animal, plants, and humans ladasha tolen krystal rivera

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Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

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Page 1: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Animal, Plants, and Humans

Ladasha TolenKrystal Rivera

Page 2: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson One: How Do Organisms Depend on Each other for Survival

•NYC Science Scope & Sequence Standards:

•LE 5.1d,e & LE 6.1 a,b•Classify populations of organisms as producers consumers, or decomposers by the role they serve in the ecosystem (food chains and food web).

Page 3: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

NCTM Process and Content Standards

•Process Standards: Reasoning and Proof.•Content Standards: Connections and Representations

Page 4: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

ISTE Standards

•Creativity and Innovation: a) Apply existing knowledge to generate new ideas, products, or processes.

•Technology Operations and Concepts: a) Understand and use technology systems.

Page 5: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Blooms taxonomy and gardners theory

• I. Blooms Taxonomy •Comprehension•Application•II. Gardners Theory of Multiple Intelligence•Auditory•Visual•Kinesthetic

Page 6: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Objectives

•Students will be able to: •1. construct a food chain and explain how energy

flows through the chain. •2. explain how all living things depend directly or

indirectly on green plants for • food. •3. use pictures and arrows to create a food web that

includes the sun, green •plants, herbivores, omnivores, and carnivores.

Page 7: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Procedures• 1. Provide background information about how all living things

need energy from food

• 2. Describe how the sun is the source. Energy in living things originates from the sun.

• 3. Discuss Food chains and Food Webs.

• 4. I will review and define producers, consumers, herbivores, omnivores, carnivores and decomposers

• 5. I will pictures of different types of organisms to each student.

• 6. Each student will display his/her picture to each other.

Page 8: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Procedures Continued•7. Students will then remain standing beside their desk

while the teacher gives one student a ball of yarn.•8. Each student must toss the yarn to another organism

that it will feed on. •9. Students will create a giant food web in the

classroom.•10. Each student will realize the importance of each

member of the web and how they are interconnected. If one is removed, the web will be destroyed.

•11. Students will summarize how the food web was created and how each organism depends on each other.

•12. Students will then fill out a graphic organizer based on the food web lesson.

Page 9: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson One Graph

Page 10: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson One Graphic Organizer

Page 11: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Materials

•Youtube video - https://youtu.be/MPZI2M1fDi8•Producers and Consumers worksheet•Space for the class to form a large circle•Ball of yarn•Food web activity sheet•Scissors•Tape to attach pictures to clothing •Bar graph generator on internet-

http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/graphing/classic/bar.as

Page 12: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Assessment

•III. The teacher will observe students in the classroom and how they created the web. Each student will summarize how the classroom web was created and how all organisms depend on each other for survival.

Page 13: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

RubricCATEGORY 3 2 1

Behavioral Objective #1: Discuss how Food Webs and

Food Chains work

Students are able to correctly discuss how Food Webs and Food Chains

work.

Students are able to discuss how either a Food Web or Food Chain

works.

Students are unable to discuss how Food Webs or Food Chains work.

Behavioral Objective #2: Discuss relationship between Producers,

Consumers, and Decomposers

Students are able to thoroughly describe the relationship between

Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers.

Students are relatively able to describe the relationship between

Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers.

Students are unable to discuss the relationship between Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers.

 Behavioral Objective #3: Students are able to create

their own food web

Students are able to utilize all knowledge of organism

classifications in order to make their own food web

Students are able to utilize some knowledge of organism

classifications in order to make their own food web.

Students are unable to utilize knowledge of organism

classifications in order to make their own food web.

Behavioral Objective #4: Students are able to categorize

each living thing and use a bar graph to record their

data from the food web they created in class

Students were able to correctly generate a bar graph using the

data collected from the food web created in class.

Students were able to somewhat generate a bar graph using the

data collected from the food web created in class.

Students were not able to generate a bar graph using the data

collected from the food web created in class.

Page 14: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson Two: Cause and effect Relationship between Human Activities and the Environment

•NYC Science & Scope Sequence Standards:

•LE 7.2b,c & LE 7.2d•Identify examples where human •activity has had a beneficial or harmful effect on other

•organisms (e.g., deforestation).

Page 15: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

NCTM Process and Content Standards

•Process Standards: Reasoning and Proof

•Content Standards: Connections and Representations

Page 16: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

ISTE Standards

•Creativity and Innovation: a) Apply existing knowledge to generate new ideas, products, or processes.

•Technology Operations and Concepts: a) Understand and use technology systems.

Page 17: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Blooms taxonomy and gardeners theory

• 1. Blooms Taxonomy

• Comprehension• Application• Synthesis• Evaluation

• 2. Gardners Theory of Multiple Intelligence

• Auditory• Visual• Kinesthetic

Page 18: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Objectives

•Students will be able to:

•1. understand the relationships between ecosystem dynamics and human activity.

•2. distinguish between beneficial and harmful activities in an ecosystem

Page 19: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Procedures• 1. The teacher will review habitat destruction within

local communities, such as clear cutting for a new neighborhood; demonstrate how agricultural pollution affects local water sources; and discuss species that have become endangered due to human activities.

•2. Students will complete a KWL chart about human impacts and the effects of pollution on environment

•3. Students will then watch the movie The Lorax by Dr. Seuss.

Page 20: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Procedures Continued•4. The whole class will discuss how some of the

actions of human and how it has impacted the natural environment that

•5. Students will be arranged into groups for an activity. As a group, they will create an illustrated book depicting how humans have negatively affected the environment. They will also be asked to think of ways that humans can make a positive impact on the environment.

•6. Students will present their books.

Page 21: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson Two Graph

Page 22: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Lesson Two Graphic Organizer

Page 23: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Materials

•The Lorax movie by Dr. Seuss

•Cause and Effect graphic organizer

•The Lorax Worksheet

•Internet- http://www.rapidtables.com/tools/line-graph.htm

Page 24: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Assessment

 • The teacher will assess during the students

presentations whether or not they understood the concept of the lesson.

• The teacher will assess the students based on the Lorax Handout activity sheet. The students will explain the different ways in which they could change some of their habits that could possible be harmful to their environment and the explain some of the ways they could do something to have a more positive affect.

Page 25: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Rubric

 

CATEGORY 3 2 1

Behavioral Objective #1: Students will be able to

understand the relationships between

ecosystem dynamics and human activity

Students are able to correctly discuss the relationship between ecosystem dynamics and human activity

Students are able to somewhat discuss the relationship between ecosystem dynamics and human activity

Students are not able to discuss the relationship

between ecosystem dynamics and human activity

Behavioral Objective #2: Students will be able to

distinguish between beneficial and harmful

activities in an ecosystem

Students are able to identify three to four

beneficial and harmful activities in an

ecosystem.

Students are able to identify one to two

beneficial and harmful activities in an

ecosystem

Students are unable to identify any beneficial or

harmful activities in an ecosystem

Behavioral Objective #3:Students will be able to

represent their data on a line graph generator

Students were able to correctly generate a line graph using the data found through

research

Students were somewhat able to correctly

generate a line graph using the data found

through research

Students were not able to generate a

line graph or conduct a research

on the internet

Page 26: Animal, Plants, and Humans Ladasha Tolen Krystal Rivera

Field Trip•American Museum of Natural History

•http://www.amnh.org/