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If appropriate, ask students to speculate about living things that might not need sunlight, air, food, or water. Some organisms live without sunlight in the deep ocean and in caves. Some tiny living things called bacteria can get the energy to live without using oxygen.
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Delta Reader Plant and Animal Life Cycles Delta Science Readers are nonfiction student books that provide science background and support the experiences of hands-on activities. Every Delta Science Reader has three main sections: Think About . . . , People in Science, and Did You Know? Be sure to preview the reader Overview Chart on page 4, the reader itself, and the teaching suggestions on the following pages. This information will help you determine how to plan your schedule for reader selections and activity sessions. Reading for information is a key literacy skill. Use the following ideas as appropriate for your teaching style and the needs of your students. The After Reading section includes an assessment and writing link. O VERVIEW Students will discover facts about the life cycles of In the Delta Science Reader Plant and plants, animals, and fungi Animal Life Cycles, students read about the learn the different parts of flowering plants life cycles of a variety of plants, animals, and fungi. They learn how some living and how these plants reproduce things grow, change, and reproduce. They read about ways plants reproduce other also read about a famous wildlife than by seeds biologist—Jane Goodall—and her unique, learn about birds, mammals, insects, long-term study of chimpanzees in Africa. amphibians, fish, and reptiles Finally, students learn about emperor penguins and compare the sizes and discuss the function of a table of contents, weights of some newborn animals. headings, and a glossary interpret photographs and diagrams to answer questions complete a KWL chart organize information in a variety of ways delta science modules Plant and Animal Life Cycles 123 © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved. Permission to reprint for classroom use only.
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READING IN THE think will happen to the goose’s eggs? (Baby geese will hatch from them.) What CONTENT AREA SKILLS other animals do you know that hatch • Compare and contrast plant and animal from eggs? (Students will probably mention life cycles different kinds of birds. Some may know that insects and most fish and reptiles lay • Recognize causes and effects in the eggs.) Read the title aloud, and invite process of pollination students to share what they know about the • Draw conclusions from text information topic from their personal experiences and • Identify main ideas and supporting hands-on explorations in science. details about ways plants reproduce • Describe the sequences of events in To stimulate discussion, ask questions metamorphosis and in life cycles such as these: What do you think a life cycle is? How might the life cycles of • Demonstrate critical thinking plants and animals be different? How • Interpret graphic devices might they be the same? • Summarize Begin a class KWL chart by recording facts students know about life cycles in the K column. You may wish to copy the KWL NONFICTION TEXT ELEMENTS chart and ask students to maintain their own charts as they read. Plant and Animal Life Cycles includes a table of contents, headings, photographs and illustrations, captions, diagrams, a table, K W L + What What What What boldfaced terms, and a glossary. I Know I Want I Learned I Want to to Know Explore Further CONTENT VOCABULARY The following terms are introduced in context and defined in the glossary: amphibian, bird, conifer, decompose, dormant, fish, flowering plant, fruit, fungus, germinate, hibernate, insect, larva, life Preview the Book cycle, life span, mammal, metamorphosis, migration, nymph, ovary, pistil, pollen, Take a few minutes to have students look pollination, pupa, reproduce, reptile, root, through the book. Explain the steps seed coat, seed food, spore, stamen, involved in previewing nonfiction: think tiny plant, yeast. about the title, read the table of contents, optional vocabulary: cold-blooded, read the headings, read boldfaced words, warm-blooded; endoskeleton, exoskeleton; and examine any photographs, invertebrate, vertebrate illustrations, charts, and graphics. Call attention to the various nonfiction text B EFORE READING elements and explain how they can help students understand and organize what they Build Background read. Point out that the table of contents lists all the main headings in the book and their Access students’ prior knowledge of plant page numbers. Ask, How do the headings and animal life cycles by displaying and help you know what you will learn about? discussing the cover. Ask, What do you Point to some of the photographs and ask 124 delta science reader © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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questions such as, What does this picture • Whole Group Reading Read the book show you? How do you think it will help you aloud with a group or the whole class. understand the text? Explain that the words in Encourage students to ask questions and boldface type are important words related to make comments. Pause as necessary to plant and animal life cycles. Remind students clarify and assess