Have students think about
an environment in the local area (depending on where you live in South Carolina,
this could be a mountain forest, a swamp, the ocean, etc.). Have
students list some of the plants and animals that are common in the wildlife
community found in this environment.
Have the students think
about and discuss whether the same wildlife community would have existed in
the area before people moved in. Have
them think about how people have changed the environment in and around their
area and how this has affected local wildlife communities.
Ask students to research
(see Resources list for reference materials) what the wildlife community
is like around their area and how it has changed since people have moved there.
As a class, have students develop a visual project (a poster, a website, a
book, a diorama, etc.) to illustrate the changes that have occurred in the
wildlife communities. If changes have occurred in the wildlife community,
have students discuss the what, why and how of these changes.
Have students consider
everything that they have learned about communities, both in the classroom
and at their visit to the South Carolina Aquarium, to determine what they
can do to help local wildlife communities. Have them discuss and develop an
action plan for a project that they can do (let them come up with their own
ideas, but if they have trouble suggest some from below). Have them implement
this plan to get involved in conserving local wildlife.
Are there any wildlife
communities left in the area that have not been affected by man? In the state?
In the country? In the world? ·
What other organisms
can change their environment? (All of them in some ways. See "Living vs. Non-Living"
Activity background info in the K-2 curriculum.)