Map
of area in which activity is to be carried out.
Activities
and Procedures The teacher should read through the following
carefully before embarking on the activity.
i. Use a guessing game to introduce this unit. Give descriptions of
some locally common birds one part at a time and have the students try
to guess what you are describing. Use a sound tape of some very common
bird songs in the game, too. Once the kids catch on to the idea that all
the "things" that you are describing are very common birds, show a good
filmstrip or video on birds of your area and express surprise that they
don't know their "neighbors" very well.
ii. Use a large diagram of a bird as a bulletin board to help students
learn the parts of a bird. Also give them a handout to take home so that
they can teach their parents about birds. Give a quiz every day on the
bird parts. This is a mastery quiz and only perfect scores are recorded.
(This activity becomes a lot more fun if the teacher or a student draws
the quiz bird on the chalkboard freehand. You can draw some wild and crazy
birds and the students will learn to identify the parts on a wide variety
of bird shapes.) Students who have passed the quiz twice can use this
time to color bird pictures, work on a bird collage, etc..
iii. Use bird records to create a tape of twenty birds that are common
to your area. Each day give a mastery quiz over ten of them. Check the
quiz by playing it again and giving the correct name of the bird as it
is singing. Leave the tape at a center table with a headphone for individual
practice or practice with the class with guessing openly allowed each
day. Tapes for take home practice can be dubbed for anyone who wants to
bring a blank tape.
iv. Use binoculars with wide-angle lenses and insta-focus for birding.
(This is really the only equipment that may not be readily available to
you. These can be purchased at discount stores for around $45 a pair.
It works best to have one pair for each 4 or 5 students. Parent teacher
organizations, class fundraisers, or business sponsors are great sources
if the school budget doesn't stretch.) Have students take the binoculars
out of the cases and experiment with how they work. Through the discovery
method they will find out how to focus the image. Encourage peer teaching
if some students have used binoculars. Encourage research by way of the
instruction sheets to find out how to clean the lenses and how to adjust
the eyepiece if one eye is stronger than the other. Emphasize that these
are expensive pieces of equipment and help the class develop a set of
rules for using the binoculars and penalties for misusing them.
v. Use a set of cards with small letters and numbers printed on them
to have binocular speed quizzes. To pass the quiz a student must take
a pair of binoculars that is out of focus and set for the wrong eye width
and adjust them so that they can read the card in 5 seconds or less. This
activity can go very quickly if a relay game is set up. It is also a good
time to practice the proper precautions in handling the binoculars.
Use the same type of activity for describing nests and eggs.
vi. NOW WE ARE READY TO GO OUT AND STALK THOSE BIRDS! With the permission
of your principal and perhaps a visit with some of the nearest neighbors
around the school you are ready to begin direct observation and recording
of birds and their behavior. On the first trip be sure to stress that
we will walk only on sidewalks and in the alleys and that we will not
pick flowers or bother other peoples property. If students know that the
class will come in immediately if these rules are broken they will be
on their best behavior in order to stay outside. (If principals and neighbors
know this they are also much more cooperative.) If you have some dead
end alleys for if some neighbors will permit it, you will have better
results if you can scatter out in small groups (all within sight of the
teacher) and sit down for periods of time to wait for birds to come near.
vii. After several days of bird walks, take a special mapping walk. Help
students draw a map of the area by providing them with a handout with
the blocks around the school outlined. As you walk, draw in landmarks
and use symbols to show the locations of any nests that you have found
in the area. Keep this map up to date by adding newly discovered nests
and by recording the activity in and around the nests on a separate sheet.
Develop a map key to use on this record sheet.
Tying
it all together Science is a field of study that requires doing--involvement.
This unit allows students to use the skills and methods required in the
search for knowledge as well as calling on their creative abilities in
completing a record of their work. It allows them to experience the beauty
and wonder of the natural world while gaining an appreciation of the need
for careful study in order to understand and preserve that beauty. Assessment
This is both an indoor and an outdoor activity. The teacher should keep
a record of individual participation and contribution to the successful
completion of the activity.
Suggestions/Modifications
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