The fourth grade curriculum standards for the United States includes the use of fractions, decimals, expanded notation, and multiplication. Fourth grade math will offer cover an extensive amount of more complicated word problems than were encountered in previous years.
Sounds like there was some attraction there, maybe more. my fathers eighth grade teacher taught him a great deal more than math
basketball
Algebra, shape space and measure
there are some about circulatory system and nervous system
Earth science is typically taught in middle school and high school, with some elementary schools also incorporating basic concepts. It is part of the science curriculum and covers topics such as geology, meteorology, and astronomy.
anything u can think of
I believe that some cool projects are - Math in Chess Math in Probability Pascal's Triangle Serpinski's Triangle Math in Origami Binary Computer Coding Math in Magic Math in Music These are good topics.
junction
exposition is the setting of the sooty and the characteristic of the story
That depends on the state you live in. In some states, sixth grade can be taught with either an Elementary Education degree (usually good for K-8th grade) or by a Secondary Education degree (6th grade-12th grade). Elementary Education majors need to take the same basic math classes all other college students take plus a "math for Elementary School teachers" type class. In most states, to get Secondary Education certification you need to get a major in a subject matter, then take extra classes to learn to teach. So you'd need to get a BS in Math, which involves LOTS of math classes starting with Calculus and going up from there, including theory classes.
link to learning
More arithmetic, the entire scope of numbers (e.g. what is a real number, a rational number), measurement, some basic geometry, and so on. Possibly some algebra, but algebra is normally first taught around 7th-8th grade.