Objective/ Standard: /
- Students will be able to differentiate from living and non-living materials.
- Students will be able to recognize the physical attributes/traits of living and non-living things.
- Students will be able to categorize living and non-living materials into their respective groups.
- Students will be able to group plants, animals, and people as “living things.”
- Students will be able to group objects and inanimate materials as “non-living things.”
“Students will sort living organisms and non-living materials into groups by observable physical attributes.”
Materials: / Whole Group
- Graphic organizer/poster showing 5 attributes of a “living thing.”(18x24)
- Graphic organizer/poster showing 5 attributes of “non-living things” (18x24)
- Worksheet: This is a Living Thing (1 per student)
- Worksheet: This is a Non-Living Thing (1 per student)
- A labeled box filled with pictures of living things doing things they need to live. Also, a labeled box with pics of non-living things.
- A grazing cow
- A crying baby
- A sleeping cat
- A kid in his/her living room
- A plant getting watered
- A bug making a nest (bee, beetle, ant)
- Rocks
- Toys
- A broom
- A cell phone
Advanced Preparation: /
- Prepare posters using Kidspiration, Inspiration 8 or Word document.
- Zoom up the posters, or have a slide ready with the graphic organizer on the smartboard.
- Make copies of the student-required papers.
- Gather and put together the living and non-living box
- Gather and put together pictures
*For Green Ribbon initiative*- Avoid using paper, and have students use their journals and state how they should format their living and non-living thing written activity. Keep the format posted on the white board or smart board.
Procedure: / ------see below------
motivating question / What are the telling signs of something being “alive”?
Answers on the poster:
- Living things breathe or need air.
- They need food and water.
- They need a place to live
- They need to protect themselves from danger.
- They express themselves
- OPTIONAL: They are born and then they die
- OPTIONAL: They have babies.
how to do it / Opening:15 minutesThe teacher will present the poster for “Living Things” showing the 5 traits of living things. She will explain that a “TRAIT” is something that tells me that you are different or alike someone or some people. It could that you look like your mom. It could be that you talk in a special way. Those are “characteristics” that belong to you and people like you.
All living things share a group of traits. Not all living things are alike, but they need the same things to be alive. “What can tell me whether something is a living thing” based on what the poster says.
After discussing each of the five traits, the teacher will take out a box filled with pictures of living things. Teacher will specify that THE IMAGE SHOWN IN THE PICTURE REPRESENTS a living thing.
Middle35 minutes:
Discussion: 20 minutes: Now that we have discussed 5 things that make things “living,” let’s discuss that the traits of NON-LIVING things are the opposite:
Answers:
- They do not need air to breathe
- They do not need water, food, or a place to live
- They do not express themselves
- They do not need protection from danger
- They do not move on their own
“Clap for me” (5 minutes)
After the students discuss the traits of non-living things, the teacher will do a quick game where she will pull out a picture from the box of mixed pictures. Teacher will ask students to stand up and clap for her if she calls the proper picture.
For example: The teacher will say: THIS (shows a picture) is a LIVING THING.
- If she is correct, the kids will stand up and clap one time.
- If she is incorrect, they will remain sitting and be quiet.
Evaluation: / “What things do living things need to stay alive?”
“Are non-living things alive?” “Do they need anything to live?”
Extension: / The students will be asked to look for their favorite book that they have read in class so far (even if it is a picture reading). They will look at images in that book and place a GREEN sticky note on a picture that shows a LIVING THING. A PINK sticky note will be placed on top of a picture showing a NON-LIVING THING.
We will discuss our findings and divide what we find in a chart of “Living vs. Non-Living things in our Books”