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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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Adaptations for Older Students: Have each student develop and write his or her own hypothesis about how particular symbiotic relationships might have evolved. |
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You can evaluate your students on their research and hypotheses using the following three-point rubric:
You can ask your students to contribute to the assessment rubric by determining how many examples should be required and what would constitute a well-reasoned hypothesis. |
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Under Cover Each animal's covering—whether it is skin, fur, feathers, scales, or something else—is instrumental in determining the niche that the animal fits into. For example, the frog is covered with skin that is porous to air; therefore, the frog must live in an area where it can stay constantly moist and where it can hibernate through the winter by burying itself in the mud at the bottom of a pond. Have students choose another animal species and research where it lives, what it eats, and what eats it. They should identify the role its covering plays in allowing it to be successful in that habitat. Design an Animal Obtain pictures of a fish, frog, snake, weasel, and leopard. Give one copy to each student and assign to each student one body part to alter: legs, covering, wings, mouth, or eyes. Tell the students to use the picture as the model and to change only the assigned body part. They can do this by tracing the unchanged part of the animal on a fresh sheet of paper and drawing the new body part on that sheet. Encourage students to be creative—they may change the color, size, shape or covering pattern. When the altered animal pictures are complete, ask students to identify any new behaviors or capabilities their newly invented animals will possess and to explain the form and function of the new feature. Students should then name the new animal and share it with the class. As a class, discuss whether the new animal's habitat, diet, or range would differ from that of the original. |
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The Robot Zoo: A Mechanical Guide to the Way Animals Work John Kelly, Philip Whitfield. Turner Publishing, Inc., 1994. The authors have transformed and illustrated 16 animals as carefully planned and engineered machines that help us understand how animals move, eat, breathe, and function. Animals on the Inside: A Book of Discovery & Learning Andres Llamas Ruiz. Sterling Publishing Co., 1994. Check out these cross-sections of animals! Great pictures and supporting text help you understand how different animals function. |
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Zoological Society of San Diego Comprehensive site that covers information on mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. This site is very well organized for student research. National Wildlife Federation Comprehensive site on wildlife that has education lessons and environmental information and materials. Zoos and Aquariums of American Zoo and Aquarium Association An excellent resource for photos, text, and graphics on dozens of animal species. Animal Diversity Web Organized and run by the University of Michigan Department of Zoology, this site includes information on animal distribution, natural history, and conservation with pictures and sounds. |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: Insects, crabs, and lobsters have external skeletons all containing a tough but pliable material called chitin.
Context: Bone and muscles eye and mouth, they all come from thousands of generations of slow tinkering by evolution. It is a natural process no human can match.
Context: Fur, feathers, scales, and beaks all are made from a versatile group of proteins called keratin.
Context: Red is a pigment that only plants can create.
Context: Over a million different species of animals exist on this earth.
Context: Animals that have internal backbones are called vertebrates. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 6-8 Subject area: science Standard: Understands how species depend on one another and on the environment for survival. Benchmarks: Benchmark 1: Knows how an organism's ability to regulate its internal environment enables the organism to obtain and use resources, grow, reproduce, and maintain stable internal conditions while living in a constantly changing external environment. Benchmark 2: Knows that organisms can react to internal and environmental stimuli through behavioral response (e.g., plants have tissues and organs that react to light, water, and other stimuli; animals have nervous systems that process and store information from the environment), which may be determined by heredity or from past experience.
Benchmark 3: Knows ways in which species interact and depend on one another in an ecosystem (e.g., producer/consumer, predator/prey, parasite/host, relationships that are mutually beneficial or competitive). (9-12)Knows that heritable characteristics, which can be biochemical and anatomical, largely determine what capabilities an organism will have, how it will behave, and how likely it is to survive and reproduce. (9-12)Knows that natural selection leads to organisms that are well suited for survival in particular environments, so that when an environment changes, some inherited characteristics become more or less advantageous or neutral, and chance alone can result in characteristics having no survival or reproductive value.
(9-12)Knows that the basic idea of evolution is that the Earth's present-day life forms have evolved from earlier, distinctly different species as a consequence of the interactions of (1) the potential for a species to increase its numbers, (2) the genetic variability of offspring due to mutation and recombination of genes, (3) a finite supply of the resources required for life, and (4) the ensuing selection by the environment of those offspring better able to survive and leave offspring. |
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Susan L. Mealiea, life science teacher, Woodbridge High School, Woodbridge, Virginia. |
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