Aims...Students
will think about endangered animals and their adaptations to their
environment, gain understandings about the inter-relationships of living
things, learn about issues relating to survival and conservation. They
will make observations, develop note taking and recording skills, be able
to locate resources and acknowledge their sources. They will share
acquired knowledge with their class via a KidPix slideshow.
Research...Locating
resources and researching animals (B4) of choice will be an ongoing
activity as students learn about Endangered Australian animals and prepare
a presentation of learned facts and understandings. Much of the
information for students can be found on my site
here Presentations (B5).See:
Developing
research skills
Student assignments
are provided as KidcyberQuests
1,
2
and
3.
Introducing...As
an introductory activity, students should gain an understanding of animal
groups and the basic characteristics of each. Make a class list together
listing animal kingdom groups and the characteristics of each, such as
cold/warm blooded, covering, vertebrate/invertebrate etc.
Students should be familiarised with
terminology such as habitat, carnivore, camouflage,
etc as the unit progresses. They should understand the 'bare essentials'
for survival: food, water, air, shelter, protection and reproduction. They
should have a broad understanding of concepts such as conservation,
endangered, survival, adaptation, interdependence.
Make lists, brainstorm to find out
what they already know. Play games such as What am I? Each student
has a sticker placed on their back labelled with an animal, or with the
picture of an animal. They must determine what that is. They move about
asking others questions, to which the answer can only be yes or no.
Activity Ideas in Key
Learning Areas.
Unless specified, the term 'animal'
includes mammal, reptile, bird, insect etc.
Activities are coded to relate to
Bloom and
Gardner:
| Bloom's
Taxonomy of Cognitive Skills |
B1
Knowledge; B2 Comprehension; B3 Application;
B4
Analysis; B5 Synthesis; B6 Evaluation]
|
| Gardner's
Theory of Multiple Intelligences |
GL
Linguistic intelligence;
GM Logic mathematical;
GVS
Visual spatial; GB Body; GMus Music;
GN
Naturalistic; GP People; GS Self
|
English
Make
a list or an A-Z of Australian
endangered animals. GL/B1
Write
stories about Australian endangered
animals in Australian settings. GL/B2
Write
information narratives about endangered Australian animals, that is, a
fiction story introducing factual information gathered from research.
GL/B5
Write
cinquain poetry . This form of poetry was invented by an American,
Adelaide Crapsey, in 1911. Strictly speaking, cinquain (pronounced
san-cane) is a poetic form consisting of five lines of two, four, six,
eight and two syllables respectively. Cinquains don't have titles but the
first line announces the topic. GL/B3
The format is:
| |
Example:
|
Line 1: one
word - title
|
Kangaroo
|
Line 2: two
words to describe the title
|
Furry marsupial
|
Line 3: three
action words
|
Hopping, jumping,
bounding
|
Line 4: a
four word phrase describing emotion/feeling
|
Proud emblem of
Australia
|
Line 5: one
word, a synonym for title
|
Macropod
|
|
Construct
a crossword puzzle about Australian animals, using researched facts as
clues. GL/B3
Write
letters to newspapers, politicians or
other appropriate bodies urging the protection of Australia's endangered
animals and the conservation of their habitats. GL/B3
Debate
issues such as :
Logging of Australia's
old-growth forests should stop;
Farming of kangaroos and
emus for food is a good thing;
There should be a curfew
on cats and dogs to safeguard native wildlife;
Native animals should not
be kept in captivity.
GL/B6 Speak
as an 'Animal Expert' : select one endangered Australian animal that you
have researched, and prepare to be questioned by the class. GL/B5
Alternatively, take on the role of the animal and answer the questions put
to you by the class. GB/B5
Write
an explanation of how some Australian
animals have become endangered species. Describe causes and effects of
such things as introduced species, habitat destruction and so on. GL/B4
Make
a wordsearch using the names of
endangered Australian animals. GL/B1
Make
'What am I?' puzzles for others to read
and solve. GL/B3
Write
about how you would feel if you were an
endangered Australian animal whose existence was threatened because your
habitat was disappearing. GL/B6
Mathematics
Survey
the class to find out what people's favourite endangered
Australian animal is. Make a
graph of the results. GM/B1
Survey
people to find out how many endangered
Australian native animals (including birds and reptiles) they can name in
one minute. From your results, identify the most commonly named animal,
the average number that people can list in a minute, or other data.
