Create Information Transfer Pattern
Help Questions
4th Grade Science › Create Information Transfer Pattern
To solve this communication problem, what pattern system should Chen and Maya design to silently ask: bathroom, help, or pencil?
Use three different hand signal patterns: two fingers up = bathroom, hand on head = help, tap desk twice = pencil.
Whisper the words to each other so no one else hears the message.
Use the same hand wave pattern for bathroom, help, and pencil.
Write the message on paper and walk it to the teacher each time.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Chen and Maya need to silently communicate three different requests—bathroom, help, or pencil—likely during quiet class time. The solution must be silent, observable without speaking, and use distinct patterns for each message. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different hand gestures like thumbs up for bathroom, raised hand for help, and finger tapping for pencil. This works because patterns are distinct, observable, represent the needed information clearly, and maintain silence. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (two fingers up, hand on head, tap desk twice), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (bathroom, help, pencil), (3) is observable and practical (visible gestures, achievable in class), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers needed information silently). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice C is incorrect because it has no distinct patterns (same hand wave for everything), so the receiver cannot tell which message is being sent. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, which pattern-based solution best lets Jamal send “stop,” “go,” and “turn left” across the playground?
Use three clear flag patterns: flag high = go, flag low = stop, flag left = turn left.
Use one flag position for all three messages to keep it simple.
Use tiny finger taps that are hard to see from far away.
Use a long list of 26 flag moves to spell every word.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Jamal needs to communicate three directions—stop, go, and turn left—across a playground, likely requiring visibility from a distance. The solution must be visual, work at a distance, and use distinct patterns for each message. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different flag positions like flag up for go, flag down for stop, and flag sideways for turn left. This works because patterns are distinct, observable from far away, represent the needed information clearly. Choice C is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (flag high, low, left), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (go, stop, turn left), (3) is observable and practical (visible across playground, achievable with flags), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers needed information at distance). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice B is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything (one flag position for all), so messages cannot be distinguished. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or forget to assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
To transfer this information in a noisy gym, what sound pattern code should Sofia design for “line up,” “freeze,” and “sit”?
Use three drumbeat patterns: 1 beat = sit, 2 beats = freeze, 3 beats = line up.
Use silent hand motions even though everyone is watching the game.
Use one loud drumbeat for sit, freeze, and line up.
Make random claps each time and hope classmates guess the meaning.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Sofia needs to communicate three instructions—line up, freeze, and sit—in a noisy gym, requiring audible signals over the noise. The solution must be sound-based, audible in noise, and use distinct patterns for each message. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different numbers of drumbeats like one for sit, two for freeze, three for line up. This works because patterns are distinct, observable (hearable), represent the needed information clearly in a noisy environment. Choice B is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (1, 2, 3 beats), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (sit, freeze, line up), (3) is observable and practical (audible in gym, achievable with drum), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers needed information over noise). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice C is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything (one loud beat for all), so messages cannot be differentiated. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, what pattern code would allow Emma and Diego to send secret words “YES,” “NO,” and “HELP” using beads?
Use 50 different bead patterns so the code is too hard to learn.
Use bead color patterns: red-blue = YES, blue-red = NO, red-red-blue = HELP.
Hide one bead in a pocket so the receiver cannot see the pattern.
Use the same bead pattern for YES, NO, and HELP.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Emma and Diego need to secretly communicate three words—YES, NO, and HELP—using beads, likely for a discreet code. The solution must be visual, secret yet observable to the receiver, and use distinct patterns for each message. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different color sequences like red for YES, blue for NO, green for HELP. This works because patterns are distinct, observable, represent the needed information clearly while keeping it secret. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (red-blue, blue-red, red-red-blue), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (YES, NO, HELP), (3) is observable and practical (visible beads, achievable), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers secret information). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice B is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything, so messages cannot be distinguished. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, which pattern-based solution best helps Amir and Yuki give game directions: “tagger,” “safe,” and “switch”?
Use very small eye blinks that teammates cannot notice from far away.
Use three clear gesture patterns: point to self = tagger, arms crossed = safe, spin once = switch.
Shout the directions loudly even though the rule is no talking.
Use one gesture for all directions so no one gets confused.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Amir and Yuki need to give three game directions—tagger, safe, and switch—without talking, likely during a silent game. The solution must be silent, visual via gestures, and use distinct patterns for each direction. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different body movements like pointing for tagger, arms out for safe, twirl for switch. This works because patterns are distinct, observable, represent the needed information clearly without speech. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (point to self, arms crossed, spin once), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (tagger, safe, switch), (3) is observable and practical (visible gestures, achievable in game), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers directions silently). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice C is incorrect because it uses one gesture for all, lacking distinction so directions cannot be told apart. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, how could patterns be used to warn “fire,” “storm,” or “all clear” during a drill?
Send a text message to every student using a phone.
Use three distinct bell patterns: continuous ring = fire, three short rings = storm, one long ring = all clear.
Ring the bell once for every warning so everyone listens harder.
Use a quiet hum that only students near the door can hear.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, the need is to warn about three situations—fire, storm, or all clear—during a drill, requiring audible signals for everyone. The solution must be sound-based, hearable by all, and use distinct patterns for each warning. A good pattern-based solution would be: using different bell rings like continuous for fire, short bursts for storm, single long for all clear. This works because patterns are distinct, observable (audible), represent the needed information clearly in emergencies. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (continuous, three short, one long), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (fire, storm, all clear), (3) is observable and practical (audible bell, achievable in school), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers warnings effectively). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice B is incorrect because it uses similar patterns (ring once for every warning), lacking distinction so messages blend together. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, which Morse-style pattern code best sends letters A, B, and C using short and long taps?