understanding. that these words are defined in the glossary. Choose one word and have students find its • Shared Reading Have students form definition in the glossary. pairs or small groups and read the book together. Ask students to pause after each Preview the Vocabulary text section. Clarify as needed and discuss any questions that arise or have been You may wish to preview some of the answered. vocabulary words before reading, rather than waiting to introduce them in the context of • Independent Reading Some students may the book. Possibilities include creating a word be ready to read independently. Have wall, vocabulary cards, sentence strips, or a them rejoin the class for discussion of the concept web. book. Check understanding by asking students to explain in their own words For example, some of the words can be what they have read. categorized according to whether they are plants, animals, or fungi. Develop a three- Tips for Reading column chart like the one that follows: • If you spread out the reading over several Plant Animal Fungus days, begin each session by reviewing the conifer amphibian mold previous day’s reading and previewing flowering bird mushroom what will be read in the upcoming session. plant fish yeast insect • Begin each text section by reading or having a volunteer read aloud the heading. mammal Discuss what students expect to learn, reptile based on the heading. Have students examine any illustrations or graphics and read accompanying captions and labels. Set a Purpose • Help students locate context clues to the Discuss with students what they might expect meanings of words in boldface type. to find out from the book, based on their Remind them that these words are defined preview. Encourage them to use the questions in the glossary. Provide help with words on the KWL chart to set an overall purpose that may be difficult to pronounce. for reading. • As appropriate, model reading strategies GUIDE THE READING students may find helpful for nonfiction: adjust reading rate, ask questions, paraphrase, reread, visualize. Preview the book yourself to determine the amount of guidance you will need to give for each section. Depending on your schedule and the needs of your class, you may wish to consider the following options: delta science modules Plant and Animal Life Cycles 125 © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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Think About … (pages 2-13) summarize the information in the text. (A flower forms fruits and seeds. A seed Pages 2, 3 What Is a Life Cycle? and contains a tiny plant and stored food. It Plant Life Cycles: Plants from Seeds stays dormant, or not growing, until it gets enough warmth and moisture. • Have students read the text on page 2. Then the seed splits open, and the tiny Have them compare and contrast the plant sends out roots and shoots.) information about living things. Ask, How are most living things alike? • Have students read the text about (They grow, change, and reproduce. conifers in the second column and Most need sunlight, air, food, and look at the photograph and caption. water.) How are they different? (They Assess understanding by having them have different life cycles and life spans.) summarize the difference between a conifer and a flowering plant. (Conifers • If appropriate, ask students to speculate do not have flowers; they grow cones in about living things that might not need which the seeds form.) sunlight, air, food, or water. (Some organisms live without sunlight in the • Invite students to share what they know deep ocean and in caves. Some tiny about conifers such as pine trees and living things called bacteria can get spruce trees. (Their needles don’t all fall energy to live without using oxygen. off in the fall as leaves on other trees Green plants, algae, phytoplankton, and do. The trees stay green all winter.) Tell some bacteria make their own food using students that another name for these energy from the sun. Some bacteria conifers is evergreens, because they are and microscopic worms can survive always green. indefinitely without water.) Conifers were some of the first plants • Then have students look at the diagrams on Earth to reproduce by making seeds. and labels. Explain: The words cycle and circle are related. Just as you can Pages 4, 5 Inside a Flower run your finger around and around a circle, a cycle repeats itself in the • Have students read the text about same order. Ask, How do the arrows flowers on page 4. Then have them look help show that the life cycles keep at the photograph and read the caption repeating? (They go around in a circle.) and labels. Have students point to the labels on the flower. Ask, What is the • Guide students to compare and contrast purpose of the pistil, stamens, ovary, the plant and animal life cycles. Ask, and pollen? (They make seeds.) How does the plant start? (as a seed) How does the animal start? (as an egg) • Have students read the first paragraph What is the same about plant and on page 5 to learn what pollination is. animal life cycles? (Young plants and Ask, What effects does the pollen animals grow into adult plants and have when it contacts the pistil? (The animals.) flower begins to make fruit and seeds. The ovary swells and ripens.) What • Have students read the text on page 3 happens to the ovary? (It becomes in the first column and look at the a fruit.) diagram and labels. Ask, How does the diagram of the seed help you • Have students study the photograph understand its parts? (It shows what above the first column and read the the text is talking about.) Assess caption. Then assess their understanding understanding by having students of the definition of fruit: What is a fruit? 