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Elephants and Their Young

Meridith Allison and Shelia Henk

Description
Concept Map
Assessment Plan
Rubric
Calendar
Resources
Lesson Plan 1
Lesson Plan 2
Orientation Video
Clinical Interviews
Modifications
Elementary Science Methods Home

Accommodations for Students with Special Needs:

Blindness, Gifted

Blindness

  • verbal descriptions of demonstrations and visual aids
  • Braille text and raised line images
  • Braille or tactile ruler, compass, angles, protractor
  • Braille equipment labels, notches, staples, fabric paint, and Braille at regular increments on tactile ruler, glassware, syringe, beam balance, stove, other science equipment
  • different textures (e.g., sand paper) to label areas on items

Low Vision

  • verbal descriptions of demonstrations and visual aids
  • preferential seating to assure visual access to demonstrations
  • large-print, high-contrast instructions and illustrations
  • raised line drawings or tactile models for illustrations
  • large-print laboratory signs and equipment labels
  • video camera, computer or TV monitor to enlarge microscope images
  • hand-held magnifier, binoculars
  • large-print calculator

Source:

http://www.washington.edu/doit/Brochures/Academics/science_lab.html

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Gifted

  • Ask open ended questions
  • Present opportunities for students to express personal opinions
  • Include discussion about current events
  • Modify the lessons so that they incorporate into a larger project
  • Relate to student’s personal interests
  • Incorporate creative writing into the lessons
  • Provide opportunities for higher-order thinking and open-ended investigations
  • Relate the study of elephants to other content areas
  • Allow students to explore and make educated guesses
  • Present a problem for students to investigate
  • Give students the chance to explain their reasoning

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