NGEXPLORER.CENGAGE.COM PASSWORD: EXPLORER MAY 2015 Explorer TEACHER’S GUIDE—GRADE 1 Frog Parents: Overview Summary Materials Needed • Frog parents take care of their young. They make sure their babies have food and a safe place with water so they can grow and survive. • "Animal Parents" poster • National Geographic video "Tad Pad Dad" at: http:// kids.nationalgeographic.com/videos?videoGuid=a0360408f47e-410b-b4ce-ee1f71244a36 Curriculum in This Article • one age-appropriate book about an animal and how it cares for its babies Common Core State Standards • Identify basic similarities in and differences between two texts on the same topic. (RI.1.9) • Write opinion pieces in which they introduce the topic or name the book they are writing about, state an opinion, supply a reason for the opinion, and provide some sense of closure. (W.1.1) Additional Resource •L earn more about poison dart frogs: ▶ http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/animals/poisondart-frog/ • Know final -e and common vowel team conventions for representing long vowel sounds. (RFS.1.3.c) To access the projectable edition of this article, go to the For Teachers tab for this magazine at: ngexplorer.cengage.com. • Use commas in dates and to separate single words in a series. (L.1.2.c) Next Generation Science Standards • Disciplinary Core Idea: Growth and Development of Organisms—Adult plants and animals can have young. In many kinds of animals, parents and the offspring themselves engage in behaviors that help the offspring to survive. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Go to the For Teachers tab at ngexplorer. cengage.com to access the free interactive whiteboard lesson for this article. Page T1 e- edition web e- edition May 2015 web Frog Parents: Background Fast Facts • Strawberry poison dart frogs live in tropical rain forests of Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. • Like some other species of poison dart frogs, the strawberry poison dart frog cares for its young. • After a female strawberry poison dart frog lays her eggs, the male returns to the clutch every day to make sure the eggs don't dry out •A female strawberry poison dart frogs returns regularly to the water-filled leaf-cups to provide food for her tadpoles. The food is unfertilized eggs from the female's body. • These unfertilized eggs are spiked with the same chemicals that make the mother frog so poisonous. This is the first time an animal has been found to pass along a chemical defense to its offspring. • Adult strawberry poison dart frogs tend to live on plants near the forest floor. However, their tadpoles live within cup-shaped leaves in trees. Once the eggs hatch, the tadpoles wiggle onto a parent's back. The parent carries the tadpoles one at a time up into trees and places them in water-filled leaf-cups of plants that grow in trees. Tadpoles need water to survive. • The female frog provides food for the tadpoles to eat while they complete their metamorphosis. It typically takes the tadpoles of a strawberry poison dart frog six to eight weeks to change into a frog. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T2 May 2015 Frog Parents: Prepare to Read and Science Activate Prior Knowledge Thinking About Parents and Babies See Frog Parents in Action 1. Brainstorm with students a list of things parents do 1. Prior to conducting this activity, download to help their young. Tell the class that the parents and young they explore can be human or any type of animal they know about. the National Geographic video "Tad Pad Dad" at: http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/ 2. Write students’ ideas on the board. Then ask: What do all of these things have in common? Guide students to recognize the patterns in the behavior of parents and offspring that help the offspring survive. videos?videoGuid=a0360408-f47e-410b-b4ceee1f71244a36. 2. Display the video for the class. Encourage students to compare what they saw in the video to what they read in the article. What additional facts did they learn about how frog parents care for their young? Explore Science What Do Animal Parents Do? Extend Science 1. Display the "Animal Parents" poster. Focus students' Explore a Frog's Life Cycle attention on each photo and caption to examine what these four animal parents do to care for their young. Encourage students to identify other animal parents they know about that do these same things. 1. Using the information in the article, guide students as they diagram the life cycle of a strawberry poison dart frog. 2. Examine the finished diagrams with the class. Identify 2. Display the projectable edition. As you view each points at which frog parents care for their babies. Challenge students to recognize where that care ends. (after the mother gives food to the tadpoles) image, discuss what it shows. Challenge students to find examples of how frog parents carry, feed, and protect their young. Discuss whether or not frog parents also teach their young. 