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Key
Points
Key Points will give you the main information you
should know to teach the activity.
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A
thing is considered alive if it exhibits all of these
characteristics together:
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the
ability to reproduce
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the
ability to grow and develop
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the
ability to take nutrients and energy from the environment
and convert it into a usable form
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the
ability to interact with and respond to the environment
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the
possession of a complex and highly organized structure
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Things
taken from living things such as twigs, seeds, leaves,
bones, teeth and shells are not characterized as living
things because separate from the organism they were
taken from, they do not have all of the characteristics
that define something as being alive. For this same
reason, a dead organism cannot be classified as a living
thing because it can no longer reproduce, grow and develop,
take nutrients and energy from its environment or otherwise
interact with its environment.
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An
organism's habitat contains both things that are living
and things that are not living.
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Detailed
Information
Detailed Information gives more in-depth background to
increase your own knowledge, in case you want to expand
upon the activity or you are asked detailed questions by
students.
Living
things depend on things that are not alive in order to survive.
Living things need air, water, the warmth of the sun, the
nutrients from the ground, the solid earth that gives us
the foundation for life and many other things that are not
alive. A habitat is the place where an organism can successfully
get the things it needs in order to survive. Since a habitat
consists both of things that are alive and things that are
not alive, students should be able to differentiate between
things that are living and things that are not living.
What
is the difference between something that is alive and something
that is not alive? Though the answer may seem obvious, the
definition of a living thing is not a simple one. There
is not one lone characteristic that defines being alive.
All living things posses certain characteristics that are
not shared collectively by non-living things. For this reason,
when classifying objects as living, characteristics must
be considered collectively. The scientific name for something
that is alive is an organism. This activity will
focus on the more easily observable characteristics of living
things that will be recognizable to young children. In brief
these characteristics are:
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the
ability to reproduce
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the
ability to grow and develop
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the
ability to take nutrients and energy from the environment
and convert it into a usable form
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the
ability to interact with and respond to the environment
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the
possession of a complex and highly organized structure
This
background information will explain these observable characteristics
and provide examples that will make the information relevant
to a young child.
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All
living things can reproduce, meaning they can produce
independent members of their species from their bodies.
There are an incredibly large amount of different
reproductive strategies used by living organisms.
Amoebas and many other organisms reproduce by cell
division. Many fungi reproduce through spores. Plants
reproduce through seeds. Most birds, reptiles, amphibians
and invertebrates reproduce through eggs. Most mammals
and sharks reproduce through live birth. In the varieties
of reproduction, organisms can be male and female
(sexual, meaning one needs to find the other to reproduce),
neither (asexual, can reproduce with out a partner)
or both (hermaphroditic, meaning an individual can
be both sexes at the same time or can change its sex).
Despite the varied means of reproduction, all living
organisms can replicate their species.
Probably the best way to explain this concept to young
elementary students is that all living things produce
babies that will eventually become adults. A younger
brother or sister who was recently born, an aunt who
had a child, a pet that had puppies or kittens or
a seed that was planted and eventually sprouted can
all be used to show how this characteristic applies
to living things. Students can also be asked if they
have ever heard of any buildings or cars or rocks
having babies to reinforce the concept that this is
a characteristic of living things.
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All
living things grow and develop. Many living things
start off life as a single living cell known as a
zygote (fertilized egg). Fish, grasshoppers, tulips,
humans and various other organisms all start as zygotes
and eventually develop into adults. Development is
observable in the changes in size and structure an
organism undergoes from fertilization to adulthood.
This is observable even in single-celled organisms,
which grow in size before they divide during asexual
reproduction.
Young children can see how growth and development have occurred
by thinking about how they have changed since they
were born. By comparing pictures of themselves as newborns
with pictures of themselves at ages one, two, three, the
students can see how they have grown and developed. They
can also compare themselves to their parents to consider
how they will continue to grow. Examples can also be observed
in the classroom by planting seeds and watching the plant
grow, or watching how tadpoles, chicken eggs or butterfly
larvae grow and develop.
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Living things take energy and nutrients from the environment
and convert them into a usable form. Through digestion
and respiration, an organism converts (or in the case
of plants creates) organic compounds (carbohydrates,
fats and proteins) in ways that either allow it to use
the energy at that moment or to store it for future
use. Nutrients used in this process can be drawn from
the soil, the water, the atmosphere or other organisms.
Energy can come from the sun, chemicals or other organisms.
Every time a person eats and every time a person breathes
he or she is performing the functions that allow them
to make energy from the environment. This gives him
or her the fuel he or she needs to live.
Young kids can understand this, since every time they
eat they are giving themselves more fuel. This is the
same reason they must feed their pets and give their
plants sunlight and fertilizer.
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Living things can react to stimuli and respond to and
interact with their environment. Living things respond
to sights, sounds, smells, tastes and sensations. A
spider knows a fly is on its web by feeling the vibrations
the fly is making. An osprey sees a fish swimming in
the water from sixty feet up in the air, and dives to
catch it. A sunflower bends toward the sun as the sun
travels across the sky. Living things also interact
with their environment. Rabbits dig holes. Birds build
nests. The roots of trees hold soil in place that otherwise
would be washed away by rain. Bacteria break down organic
materials into nutrients that replenish the soil. Non-living
things may be manipulated by natural forces, but they
cannot interact of their own accord with their environment.
For example water may be pulled down a mountain by gravity
and erode soil particles, and air molecules may be moved
by air pressure differences and cause trees to be blown
over, but neither the water nor the air molecule could
do anything to the environment without being acted upon
by physical forces. An earthworm can move soil and a
beaver can cut down a tree of their own action, both
showing a characteristic of a living thing.
- Living
things possess a complex and highly organized structure, meaning
they have many parts to them that allow them to function.
People, such as students, have hearts and lungs and many other
organs, as well as eyes, ears, feet, arms and various other
parts that keep them moving and surviving. So do dogs, cats,
fish, birds, insects and even bacteria with their cell organelles.
Plants have leaves, roots, branches, flowers and other less
visible structures. These structures are easily observable
to any student. A rock may be composed of many different minerals,
but if you break it in half, it will still function as a rock.
This is not the case if you break the classroom gerbil in
half. Rocks have very simple structures, and therefore are
not classified as living things.
Students may be tempted to think that the ability to
move is a characteristic of living things. Students
should be reminded that wind is air moving and streams
and ocean waves are water moving. Neither of these is
a living thing, though, because they do not have any
of the characteristics listed above. On the other hand,
trees and sponges do not move but they have the characteristics
above and so are classified as living things.
Choose items
that are fairly easy for students to identify as being alive or
not alive. Although it may seem like a fairly simple concept,
it can become quite confusing rather quickly. For example, it
can be very confusing for students to try to classify a whelk
shell that once housed a living organism as living or nonliving
. A better example to use would be a living whelk or a photograph
of the entire animal. It can be very confusing for students to
classify a twig from a tree as a living thing. Even a seed with
the potential to become a living thing is not a living thing until
it begins to sprout and can grow and change, take food and energy
from the environment, etc. A better example to use would be a
photograph of a tree or a small potted plant. Having once been
alive also does not make something a living thing. A carcass cannot
reproduce nor does is exhibit most other characteristics of living
things. Because of this potential for student confusion, some
teachers have suggested adding a third category of "once
was alive" or "comes from living things" that can
be included in the circle of objects that are not living things.
These confusing objects, though, can offer a wonderful opportunity
for discussion.
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