Students explore how plants act like 'factories' to create their own food using sunlight, water, and nutrients through a playful role-play activity and video discussion.
A focused lesson on matter's properties and states, using cause-and-effect and compare-and-contrast text structures to build literacy skills.
A detective-themed lesson focusing on decoding and spelling multisyllabic words with the 'oi' and 'oy' diphthongs. Students learn the placement rules for these spellings and apply them through sorting and syllable division activities.
This lesson explores the various ways animals interact and survive in groups, focusing on specific behaviors like schooling, herding, and cooperative hunting, while introducing students to the creative collective nouns used to describe these groups.
A comprehensive set of rubrics designed for evaluating paired ecosystem observation activities, focusing on scientific accuracy, inquiry, and collaboration.
A comprehensive exploration of the human digestive system, focusing on the journey of food and the specific functions of each organ while building ELA skills in identifying main ideas and supporting details.
A hands-on STEAM lesson where students explore the stages of a plant's life cycle through visual aids, vocabulary building, and a planting activity.
A series of reading comprehension materials exploring major human body systems, focusing on the respiratory and circulatory systems. Aligned to 3rd-grade NC ELA standards for main idea, cause and effect, and academic vocabulary.
Students simulate the pollination process through a high-energy movement game, learning about the symbiotic relationship between bees and flowers and its importance to our food system.
Students step into the roles of junior engineers to design, build, and test bridges for toy insects, exploring structural integrity and the engineering design process.
An outdoor sensory exploration lesson designed for Earth Day, helping students with diverse sensory needs build descriptive language and observation skills through nature-based science communication.
An introductory exploration of the four primary moon phases, helping students identify and understand the lunar cycle through visual observation.
A hands-on inquiry into the vital role of pollinators in the Indiana ecosystem. Students explore local species, simulate the pollination process, and record their findings in a field journal.
An immersive science lesson where students become 'River Rangers' to investigate the Hudson River's health through filtration experiments and mapping exercises.