3. Guide students to recognize that animal parents 3. Give each student a copy of the Activity Master. Using the poster as a guide, encourage students to draw an animal parent caring for its young in each way described on the poster. Tell them to write each animal's name on the line below their drawing. When students are finished, invite them to show and tell about the different Activity Master, ways animal parents care for their page T5 young. ▶alligator: a few months to a year; Frog Parents Activity Master care for their young for different lengths of time. To ensure that students understand, share examples of the lengths of time different species care for their young: Name: What Do Frog Parents Do? carry feed protect teach National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T5 © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Read each word. Draw animal parents that care for their young in each way. Write each animal's name. May 2015 ▶woodpecker: about 18 to 30 days; ▶grizzly bear: about 2 to 3 years; ▶b obcat: about 8 months to a year. Poster correction: Alligator young are called hatchlings, not hatchings. If you teach with the poster, please add the missing "l" to the word. We apologize for the error. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T3 May 2015 Frog Parents: Language Arts Explore Reading Explore Foundational Skills 1. Prior to conducting this activity, gather one 1. Create a chart like the one below on the board: Comparing Two Texts on the Same Topic Investigating Long Vowel Sounds age-appropriate book about an animal and how it cares for its young. safe need ride pole use 2. Display pages 2-3 of the projectable edition. Invite a volunteer to read aloud the headline and text. Ask students what this article is about and how the image and text are connected to that idea. 3. Read the article as a class. As you do, take time to discuss how each photo helps explain the text on the page. Examine descriptions and labels. Encourage students to comment on how frog parents keep their young safe as they grow. 4. Then read the book in this same manner. When you Challenge the class to recognize what the five words have in common. (long vowel sounds) How are they different? (Each has a different long vowel sound.) 3. Examine how the words get their long vowel sounds. Guide students to recognize that four of the words have a final -e. Which one doesn't? (need) 4. Give students a moment to scan the article in their finish reading, guide students as they compare the article and the book. Challenge students to identify ways the two texts were alike and how they were different. magazines. Which of these words are in the text? (safe, need, (tad)pole) Invite volunteers to read sentences containing those words aloud. 5. Then brainstorm additional words that have each long vowel sound. Invite volunteers to write the words in the chart. Examine each word to see why it has a long vowel sound. Challenge students to use each word in a sentence that tells about frog parents and their young. Explore Writing Write Opinions About Frog Parents 1. D isplay and review the projectable edition with the class. As you do, highlight details that tell how frog parents care for their young. 2. D ivide the class into small groups. Encourage groups to discuss other animals and how they care for their young. Challenge them to identify animal parents that they think are most and least like frog parents in the way they care for their young. 3. I nstruct groups to use information from the article 2. Invite volunteers to read each of the words aloud. and what they know to write one paragraph about an animal parent they think is most like the frog parents and one paragraph about an animal parent they think is least like frog parents. Remind students to state their opinions clearly and to give reasons to support each comparison. Instruct them to add a final sentence that wraps up their thoughts. Explore Language Using Commas in a Series 1. D isplay page 5 of the projectable edition. Zoom in on the block of text. Challenge students to count how many commas they see. (three) Invite a volunteer to highlight the sentence that has the most commas. 2. E xplain to the class that these commas are used to separate single words in a series. Review what that means. 3. E ncourage students to examine the rest of the article. Where can they find another example of commas used in this way? (page 6) 4. G uide students as they write more sentences about frog parents that use commas to separate words in a series. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T4 May 2015 Frog Parents Activity Master What Do Frog Parents Do? feed May 2015 Read each word. Draw animal parents that care for their young in each way. Write each animal's name. carry teach Page T5 protect National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Frog Parents Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. What does a mother frog lay on a leaf? A food B tadpoles C eggs 2. Why does the father frog watch over the eggs? A to make sure they hatch B to keep them safe C to give them food © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. What do frog parents do to care for new tadpoles? A Take them to water. B Put them in a sunny place. C Put them under leaves. