5E
Lesson Plan # 3: Eggs on Land, Eggs in Water
AUTHOR'S NAME: Emily Crumley
TECHNOLOGY LESSON (circle
one): No
DATE OF LESSON: Week 4, Tuesday
LENGTH OF LESSON: 40 min. lesson, some parts will carry
over into next day
NAME OF COURSE: 1st grade
science
SOURCE OF THE LESSON: Eggs
Eggs
Everywhere GEMS teacher’s guide
§112.3.
Science, Grade 1.
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;
(7) Science
concepts. The student knows that many types of change occur. The
student is
expected to:
(D) observe
and record stages in
the life cycle of organisms in their natural environment.
(9) Science concepts. The student
knows that
living organisms have basic needs. The student is expected to:
(A) identify
basic needs of
living organisms;
(B) give
examples of how living
organisms depend on each other; and
CONCEPT STATEMENT:
Many
different types of animals are born from eggs.
Students should recognize that different hatching animals lay eggs in
different
types of environments. They should also understand that some animals
eat other
animals while some eat plants. They should begin to understand the
basic needs
of living organisms.
PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES:
- SWBAT
identify
multiple animals that hatch from eggs
- SWBAT
identify
which animals lay eggs on land and which animals lay eggs underwater
RESOURCES: For the group:
- 1 live box turtle
- 1
live toy turtle
- 2
small toy turtles
- 2
ping-pong or Styrofoam balls
- 1
toy dog
- 1
tub filled with sand
- 1
paper grocery bag
- 1
turtle laying eggs poster (in guide)
- Colored
pictures of turtles and turtle eggs
- 2
strawberries
- 1
tomato cut into quarters
SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS: Student will be working with a box
turtle. The children must be warned while meeting the turtle not to
touch its
head in case it bites or they poke it in the eye. Turtles can also
carry salmonella,
so the turtle must first be taken to the vet to make sure it is disease
free.
The children must always wash their hands after handling the turtle.
SUPLEMENTARY MATERIALS,
HANDOUTS: None
LESSON
Engagement |
|
Time:
___10 min_____ |
What
the Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Introduce the box turtle. Sit
on the floor in a circle with the students. Put the turtle on the
ground with its head away from me. Tell the students they will each
have an opportunity to touch the turtle’s shell and legs.
Count the turtle’s eyes, legs
and toes with the children. Put the strawberry and tomato in front of
the turtle to see if it will eat them. Then put the turtle back safely
in the terrarium. |
1. Why is it best not to touch
the turtle’s head?
2. Why do you think the turtle
pulls his head and legs in the shell?
3. Why do you think turtles
have shells? |
1.[He’ll bite us]
2. [He’s scared]
3.[For protection] it’s their
home |
Show the turtle laying eggs
picture |
1. What do you see in the
picture?
2. Where is the turtle laying
her eggs? |
1.[A turtle and her eggs]
2.[In the ground] in the water |
|
|
|
Exploration |
|
Time:
__10______ |
What
the Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Present a drama about a mother
turtle laying her eggs and baby turtles crawling out of their nest. Use
the prepared toys and tub of sand to act out turtle behavior during the
story. Students will be in a circle, around the tub where everyone can
see.
A
mother turtle is eating a strawberry on a hot summer day.
A
dog sniffs the ground as it walks toward the turtle. (If possible,
place the turtles head and legs under shell)
The
turtle is so still and looks so much like a
rock that the dog walks away (walk the dog to the bag and put it in)
The
mother turtle is about to lay eggs. She needs to find a safe place to
hide them.
She
uses her back legs to dig a hole in the sand and drops her eggs into
the hole. (Place the two eggs in the hole).
She
uses her back legs to cover the eggs with sand so they are hidden.
She
then leaves her nest (walk turtle to the bag and put her away)
A
long time goes by. Then something exciting happens. The baby turtles
hatch out of their eggs, dig through the sand and suddenly appear.
(Crawl the turtles out from the sand.)
The
baby turtles look for food.
· The
little turtles nibble on the strawberry and tomato. They are big enough
to take care of themselves. |
1. What
do you think the turtle will do if the dog comes too close to it?
2. Why
do you think the dog leaves the turtle alone?
3. What do you think the baby turtles will eat? |
1. [Hide
in its shell] run away
2. [he
doesn’t know what it is, it looks like a rock] he’s scared of it, dogs
don’t eat turtles
3. [Strawberries
and tomatoes, grass] sand, the dog, each other |
The tray and props should be
left in the play area to be explored further during free time. |
|
|
|
|
|
Explanation |
|
Time:
___5_____ |
What
the Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Have students explain what
they saw in the drama.
Explain to students the terms
incubation and egg tooth. |
1. Do
all animals hatch from eggs?
2. What
do we call animals that are born alive and not hatched from eggs?
3. What
are some more groups of animals that are hatched from eggs? |
1.[no] yes
2. [mammals] birds, bugs,
reptiles, amphibians
3. [Birds, bugs, reptiles,
amphibians. |
|
|
|
Elaboration |
|
Time:
__15______ |
What
the Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
The students will look through
books to find other animals that lay eggs, in water or on land. They
will draw a picture of the animal, label it, and label where the animal
lays its eggs. Then the class will divide into groups according to
where their animal lays its eggs and discuss how they came to that
conclusion. The teacher will circulate through the groups listening to
explanations and asking questions. |
1. Why
do you think that animal lays its eggs on land (water)?
2. What
do you think that animal will eat?
3. The
turtle had to hide her eggs; do you think your animal will hid her eggs? |
Responses will be dependent on
the student’s chosen animal. |
|
|
|
Evaluation |
|
Time:
________ |
What
the Teacher Will Do |
Probing
Questions |
Student
Responses
Potential
Misconceptions |
Have students put their
pictures in their portfolios.
As a ticket out the door, each
student must name an animal that lays eggs, and where. |
1. Name one animal that lays
eggs, and where do they lay them? |
1. [bird] in the water
[fish in the water]
[turtle] in
the water |
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