Science

Our Science Program

At Creators Academy, our Science Program builds a rigorous, lab-centered foundation through Living Environment (Biology) and Earth & Space Science. Students investigate core ideas—from cellular processes and genetics to Earth’s systems, climate, and geologic change—while practicing the habits of scientists: posing testable questions, designing investigations, analyzing real data, and communicating evidence-based conclusions. Each course includes the full NYS Regents laboratory requirement and integrates math, data literacy, and technology (e.g., modeling, graphing, and simulations).

Emphasis on local phenomena—weather events, ecosystems, human health—helps learners connect concepts to everyday decisions and global challenges. With a balanced assessment system (labs, classwork, quizzes, and exams) and structured support, students develop critical thinking, collaboration, and scientific reasoning. The sequence prepares all learners for success on the NYS Regents exams and opens pathways to advanced STEM coursework, research experiences, and college- and career-ready opportunities.

Current Courses

Biology This year-long Regents Biology course examines life from cells to ecosystems through inquiry, modeling, and data analysis. Students build scientific literacy and quantitative skills while investigating genetics, evolution, human physiology, and ecology in themed units (e.g., “Marathon Runner,” “Humans vs. Pathogens,” “Evolution of Sick Humans”). Learning is anchored by 1,200 minutes of laboratory work (with written reports) and three required state investigations—Feedback & Homeostasis, Lactose Tolerance, and “For the Birds”—that emphasize evidence-based reasoning and problem-solving. Assessment balances exams/quizzes, classwork, labs, and participation. The course culminates in the New York State Regents Examination in Biology and awards 1 science credit per semester (2 total).
Earth and Space Science High School Earth & Space Science (HS-ESS) is a full-year Regents course exploring Earth’s dynamic systems and our place in the universe. Students develop core scientific practices—analyzing maps/graphs, constructing and testing models, and arguing from evidence—across units on space systems, geologic time, plate tectonics (earthquakes/volcanoes), weather and climate, hydrology, and human sustainability. Learning is anchored by 1,200 minutes of laboratory work and three state investigations—Unearthing Mars, The Ripple Effect, and The Sky’s the Limit—that strengthen data-driven reasoning and lab safety. Assessment balances exams/quizzes, classwork, labs, and participation; extra help is available. The course awards 1 science credit per semester and culminates in the NYS Earth Science Regents Exam.