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T6 May 2015 Frog Parents Activity Master What Do Frog Parents Do? feed teach Page T5A Answer Key May 2015 Read each word. Draw animal parents that care for their young in each way. Write each animal's name. carry Students should draw pictures of animal parents that care for their young in each of the four identified ways. Remind them to write each animal's name below the appropriate picture. protect National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Frog Parents Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. What does a mother frog lay on a leaf? A food B tadpoles C eggs 2. Why does the father frog watch over the eggs? A to make sure they hatch B to keep them safe C to give them food © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. What do frog parents do to care for new tadpoles? A Take them to water. B Put them in a sunny place. C Put them under leaves. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T6A May 2015 Starry Sky: Overview Summary Materials Needed • Stars are objects in space that look like dots of light in the dark night sky. The only star we can see during the day is the sun. The sun's light is so bright we can't see the other stars in the sky during the day. • black and white construction paper • Stars are huge, but they look tiny to people on Earth. Stars look small because they are so far away. • t he National Geographic Kids article "Sun" at: http:// • scissors • three identical pencil erasers kids.nationalgeographic.com/explore/space/sun/ • sentence strips Curriculum in This Article Common Core State Standards Additional Resource • Identify the main topic and retell key details of a text.(RI.1.2) •W ith guidance and support from adults, focus on a topic, respond to questions and suggestions from peers, and add details to strengthen writing as needed. (W.1.5) • S egment spoken single-syllable words into their complete sequence of individual sounds (phonemes). (RFS.1.2.d) • Learn more about stars: ▶ http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/universe_ level1/stars.html To access the projectable edition of this article, go to the For Teachers tab for this magazine at: ngexplorer.cengage.com. • S ort words into categories to gain a sense of the concepts the categories represent. (L.1.5.a) e- edition web Next Generation Science Standards • Disciplinary Core Idea: The Universe and Its Stars—Patterns of the motion of the sun, moon, and stars in the sky can be observed, described, and predicted. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T7 May 2015 Starry Sky: Background Fast Facts • A star is a ball of hot gas in space. There are billions of stars in the universe. • I t takes eight minutes and 20 seconds for light from the sun to reach Earth. • The sun is a big star. It is so large about 109 Earths could stretch across the diameter of the sun. If its interior were hollow, more than a million Earths could fit inside. •P roxima Centauri is the next closest star to Earth. It takes more than four years for light from this star to reach Earth. • The sun is the closest star to Earth. It looks much larger than other stars because it is much closer to Earth. Closer objects look larger to the observer. • While stars do have different levels of brightness, distance also affects how bright they appear. The closer an object is to the observer, the brighter it appears. • Because the sun is so much closer to Earth than other stars, its light makes it impossible to see other stars during the day. When the sun sets, we can see other stars set against the dark, night sky. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T8 May 2015 Starry Sky: Prepare to Read and Science Activate Prior Knowledge Sharing Ideas About Stars Size: Patterns of Stars in the Sky 1. D isplay pages 10-11 of the projectable edition. Zoom 1. Gather three identical pencil erasers. Take the class 2. Z oom out to show the full image. Compare the image 2. S et one eraser on the floor directly in front of the Explore Science 3. I nstruct students to observe the erasers now. Ask: in on the headline and invite a volunteer to read it aloud. Ask students to describe a "Starry Sky." to students' descriptions. Encourage students to share what they know about stars. into a long hallway. Encourage students to observe the erasers to verify that they are the same size. class. Invite a volunteer to place another eraser halfway down the hallway and the last eraser at the far end. Why do the erasers look like they're different sizes? Encourage students to share their ideas. Guide the class to understand that the answer is distance. The first eraser looks bigger because it's closer to them. Brightness: Patterns of Stars in the Sky 1. Display pages 10-11 of the projectable edition. Instruct students to identify everything they see in the photo. Do the same with the images on pages 12-13 and 14-15. 