
After our unit on vertebrates (which I blogged about yesterday) I delved into our unit on invertebrates. Although our book reverses the order, I think
it's better to start with the familiar.
And I'm sure kids have more experience with our furry friends the
mammals than they do with sea sponges.
Plus I enjoy getting questions from those deep thinkers who ask, as we
are classifying animals into five categories, "What about ants. Aren't they animals?" It leads to great discussions when it comes
time to rationalize why a sponge is an animal!
The exoskeleton is represented with tin foil. It's not the easiest fine motor task, but of
course the activity can be differentiated by assigning certain kids the
worm. They feel successful while the
kids who like a challenge work with me on how to manipulate the foil.

Next I reinforced the concept of the T chart with kids. They were learning about how to compare and
contrast in reading, and that was a perfect segue into how insects and
arachnids are similar and different.
Then finally we honed in on how to classify 2 types of invertebrates,
insects and arachnids.
They used the T charts to create captioned pictures for our
hall display (Top tip: Use paperclips to
easily change out papers throughout the year! Although it worked better with 2 clips, not one center one because they
droop over time).







Nice! Saw your post on All Things Upper Elementary, and hopped over to your blog to become your newest follower. I felt the same way this year (and last year, and the year before that...) when I looked in the grade book at Science.
ReplyDeleteI love teaching math and ELA, but sometimes they just take over! It's nice to get back to science and social studies. :)
DeleteFound this site while over at ATUE. Curious as to why you have a separate blog? I have just followed this one as I enjoy hearing what you are doing with your students.
ReplyDeleteCharlene/Diamond Mom
Hi Charlene,
DeleteI started this blog back in 2009, but I've been blogging for much longer than that. :)
ATUE began less than 6 months ago. The group of us there share more than just a blog; we Email each other all the time with blogging tips, teaching deals we come across, good news, and bad news. I love our group, and I feel like we've all grown as bloggers because we're all learning from each other. However I have no plans to abandon my own blog here, either. :) It's good to have creative control sometimes as well as collaborate with others sometimes.
Thanks for following!
I just discovered your blog, and love your TPT products....espcecially the hand sanitizer pass labels! Laura
ReplyDeleteRead-Write-Create
Thank you very much, Laura! :) Those labels work really well for my own class too. I appreciate your endorsement. :D
ReplyDelete