5E
Lesson Plan # 1 Dinosaur Defenses
AUTHOR'S
NAME: Alex
Gayler
TECHNOLOGY
LESSON (circle one): No
DATE
OF LESSON: Day
1, 2 and 3 of Week-long Unit
LENGTH
OF LESSON: Over
three days, about 30-45 minutes each day
NAME
OF COURSE: 1st Grade Science
SOURCE OF THE
LESSON:
Echols,
J. C. (1986). Animal defenses: Teacher’s guide. Berkley, CA: Lawrence
Hall of
Science.
TEKS
ADDRESSED:
Science
TEKS:
1.2(A)
Ask questions about organisms, objects, and events.
1.6(A) Sort
organisms and objects according to their parts
and characteristics.
1.9(A)
Identify characteristics of living organisms that
allow their basic needs to be met.
1.9(B)
Compare and give examples of the ways living organisms depend on each
other for
their basic needs.
CONCEPT
STATEMENT:
This
unit begins with a look at the defensive structures and behaviors of
dinosaurs
and allows ample time for independent dramatic play and exploration of
the
predator/prey relationship and the defenses dinosaurs used in their
environments.
PERFORMANCE
OBJECTIVES:
Students
will be able to:
- Identify the
defensive structures
and behaviors that animals use to protect themselves;
- Demonstrate their knowledge of the predator-prey relationship through dramatic play.
- Demonstrate their knowledge of the defensive structures of a defenseless animal through dramatic play.
RESOURCES:
For class:
- Posters
of T-Rex, Stegosaurus and Triceratops
- Copies
of patterns for cut-outs (from GEMS guide)
- 1
9”x12” sheet of brown construction paper for T-Rex
- 1
9”x12” sheet of green construction paper for paper
ferns
- 1
paper punch for making eyes
- 1
large pair of scissors for precutting
- 1
tray for demonstration
- newspaper to cover tables and demonstration tray
- transparent tape
- overhead projector
- projector screen
For each student:
- 1 pencil
- 1
4.5”x6” sheet of green construction paper for the
defenseless animal
- 1
bottle or white glue
- 1
pair of scissors
SAFETY
CONSIDERATIONS:
Remind students about how to safely use
scissors. Keep
large scissors out of student reach.
SUPLEMENTARY
MATERIALS, HANDOUTS:
Barton, B. (1989.) Dinosaurs,
dinosaurs. New York, Thomas Y. Cromwell.
ENGAGEMENT |
|
Time:
__10 minutes______ |
What the
Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Read
“Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs” to full class to initiate discussion of
dinosaurs, their habitats, foods, body structures, etc. Show posters of
different dinosaurs to illustrate discussion. |
1. How did
the Stegosaurus protect himself if a T-Rex came along?
2. How did a
Triceratops protect himself? |
1. He fought
him!
2. He used
the spikes on his head. |
Introduce
vocabulary: defenses. Brainstorm definition and write
down student ideas. |
1. What does
“defense” mean? |
1. You have
to defend your goal in hockey. Like you play defense in basketball. |
EXPLORATION |
|
Time:
__30 minutes______ |
What the
Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Act out the
“play” of the defenseless dinosaur hiding from the T-Rex. |
1. Why did
this dinosaur have to hide from the T-Rex? |
1. Because
the T-Rex was gonna eat him! |
Ask students
to help create defenses for the dinosaur so that it will be safe to go
find food. |
1. What can
we give this dinosaur so that it can protect itself from the T-Rex or
other bigger dinosaurs? |
1. Spikes,
teeth, claws, etc. |
Observe
independent student work. |
What did you
give your dinosaur to help him protect himself? |
Students will
work at their tables to create defenses for their dinosaur using paper,
glue and tape. |
EXPLANATION |
|
Time:
___10 minutes_____ |
What the
Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Reenact the
original scenario and use student-created dinosaurs. |
What might
happen now if your dinosaurs run into the T-Rex? |
They might
get in a fight and mine can use his claws to keep the T-Rex away from
his food. |
Recap
previous discussion of dinosaur defenses using the posters of the
stegosaurus, T-Rex and triceratops. |
So do you
think there were real dinosaurs that didn’t have any spikes or teeth or
ways to defend themselves? What would have happened to dinosaurs like
that? |
No, all
dinosaurs had claws at least or something that they could fight with. |
ELABORATION |
|
Time:
____30 minutes____ |
What the
Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Allow
students to create larger, more involved scenarios and sets for their
dinosaurs to live in. Rich dramatic play will follow. |
1. Where do
you think a T-rex and a stegosaurus might meet?
2. What is
happening with your dinosaurs? |
1. They might
all meet at the river because they all want water or they might fight
over food they find. |
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EVALUATION |
|
Time:
________ |
What the
Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
To assess student
understanding and evaluate student participation, teachers can use a
simple checklist (see rubric) and evaluate based on concept mastery. |
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