4. I nstruct students to open their magazines and 2. Review the lists. Circle the word stars in each. If students didn't recognize the sun as a star in the final photo, ask the class where the stars are in that image. If they did know that the sun is a star, challenge them to explain where the rest of the stars have gone. 3. Point out to the class that sometimes it's easier to compare the size of the sun on pages 14-15 to size of the stars in the other photos. Help students understand that the sun and stars are just like the erasers. The further away something is, the smaller it appears. Stars that look like tiny dots of light in the night sky are really huge stars located far out in space. understand things if you do an experiment. 4. Give each student a strip of white construction paper. Extend Science 5. Give each student one sheet of black construction 1. P rior to conducting this activity, download the Instruct them to cut their papers into small pieces. National Geographic Kids article "Sun" at: http:// kids.nationalgeographic.com/explore/space/sun/. paper and one sheet of white construction paper. Instruct them to put half of their pieces on each sheet of paper. Encourage students to share their observations. 6. Display the article's images in the projectable edition 2. D isplay the article. Review the information with the class. once again. Instruct students to compare what they observed in their experiment with the sky and stars in each image. Guide the class to understand that stars are always in the sky. We just can't see them in the daytime because it's so bright. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 The Sun Is a Star 3. G uide students to recognize that the sun is a star. Because it is so much closer to Earth than other stars, it looks much larger and appears much brighter. Ask: What do we feel from the sun because it's closer to Earth than other stars? Encourage students to review page 14 in the article to find the answer. (heat) Page T9 May 2015 Starry Sky: Language Arts Explore Reading Explore Foundational Skills 1. D isplay pages 10-11 of the projectable edition. Ask 1. D isplay pages 10-11 of the projectable edition. 2. P oint out that stars or the sky could be a main topic, or 2. S ay the word sky, one sound at a time. Select a Retelling Ideas About Stars Recognizing Segmented Words students to raise their hands if they think this article is about stars. Then ask them to raise their hands if they think it's about the sky. Invite students to share reasons to support their votes. Explain to students that you are going to choose a word on the page and say it one sound at a time. When students know which word it is, they should raise their hands. what the article is mostly about. The only way to know for sure is to read the details in the article. 3. R ead the article as a class. After reading, ask again: What is the main topic of this article? What is the article about? Guide students to understand that this article is about star patterns. We can see stars other than the sun at night. We can't see them during the day. Activity Master. Instruct students to record the main topic on their papers. Then divide the class into small groups. Encourage group members to work together to identify and record five key details that tell more about the topic. 3. O nce students fully understand the procedure, divide the class into small groups. Instruct students to take turns saying and identifying words in the text. Challenge them to go beyond the text and think of new words to segment and identify on their own. Starry Sky Name: Activity Master Retelling Ideas About Stars Write the main topic and five key details in the article. Use your notes to retell the story in your own words. Write the main topic or the most important part of the article. Main topic: Write the clues that tell about the main topic. These are key details. Explore Language Key detail: Key detail: © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 4. G ive each student a copy of the student to highlight the word you pronounced on the screen. Confirm with the class that the correct word is highlighted. Then repeat this process with the word stars. Key detail: Key detail: Key detail: National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 5. R ejoin as a class. Using their Activity Masters as a guide, invite volunteers to retell the article in their own words. Page T11 May 2015 Activity Master, page T11 Sorting Words Into Categories 1. Prior to conducting this activity, write the following sets of words on sentence strips. ▶ s un, moon, star, tree ▶ s tar, shadow, lamp, flashlight ▶m atch, cave, shadow, night 2. Display the first strip. Instruct students to compare the words. Which three words have something in common? (sun, moon, star) What is it? (They are things found up in the sky.) Challenge students to explain why the word tree doesn't belong. Explore Writing Writing About Stars and Light 1. Write the following questions on the board: 3. Examine the other two examples in this same way. ▶W hy can't we see stars during the day? ▶W hy can we see stars at night? 