Children are natural scientists. They love to observe and
should be encouraged to talk about their observations. We can help guide them
to “discover” many key concepts. Asking questions and having children sort
objects into categories helps in science learning. This has the added benefit
of helping develop oral vocabulary and even pre-reading skills.
Go for a walk around the school neighborhood or playground.
Ask children to find the living things. When you go back into the room, ask
children to draw one of the living things they saw. Have children show their
work and verbalize why this is a living thing. Responses such as these are
age-appropriate observations:
- It moves.
- It grows.
- It needs food.
- It breathes (actually exchanges gases like in the case of plants)
Have children look around the room for representations of
living things. Examples include stuffed or plastic animals, plants, the
children, pictures in books of fish, etc. Children can bring their items to
circle time and verbalize their reasoning for why the item represents a living
thing. This helps develop new
vocabulary.
We also like to incorporate movement and have children show
how a plant moves or talk about the needs of animals for food and air. Some
concepts are likely to be beyond what a preschooler can easily understand but
we think it is helpful to introduce vocabulary such as a plant gives off
oxygen, the air we need. It takes in carbon dioxide.
Children can then circle items on a worksheet such as the
one below to identify living things:
For more on a unique living things, see our Weekly Activity,
"Sand Dollars." It is a good way to integrate literacy skills with an unusual
living thing. Sign up in the white box with your email.
Standards Alignment:
Head Start: IV. C; VI. B.; VIII. B.; XI. A & B.
NAEYC: 2.B.04; 2.D.04; 2.D.07; 2.G.02; 2.G.08.