This week in our weekly activity, we provided a short text
about bears. We hope you are signed up to receive these free activities. If so,
be sure to read these bear facts to your class.
You can use this as the basis for a discussion (or grand
conversation) about living things. You could also show children a photo like
the one below:
Ask if zebras and bears are living. You will likely get a chorus
of “YES!” Then ask children to share ideas about why this is living. Children might
suggest ideas like the following:
It eats.
It has a face.
It has a home.
It moves.
You can ask leading questions about other living things. For
example, “Are you living?” After children agree. Ask them what size they were
as a baby. This likely will prompt responses such as “Living things can grow.”
Then comes the difficult part – having children cross ideas
off of the “Living Things” list. We feel this is important as it helps
children understand that it is necessary to revisit and often change their original
ideas.
You can show a picture of a tree.
You can ask if the tree is living. Explain that it grows, it
takes in air to help make food, and it moves in the breeze along with growing.
Additionally, trees produce seeds like pinecones so they make more. This should
help children cross off statements like “It has a face.” They can add other
statements including “It makes more.”
Then have children go on a picture “hunt” in your classroom
library or on the playground to find other examples of living things.
Standards Alignment:
NAEYC - 2.G.02 & 2.G.06
Head Start - XI.1 & 2