MAIN
| OBJECTIVES | STANDARDS
| BACKGROUND | PROCEDURES
| ASSESSMENT | RESOURCES
Introduce
students to one of South Carolina's ocean inhabitants, the
porcupinefish, by simply showing students a picture of the
animal. Ask each student to look closely at the animal pictured.
Have students write a paragraph (click
here for a sample, blank worksheet) about the porcupinefish
that includes the following:
- A description of three adaptations they think the
porcupinefish might have based on their observation
of the animal (1 point per adaptation; 3 points total);
credit all rational observations.
- A description of how they think each adaptation helps
the porcupinefish to survive in the ocean (1 point per
description; 3 points total); Teachers should credit
all descriptions even if the explanation of the function
of the adaptation is not biologically correct; the goal
of this assessment is to determine if students can observe
an animal, look at its body parts and come up with a
possible guess as to how those body parts might help
an animal to survive and not whether or not the guess
is accurate.
- Creative Writing (2 points total)
- 0 points- student just provides a list of
adaptations and functions
- 1 point- student provides descriptions
in complete sentences to create a simple story
- 2 points- student infuses imagination
and creativity while providing descriptions in complete
sentences to create a story
An example of a paragraph that would receive the full eight
points appears below.
This is a story about Spike, the porcupinefish. Spike
has a small mouth that helps him to eat little jellyfish
in the ocean. Spike loves to eat jellyfish! He has to
swim around in the water to catch his food and Spike uses
his fins to move. Spike is called Spike because his mother
likes the name Spike and because he has pointy things
all over his body. Spike uses his pointy things to scare
other fish away so that they won't eat him.
Note that porcupinefish do have small mouths, but they
use them to eat snails, crabs and shrimp, not jellyfish.
However, the student who wrote the paragraph above received
full credit.