Present your findings graphically. GM/B4
Make up
maths problems involving endangered
Australian animals, and share these with the class for others to solve.
GM/B3.
Examples:
7 kangaroos...how many legs?
tails? ears?
An emu runs at 50
kph...how long would it take to run from Adelaide to Melbourne ?
Studies of Society
and Environment (SOSE)
Locate
on a map of Australia the places where
some species of endangered
animals are found. Draw the
animals and show where they may be found. GVS/B2
Construct
a diorama of an endangered Australian animal in its habitat. GN/B3
Compare
the different habitats of endangered Australian native animals. Classify
them under heading such as rainforest, desert, woodland, grasslands and so
on. GN/B4
Visit
a zoo or animal sanctuary that has
endangered Australian animals. List the jobs you think there might
be for people to do in a zoo. Some of these you might notice on your
visit, starting with the people in the ticket office. Classify the jobs,
for example, caring for the animals, dealing with people, etc. GN/B1
Science
Construct
a life cycle sequence in
pictures about a selected
endangered
Australian marsupial. GN/B2
Identify
the similarities and differences
between the three groups of mammals or between reptiles and amphibians.
GN/B4
Identify
and list Australian native animals that are classified as
endangered or vulnerable. GN/B1. Look at the ways in which people
are trying to conserve them. GN/B2
Describe
how some Australian animals use their senses to protect themselves and to
find food. GN/B2
Investigate
the ways in which the bodies of animals assist in their survival. Use
Australian native animals as your examples. GN/B2
Observe and list
the features of different Australian
animals on a chart with headings: animal name, animal group, features.
Include their movement, bodies, coverings and so on. GN/B1
Example:
wombat
.........marsupial.........hard bony back, claws, backward-facing pouch
Find out
what some endangered Australian native animals eat. Make a booklet listing
each selected animal and their diet in the wild. GN/B1
Investigate
the ways in which some Australian
animals use camouflage as a means of defence.
Technology
Produce
one of your endangered
Australian animal reports on computer. GVS/ B2-5 depending on the
sophistication of the information product used.
Design
an appropriate zoo habitat for an Australian native animal . List the
materials you would use and the reasons for selecting those materials.
GVS/B3
Design
a special zoo that only keeps
endangered Australian animals. Make a map of the zoo, marking where each
animal would be housed. Give reasons for your choice of animals and the
location of their zoo habitat. Take into consideration the purposes of
zoos. GVS/B3
Collect
images of Australian native animals
from the internet to be used in your own computer presentation or report.
GVS/B3
The Arts
Improvise
in drama: take on the role of an endangered
Australian animal you have
researched and imagine that you are to go to a zoo in another country .
The animal must tell the zookeepers what sort of habitat and food it
requires in order to stay healthy . GB/B3
Create
a dance about an endangered Australian
native animal (this includes birds and reptiles) that imitates their
movements. GB/B5
Compose
a song or rap about an endangered
Australian animal and perform it to the class. GB/B5
Paint
a mural of an endangered Australian
habitat and the appropriate animals of that environment. GVS/B3
Make
endangered animal masks. GVS/B3
Use
the animal masks you have made in a
play you write or improvise using endangered Australian animals as the
central theme. GB/B5
Model
an endangered Australian animal in clay
or play dough. Make a habitat for your animal, making sure it provides the
animal with all its basic needs such as shelter, food, water and
protection. GVS/B3
Physical Education
Make up
a movement game about endangered
Australian animals. Teach the
class so that everyone can play it together. GB/B3
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