Use tap patterns but never tell the receiver what the patterns mean.
Use a full Morse chart for all letters and numbers, including punctuation.
Use tap patterns with meanings: A = short-long, B = long-short-short, C = long-short-long.
Use only long taps for A, B, and C, so the code is faster.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, the need is to send three letters—A, B, and C—using Morse-style short and long taps. The solution must be sound-based or tactile, distinct for each letter, and learnable as a code. A good pattern-based solution would be: using combinations like short-long for A, long-short-short for B, long-short-long for C. This works because patterns are distinct, observable (hearable or feelable), represent the needed information clearly. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns (short-long, long-short-short, long-short-long), (2) assigns specific information to each pattern (A, B, C), (3) is observable and practical (tappable, achievable), (4) solves the communication problem (transfers letters via code). This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice B is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything (only long taps for all), so letters cannot be distinguished. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, Carlos and Keisha need playground game signals for “pass,” “shoot,” and “switch teams” without yelling. To communicate these using patterns, what should be designed?
A code with ten different motions, even though only three messages are needed.
A plan where players shout the words louder so everyone can hear.
A set of three big arm-motion patterns: two waves = pass, hands up = shoot, arms crossed = switch teams.
One small finger tap pattern for all three messages, even from far away.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Carlos and Keisha need signals for 3 game instructions without yelling: pass, shoot, and switch teams. The solution must be visual movements visible on the playground. A good pattern-based solution would be: use different arm motions for each command. This works because patterns are distinct, observable from afar, and represent the needed information clearly. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns like two waves, hands up, arms crossed, (2) assigns specific information to each pattern such as two waves means pass, (3) is observable and practical as big motions can be seen on playground, (4) solves the communication problem by transferring needed instructions silently. This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice C is incorrect because it uses one small pattern for all, which is not observable from far away. This error occurs when students choose patterns that can't be observed or don't make them different enough. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
To communicate “yes,” “no,” and “need help” during a quiet test, Emma and Chen need silent movement signals. Which pattern-based solution would best transfer this information?
Use the same nod for yes, no, and need help, and rely on guessing.
Emma coughs once for yes, twice for no, and three times for help.
Use three gestures: nod = yes, head shake = no, raise hand = need help.
Emma thinks the answer in her head, and Chen tries to read her mind.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Emma and Chen need to communicate 3 different messages silently during a quiet test: yes, no, and need help. The solution must be visual movements that are silent. A good pattern-based solution would be: use different head and hand gestures for each response. This works because patterns are distinct, observable quietly, and represent the needed information clearly. Choice B is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns like nod, head shake, raise hand, (2) assigns specific information to each pattern such as nod means yes, (3) is observable and practical as gestures can be seen during a test, (4) solves the communication problem by transferring needed information silently. This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice C is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything, relying on guessing. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?
For this communication problem, Diego needs a warning system for “fire drill,” “lockdown,” and “all clear” using hallway lights. Which solution uses patterns to transfer the needed information?
Use light-flash patterns: 1 flash = all clear, 2 flashes = fire drill, 3 flashes = lockdown.
Use sound alarms only, even though the plan must be light-based.
Turn the lights on once for every alert, no matter what the alert is.
Flash the lights in many complicated patterns that take two minutes to remember.
Explanation
This question tests 4th grade ability to generate pattern-based solutions for transferring information (NGSS 4-PS4-3). Students must design patterns that represent and communicate specific messages. Good pattern-based communication solutions: (1) Use distinct patterns - each pattern clearly different from others, (2) Assign specific meanings - each pattern represents specific information, (3) Observable - patterns can be seen, heard, or detected, (4) Learnable - people can remember and reproduce patterns, (5) Appropriate for situation - works with available materials and environment. The design must match information to patterns: if need 3 messages, need 3 distinct patterns; if need 10 messages, need 10 patterns. Patterns must be clearly different so receiver knows which message is being sent. In this challenge, Diego needs to communicate 3 different alerts using hallway lights: fire drill, lockdown, and all clear. The solution must be light-based and visible in hallways. A good pattern-based solution would be: use different numbers of flashes for each alert. This works because patterns are distinct, observable visually, and represent the needed information clearly. Choice A is correct because it: (1) uses clear, distinct patterns like 1 flash, 2 flashes, 3 flashes, (2) assigns specific information to each pattern such as 1 flash means all clear, (3) is observable and practical as light flashes can be seen in hallways, (4) solves the communication problem by transferring needed information through lights. This demonstrates understanding that patterns can be designed as communication systems - different patterns carrying different meanings in observable, agreed-upon ways. Choice B is incorrect because it uses the same pattern for everything, which doesn't distinguish alerts. This error occurs when students don't make patterns different enough or don't assign specific meanings. The key: Solution must use patterns (not random), patterns must be distinct (clearly different), and each must have specific meaning. To help students design pattern solutions: (1) Identify information to communicate - list all messages needed, (2) Choose pattern type - visual (colors, shapes, positions), sound (beats, rhythms, tones), movement (gestures, positions), (3) Create distinct patterns - make each clearly different, (4) Assign meanings - match each pattern to specific information, (5) Test - can others observe patterns and understand messages? Practice with challenges: Design code for 3 messages using hand signals - must create 3 different, clear gestures. Design light signals for 4 instructions - use number or rhythm of flashes. Evaluate solutions: Are patterns distinct? Can you tell them apart? Does each have specific meaning? Can others learn and use it? Emphasize: More information = more patterns needed. Patterns must be clearly different. Both sender and receiver must know what patterns mean (agreed-upon code). Compare solutions: Which is clearer? Which is easier to use? Which solves problem best?