5E
Lesson Plan # 2
: Hatching Eggs
AUTHOR'S
NAME: Johnathon
Sample
TECHNOLOGY
LESSON (circle one):
Yes No
DATE
OF LESSON: Week 3, Monday
LENGTH
OF LESSON: 45
minutes
NAME
OF COURSE: 1st
grade Science
SOURCE
OF THE LESSON: LHS
GEMS: Eggs, Eggs Everywhere Teacher’s
Guide-Activity 2: Hatching Eggs: Session 1-Sorting Animals
TEKS
ADDRESSED:
(2)
Scientific processes. The
student develops abilities necessary to do scientific inquiry in the
field and
the classroom. The student is expected to:
(A)
Ask questions about organisms, objects, and events
(6) Science
concepts. The
student knows that systems have parts and are composed of organisms and
objects. The student is expected to:
(B)
Observe and describe the parts of plants and animals;
(7) Science
concepts. The
student knows that many types of change occur. The student is expected
to:
(D)
Observe and record changes in the life cycle of
organisms.
CONCEPT
STATEMENT: A common
misconception among children is that eggs only come from chickens or
what they
see in the store. Hatching eggs allows children to open eggs and
identify the
various animals inside. Children sort the animals by type and then
compare the
traits of each group.
PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES:
- Students
will be able to recognize that many animals come from eggs.
- Students
will be
able to sort animals that come from eggs.
- Students will
be able to compare the characteristics of each group of
animals that come from eggs.
RESOURCES:
- 1 copy of Chickens
Aren’t the Only Ones by Ruth Heller
- 1 basket or container to hold
the
filled plastic eggs
- white paper plates
for each child:
- 1 hollow
plastic
egg that opens and closes,
- 1 small toy animal that hatches from an egg
such as
a turtle, lizard, spider, snake, bird, or fish.
SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS: Students should use
caution when using scissors.
SUPLEMENTARY
MATERIALS, HANDOUTS: Ostrich
Egg
drawing, drawing of various eggs, crayons or markers, scissors located
in the
back of LHS GEMS Eggs, Eggs Everywhere Teacher’s Guide.
Engagement
|
|
Time:
___45_min____
|
What the
Teacher Will Do
|
Probing
Questions
|
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions
|
Read
Chickens Aren’t the Only Ones
|
What other
animals come from eggs?
|
Eggs only come
from chickens or birds.
|
Show
children the plastic eggs with the various animals inside.
|
What animal do
you think is in your egg?
|
Students will
say a few animals that come from eggs such as chickens and other birds.
|
Exploration
|
|
Time:
___45__min___
|
What the
Teacher Will Do
|
Probing
Questions
|
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions
|
Encourage
students to role-play animals hatching out of eggs
|
How do the
animals move?
|
Fish and other
animals do not lay eggs.
|
Encourage
students to group animals by the way they move
|
Which animals
fly, swim, crawl, etc.?
|
Students group
animals according to color.
|
Explanation
|
|
Time:
__45__min____
|
What the
Teacher Will Do
|
Probing
Questions
|
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions
|
Have
students compare the similarities of the groups of animals that come
from eggs.
|
How are the
groups of animals the same?
|
The groups
don’t have anything in common.
|
Have
students compare the differences of the groups of
animals that come from eggs.
|
How are the
groups of animals different?
|
Students group
animals according to color instead of more important physical features.
|
Elaboration
|
|
Time:
___45 __min___
|
What the
Teacher Will Do
|
Probing
Questions
|
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions
|
Have
students count the groups of animals
|
How many
animals are in each group?
|
Students count
incorrectly.
|
Have students role play different animals coming out
of the egg.
|
How do you
think the animals get out of the eggs?
|
Someone opens
the egg for the animals to get out.
|
Evaluation
|
|
Time:
__45___min___
|
What the
Teacher Will Do
|
Probing
Questions
|
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions
|
Have
students name each kind of animal that came from the eggs
|
What animal is
this and how does it move?
|
Students
incorrectly name an animal.
|
Monitor
children and ask them to role play the way each animal moves.
|
What animal is
this? How does it move?
|
Children don’t
know how to imitate an animal.
|