Texas State Logo

Elephants and Their Young

Meridith Allison and Shelia Henk

Description
Concept Map
Assessment Plan
Rubric
Calendar
Resources
Lesson Plan 1
Lesson Plan 2
Orientation Video
Clinical Interviews
Modifications
Elementary Science Methods Home

5E Lesson Plan # Session 5

AUTHORS'’ NAMES: University of California, Berkley and adapted by Shelia Henk

TITLE OF THE LESSON: What Elephants Eat

TECHNOLOGY LESSON (circle one):        Yes      No

DATE OF LESSON: Friday, October 10th

LENGTH OF LESSON: Approximately 1 ½  hour

NAME OF COURSE: Kinder Science

SOURCE OF THE LESSON: Elephants and Their Young GEMS from UC Berkley

TEKS ADDRESSED:

(2) Scientific processes. The student develops abilities necessary to do scientific inquiry in the field and the classroom. The student is expected to:

(A) ask questions about organisms, objects, and events;

 (5) Science concepts. The student knows that organisms, objects, and events have properties and patterns. The student is expected to:

(A) describe properties of objects and characteristics of organisms;

CONCEPT STATEMENT: Students will investigate what an elephant’s diet is like, including the concepts of vegetarian and herbivore.  The activity integrates sensory investigation, such as taste and touch.  The students will learn not only what elephants eat but also how they identify their food.  Students will be allowed to practice finding food the way an elephant does.  After the inside activity is completed, the teacher will take the students outside and encourage students to identify food that an elephant might eat.  The outdoor activity allows students to independently discover elephant food.

PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES:

Students will be able to identify food that elephants eat.

Students will be able to define what a herbivore is.

Students will be able to describe how an elephant locates food.

RESOURCES:

  • Examples of elephant food (vegetables, leaves, grass, roots, bark, nuts, etc.)
  • 1 large paper grocery bag (for group)
  • 1 paper lunch bag for each student
  • 5-10 different elephant snacks that students may eat such as carrot sticks, grapes, celery sticks, etc.
  • Paper plate puppet made in Activity 1, Session 1

SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS:

Make sure students wash their hands and do not touch other students'’ snacks.

SUPLEMENTARY MATERIALS, HANDOUTS: None

 

Engagement

 

Time: ____5 minutes____

What the Teacher Will Do

Probing Questions

Student Responses

Potential Misconceptions

Gather children in discussion area

 

Explain that elephants must eat a lot, so they spend most of their day look for food.  List student answers on board.

1. What do you think elephants eat?

2. How much do you think an elephant eats?

Plants, pumpkins (since zoos often feed elephants pumpkins around Halloween), fruit.  Some students may not understand that elephants are herbivores.

 

Exploration

 

Time: ___15 min._____

What the Teacher Will Do

Probing Questions

Student Responses

Potential Misconceptions

Introduce the large grocery bag and tell students that it is full of elephant snacks. Have students pull out an item from bag and place it inside the circle.

1.What is it?

Students identify what they pulled from the bag.

With their elephant puppets, have children explore their lunch bags filled with elephant snacks.  Encourage students to pick up food, smell it, and identify it without looking.  Then, they can eat the snack. 

1. How does the food feel?

2. How does it smell?

3. What do you think it is?

4. What does it taste like?

 

 

Students will likely peek at their snacks to identify it.  Vegetables that have a distinct smell like celery may be easily identified by smell.

 

Explanation

 

Time: ___20 minutes+ time to eat snacks_____

What the Teacher Will Do

Probing Questions

Student Responses

Potential Misconceptions

Encourage students to compare their first answer on the board to the items in the circle.  Facilitate a discussion.

1. How do the items written on the board compare to the food in the circle?

Students who did not understand that elephants are herbivores may wonder why there are only plants in the middle of the circle.

Encourage students to realize that all the items in the centre are plants.  Introduce the term herbivore and explain in it terms of being a vegetarian.

1. How are the items all the same?

2. Do you know a vegetarian?

3. What do you think being a vegetarian is?

4. Do you know what a herbivore is?

Students will begin to under what a herbivore is and that elephants are herbivores.

 

Explain that elephants touch and smell food and recognize what it is without seeing it.

1. Do you know how elephants find food?

2. How do they know what it is?

Students will most likely answer smell using trunk, looking at it, and grabbing it.  Students might not understand how elephants identify food without looking at it, because most humans identify food by looking at it.

 

Elaboration

 

Time: __20 min.______

What the Teacher Will Do

Probing Questions

Student Responses

Potential Misconceptions

Take student outside to identify what elephants would eat in an outdoor setting

1. What is that?

2. Would an elephant eat that?

Students will identify items they saw in class, such as leaves and bark.  Students might not identify roots if they were not shown in class.

 

Evaluation

 

Time: ____20 min____

What the Teacher Will Do

Probing Questions

Student Responses

Potential Misconceptions

When students return to class, have students independently draw or cut from magazine things that elephants might eat.

1. Think about what we saw in the grocery bags.

2. Think about what we saw outside.

Students will cut out plants, trees, vegetables, fruit, nuts, etc.