2. Divide the class into small groups. Assign half of the groups to each question. Challenge them to use the article as they write a response. 3. Have groups switch papers. Instruct them to review Then provide additional examples or encourage students to create examples of their own. Guide students to recognize that identifying similarities and differences between words can help them understand what words mean. each other's responses and suggest ways that the writing could be stronger. Return the papers to the original groups and give them time to revise. Invite groups to share their final drafts with the class. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T10 May 2015 Starry Sky Activity Master Retelling Ideas About Stars Write the main topic and five key details in the article. Use your notes to retell the story in your own words. Write the main topic. It is the most important part of the article. Main topic: Write the clues that tell about the main topic. These are key details. Key detail: © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Key detail: Key detail: Key detail: Key detail: National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T11 May 2015 Starry Sky Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. Why can we see more stars at night? A The sky is dark. B The moon is bright. C There are clouds. 2. Which star can we see during the day? A the moon B the sun C Earth © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. Why do stars look like tiny dots of light? A They are small. B They are in the sky. C They are far away. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T12 May 2015 Starry Sky Name: Activity Master Answer Key Retelling Ideas About Stars Write the main topic and five key details in the article. Use your notes to retell the story in your own words. Write the main topic. It is the most important part of the article. Main topic: We can see stars other than our sun at night but not during the day. Write the clues that tell about the main topic. These are key details. Key detail: Key detail: Key detail: Key detail: We can see stars at night when there are no clouds in the sky. Stars look tiny because they're so far away. The sun is a star. The sun's light makes the sky so bright that we can't see other stars during the day. After the sun sets, the sky gets darker and we can see other stars again. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T11A May 2015 © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Key detail: Starry Sky Answer Key Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. Why can we see more stars at night? A The sky is dark. B The moon is bright. C There are clouds. 2. Which star can we see during the day? A the moon B the sun C Earth © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. Why do stars look like tiny dots of light? A They are small. B They are in the sky. C They are far away. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T12A May 2015 Stems: Overview Summary Materials Needed • A stem is a part of a plant that helps it grow. Stems hold plants up, connect a plant's roots to its leaves, and carry water and food to other parts of the plant. •p lain white paper • Not all stems look alike. Some stems are soft and can bend. Other stems are hard. Hard stems can't bend. • several tall, clear glasses or jars Curriculum in This Article • scissors • "Parts of a Sunflower" poster • water • food coloring Common Core State Standards • several white flowers •D escribe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information in a text. (RI.1.3) • a box of facial tissues • Participate in shared research and writing projects. (W.1.7) • green pipe cleaners • Use context to confirm or self-correct word recognition and understanding, rereading as necessary. (RFS.1.4.c) • sentence strips • transparent tape • a popsicle stick • Spell untaught words phonetically, drawing on phonemic awareness and spelling conventions. (L.1.2.e) Next Generation Science Standards • Disciplinary Core Idea: Structure and Function—All organisms have external parts. Different animals use their body parts in different ways to see, hear, grasp objects, protect themselves, move from place to place, and seek, find, and take in food, water and air. Plants also have different parts (roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits) that help them survive and grow. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 To access the projectable edition of this article, go to the For Teachers tab for this magazine at: ngexplorer.cengage.com. Page T13 e- edition web May 2015 Stems: Background Fast Facts • Plants are living things. To live, most plants need light, water, and air. They get nutrients from the soil. • Plants are made of many different parts. Each part has a specific function that helps the plant survive: ▶roots: absorb water and minerals from soil, hold the plant in the ground, and store extra food; • Some plants store food and water in their stems. •M ost stems stand upright, but the stems of some plants, such as strawberry plants, lie flat on the ground. Vines have stems that climb and twist around things. •A potato is a tuber, or the swollen end of an underground stem. ▶stems: support the plant and provide a system for water and nutrients to move from the roots and the leaves to the rest of the plant; ▶l eaves: make food in most plants; ▶f lowers: allow most plants to reproduce; ▶f ruits: cover plants' seeds; ▶s eeds: grow into new plants. • There are different types of plant stems. Some, like a tree trunk, are hard and do not bend easily. Others, like the stem of a daisy, are soft and bend easily. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T14 May 2015 Stems: Prepare to Read and Science Activate Prior Knowledge Recognizing a Plant's Stem Taking a Closer Look at Stems 1. G ive each student a piece of plain white paper. 1. T o conduct this activity, you will need several tall, Ask students to draw a picture of a plant. clear glasses or jars, water, food coloring, scissors, and several white flowers. 2. D isplay students' drawings and invite them to describe what they drew. Point out, but don't identify, the stem in several examples. Encourage students to share what they know about stems. 2. R eview the steps of the experiment on page 22 of the article. Then divide the class into small groups. Supervise as students complete steps 1-4. Store students' flowers in a safe place overnight. As a class, predict what the flowers will look like the next day. Explore Science 3. Th e following day, invite groups to retrieve and Identifying Plant Parts 1. D isplay the "Parts of a Sunflower" poster, covering up the labels that identify the various plant parts. Invite students to describe what they see. 2. R ead aloud the headline and text. Challenge Extend Science students to identify each word in the text that names a plant part. (leaves, stem, roots, flower) Different Types of Stems 1. T o conduct this activity, you will need a box of facial 3. P oint out that the text identifies four plant parts. tissues, transparent tape, green pipe cleaners, and popsicle sticks. Also cut out two green leaves for each student from green construction paper. The poster has four labels. As a class, determine which plant part belongs in each label. 4. A s an extension activity, cut apart the "Stems" 2. I nvite students to watch as you demonstrate how to sorting cards. Invite partners to challenge one another to a "Stems" sorting game. make a tissue paper flower: Understanding What Plant Parts Do 1. D isplay pages 18-19 of the projectable edition. Cover up the three blocks of text. Invite volunteers to identify the three parts of this plant. 2. I nstruct students to look closely at the plant in the image. It really doesn't look like much. It's just a thin red stem, four green leaves, and a tangle of roots in the ground. Ask: How does this plant stay alive? Encourage students to share their ideas. 3. G uide the class to understand that plants live because each part has an important job. One at a time, remove the covers over the text blocks. Invite volunteers to read the information aloud. As you review the function of each part, encourage students to share what else they know about these parts and how each one helps plants live and grow. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 examine their flowers. Challenge them to explain why their flowers are no longer white. If necessary, recommend that they reread page 21 of the article. ▶L ay three tissues in a neat pile. ▶F old the tissues back and forth like an accordion. ▶F old the tissue strip in half. Tape it tightly around the folded end. ▶V ery carefully pull apart the layers of tissue to create a flower. 3. D istribute the tissues. Supervise as students create their own tissue paper flowers. When all students are finished, ask them what their flowers are missing. (leaves and a stem) Give each student two leaves. Display one green pipe cleaner and one popsicle stick. Instruct students to review the information on pages 20-21 of their magazines to decide which of these stem choices is correct. 4. O nce students have given a satisfactory response, distribute the pipe cleaners. Instruct students to wrap the pipe cleaners around the bottom of their flowers. Tape each so it is secure. Have students tape their leaves to the stem to complete their flowers. Page T15 May 2015 Stems: Language Arts Explore Reading Explore Foundational Skills 1. D isplay pages 16-17 of the projectable edition. 1. D ivide the class into small groups of three. Make sure 2. Then read aloud the text on these pages. Ask students 2. A s one student reads, other group members should Connecting Ideas About Stems Using Context to Confirm Understanding Highlight the headline and read it aloud. Encourage students to identify stems they see in these photos. each student has a copy of the magazine. Instruct students to take turns reading the article aloud. what they think this article will tell them about stems. (how stems help plants live and grow) Encourage students to share what they already know about this topic. 