Looking for a lesson for your younger students? This K-2nd grade lesson …
Looking for a lesson for your younger students? This K-2nd grade lesson will allow students to investigate the three types of honey bees in a colony, identify their roles, and recognize honey bees as part of a community that works together. The lesson includes three activities, vocabulary words, recommended reading, and a "making honey" lab!
Scout is a little honey bee with a big mission! She needs …
Scout is a little honey bee with a big mission! She needs to find the last flowers of fall to get the sweet nectar that she and her sisters will turn into honey. With winter on the way, honey will provide the food to keep the hive alive until spring. But she’s got some pretty big obstacles coming her way!Lexile Level: AD840LGuided Reading Level: OGenre: Nonfiction
Get the buzz about honey bees in this brilliant, nonfiction title by …
Get the buzz about honey bees in this brilliant, nonfiction title by Gail Gibbons. From jobs within the hive to modern-day beekeeping and all of the millions of flowers in between, these are some busy bees! Without the honey makers, the world would be a much different place. Help young readers learn to love the bees!Lexile Level: 770LGuided Reading Level: OGenre: NonfictionPre-Reading
PhD Science Grade Levels K–2 is available as downloadable PDFs. The OER …
PhD Science Grade Levels K–2 is available as downloadable PDFs. The OER consists of Teacher Editions and student Science Logbooks for every module.
With PhD Science®, students explore science concepts through authentic phenomena and events—not fabricated versions—so students build concrete knowledge and solve real-world problems. Students drive the learning by asking questions, gathering evidence, developing models, and constructing explanations to demonstrate the new knowledge they’ve acquired. The coherent design of the curriculum across lessons, modules, and grade levels helps students use the concepts they’ve learned to build a deep understanding of science and set a firm foundation they’ll build on for years to come.
Cross-curricular connections are a core component within PhD Science. As an example, every module incorporates authentic texts and fine art to build knowledge and create additional accessible entry points to the topic of study.
Three-dimensional teaching and learning are at the heart of the curriculum. As students uncover Disciplinary Core Ideas by engaging in Science and Engineering Practices and applying the lens of Cross-Cutting Concepts, they move from reading about science to doing science.
See OER license details here: https://s3.greatminds.org/link_files/files/000/003/991/original/Final_Form_OER_PhD_Science_K-2_limited_public_license_%282.10.21%29.pdf
Incorporating your schoolyard into your classroom can be a powerful tool for making learning meaningful and engaging for …
Incorporating your schoolyard into your classroom can be a powerful tool for making learning meaningful and engaging for your students. Local and relevant phenomena can engage your student’s prior understandings, better connect to their interests and identities, and help in draw in students who don’t see science, reading or writing connecting to their lives. This online course is a series of professional development workshops for Early Elementary (K-2) educators, developed by IslandWood with funding from the OSPI ClimeTime Grant. A slide deck and accompanying handouts supplement the course outline for a complete picture.
Every spring, hundreds of people from all over Washington call customer service …
Every spring, hundreds of people from all over Washington call customer service at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) because they find baby wildlife and want to know what to do with it. Many of these calls are for baby wildlife who are not hurt and are behaving normally, so why do people think they need help?
This is an integrated unit, teaching key English Language Arts standards through a science lens. Students will be presented with an anchoring phenomenon of a scenario where a community member found baby wildlife and wants to know what to do. As a class, students and their teacher engage in a research project to determine:
What kind of baby wildlife the animal is, Where they live, Who their parents are and how the parents care for their young, and If the baby wildlife needs help. Finally, students will work in small groups to engage in a research project about another Washington wildlife species, and they will create a wildlife research poster that can be shared with WDFW! Our goal is to help inform communities about how and when people should engage with baby wildlife, and when wildlife babies are better left alone.
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