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Pre-Visit
Activities : Plants are Producers : Assessment
Third - Fifth Grade Online Curriculum : Communities |
Assessment
Students will draw and describe a garden that they will grow. Students
will describe what they will grow, and describe how they will make sure that
the plants get the things that they need to produce the food that will make
big, healthy vegetables and fruits.
Scoring Rubric (Out of 5 Points)
Cross-Curricular
Extensions
Social Studies
Extension
Students will research what plants are grown and eaten the most in South Carolina
and compare these with the plants that are grown and eaten the most in the world.
Why are some plants eaten more than others? Do they produce more food energy?
Math Extension
Tell students to pretend that they can measure the amount of food energy
produced by a plant in gallons, as if it were gasoline in a car. Pretend that
every time the energy was passed in the food chain from one organism to another,
five gallons of energy were lost. How many animals could exist in the food chain
if the plant produced ten gallons of energy? 20 gallons? 30 gallons? Have
them calculate the energy that is lost and determine how many organisms can
be supported based on the amount of energy produced by the plant. Ask them to
consider if energy is lost in a real food chain and if there is enough energy
in a real food chain for it to go forever.
English Extension
Have the students write a recipe for the photosynthesis process as if it
were an entry in a cookbook. Have them write it in a clear descriptive fashion
so that someone totally unfamiliar with photosynthesis could create their own
glucose and oxygen by following the recipe.
English Extension Have the students read the book Weslandia by Paul Fleischman. Have them write their own story about how they could use the plants in their backyard for to build their own civilization.
Social Studies Extension
Create a garden plan that is representative of South Carolina’s diverse
plant life. Students can use resources such as field guides to choose plants
that can be used in a distinctive garden. The rules are that:
Science
Extension
by Brad Burnham