3. R ead the article aloud as a class. Stop after each page to discuss different ways that stems help plants live and grow. Guide students to understand plant stems can be very different. For example, some stems are hard and others are soft. However, all stems carry out the basic functions that help plants live and grow so they can survive. when needed. Make sure that each group member has a chance to read the article aloud. Spell Untaught Words Phonetically Research and Write About Stems 1. W rite sentences from the article on sentence strips in 1. Display the "Parts of a Sunflower" poster. Review the information to ensure that all students can accurately identify these four parts of a plant. Name: Activity Master Research and Write About Stems ▶A _tem is a part of a pl_nt that _elps it live and gr_ _. to identify the missing letter in each word. each plant. Write to tell how stems help plants live and grow. Plant with a hard stem the following manner: 2. R ead the sentence aloud. As you do, challenge students Stems Draw a plant with a hard stem and a plant with a soft stem. Label the parts of Plant with a soft stem 3. Y ou may wish to make multiple sentence strips and © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. of the Activity Master and take the class on a nature walk around the school. Challenge students to find plants with hard and soft stems. Instruct them to draw one example of each. Remind students that roots grow into the ground. They shouldn't pull up any plants but simply draw what they think the roots look like. 3. C irculate among the groups and provide assistance Explore Language Explore Writing 2. Then give each student a copy follow along and read silently to themselves. If the main reader struggles with a word, encourage group members to help out. Point out that this doesn't mean that they read the word aloud themselves. Tell students that it's much more helpful if they sound out the letters in the word with the reader or show the reader other words on the page that have the same sounds. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T17 complete this activity as a class. Or, create a document with a variety of sentences and have students fill in the missing letters in small groups. May 2015 Activity Master, page T17 3. Return to the classroom. In small groups, instruct students to label the parts of each plant. Then, using their labeled drawings and the article as a guide, encourage students to write a short explanation telling how a plant's stem helps it live and grow. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T16 May 2015 Stems Activity Master Research and Write About Stems Draw a plant with a hard stem and a plant with a soft stem. Label the parts of each plant. Write to tell how stems help plants live and grow. Plant with a hard stem © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Plant with a soft stem National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T17 May 2015 Stems Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. What does a stem do? A hold a plant in the ground B hold up a plant C hold light 2. What can a stem do? A make food B take in water C move water and food © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. How are all stems alike? A All stems are soft and can bend. B All stems are hard and do not bend. C All stems have tiny tubes in them. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T18 May 2015 Stems Answer Key Activity Master Research and Write About Stems Draw a plant with a hard stem and a plant with a soft stem. Label the parts of each plant. Write to tell how stems help plants live and grow. Plant with a hard stem Students should draw a picture of a plant with a soft stem such as a flower or small plant. They should label the stem, leaves, roots (underground). If applicable, they should label the flowers. Students should explain that the stem holds up a plant and connects the roots to the leaves. They should note that stems have tiny tubes in them that move water and food to other parts of the plant. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T17A May 2015 © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. Students should draw a picture of a plant with a hard stem such as a tree. They should label the stem, leaves, and roots (underground). If applicable, they should label the flowers. Plant with a soft stem Stems Assessment Read each question. Fill in the circle next to the correct answer. 1. What does a stem do? A hold a plant in the ground B hold up a plant C hold light 2. What can a stem do? A make food B take in water C move water and food © 2015 National Geographic Learning. All rights reserved. Teachers may copy this page to distribute to their students. 3. How are all stems alike? A All stems are soft and can bend. B All stems are hard and do not bend. C All stems have tiny tubes in them. National Geographic Young Explorer, Grade 1 Page T18A May 2015
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