9th grade history text. She's in 2nd grade. She read it at about a 95% accuracy. If I can teach a child to read without a teaching degree or a pile of textbooks, why does the school have so much difficulty?
IMO, the public schools are a failed model.