126 delta science reader © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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(A fruit is the part of a plant that covers and vertebrate an animal with a backbone, or protects seeds.) Is an orange a fruit? (yes) spine (examples: human, bird, snake, fish) Is a potato a fruit? (no) Why not? (It invertebrate an animal without a doesn’t have seeds.) backbone (examples: insect, jellyfish, worm, clam, octopus) • Have students finish reading the page, look at the photograph, and read the warm-blooded an animal that keeps its caption. Ask, How are many flowers body warm through its own metabolism pollinated? (They are pollinated by (examples: all birds and mammals) insects, such as butterflies and bees, that cold-blooded an animal whose carry pollen from one flower to another.) temperature changes with the How do flowers attract insects? (Insects temperature of its environment are attracted to the nectar, colorful petals, (examples: most reptiles, fish, scent, and shapes of the flowers.) amphibians, all invertebrates) endoskeleton a hard skeleton inside an Page 6 Plants from Spores and Other Ways animal’s body (examples: all vertebrates) Plants Reproduce exoskeleton a hard skeleton that • Have students read the text about plants surrounds an animal’s body and supports from spores on page 6 and look at the it from the outside (examples: lobster, accompanying photograph and caption. clam, scorpion, spider, beetle) Ask, What are two differences between a spore and a seed? (A seed is made by a • Before students read page 7, write the flower and is inside a fruit. Spores are not word animal on the board. Ask, What are made by flowers and are not inside fruits.) some kinds of animals? List examples Encourage students to speculate about students suggest. If no one mentions why so few spores out of millions live to animals in a given category, such as make new plants. (Most spores do not insects, raise the subject: Is a land in a spot with the right conditions.) grasshopper an animal? Is a clam? Explain: Animals are living things that • Have students read the text about other generally eat food and can move at ways plants reproduce and look at the least part of their body. Insects and photograph and caption. Ask, What is the many other creatures that you may not main idea of this section? (Some plants think of as animals are members of the reproduce from other plant parts.) What animal kingdom. details tell more about this main idea? (The bulbs of tulips and garlic divide to • Have students read the introduction produce new plants. Potatoes are actually and the first paragraph on page 7. Tell modified stems called tubers. The eyes students to think about animals they are buds. New potato plants can grow are familiar with. Then ask, What makes from these buds. New strawberry plants birds different from all other animals? grow from nodes on runners. Gardeners (They have feathers.) Can all birds fly? grow new plants from cuttings.) (no) Encourage students to name birds that are unable to fly. (Students may Page 7 Animal Life Cycles: Birds mention penguins and ostriches. Other flightless birds are the emu and kiwi.) • As appropriate for your class, discuss the following at relevant points during • Have students read the second paragraph the reading of Animal Life Cycles on and look at the photograph and caption. pages 7–12: Ask, What surprised you the most about hummingbirds? (Responses will vary.) delta science modules Plant and Animal Life Cycles 127 © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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• You may wish to share the following • Explain that antennae is the plural of information about hummingbirds with antenna. Write both words. Tell students: Hummingbirds are the only students that many science words come birds that can fly backward, hover in from ancient Latin and Greek, and their one place, and fly straight up or down. plural forms are different from the They have a tubelike beak with a long plurals of English words. Antenna tongue that lets them take nectar from comes from a Latin word. flowers. Hummingbirds eat while hovering. • Have students read the paragraphs about insect life cycles and look at the diagram and labels. Elicit that two kinds Page 8 Mammals of insect life cycles are described: • Have students read the first paragraph (1) egg, nymph, adult; examples are on page 8 to find out about mammals. grasshoppers, dragonflies, cockroaches; Have students discuss what makes a and (2) egg, larva, pupa, adult; examples mammal different from other animals. are butterflies, bees, flies, and beetles. (It has fur or hair. It feeds on milk from Point out and discuss each stage in the mother.) the life cycle of a butterfly. Assess • Then have students look at the students’ understanding by having photograph, read the caption, and read them describe the sequence of events the rest of the page to learn about in the metamorphosis of a butterfly. bears. Ask, What did you learn about (A larva hatches from an egg. Later, the the life spans of mammals? (They’re larva forms a cocoon around itself and different. Some animals live just a few becomes a pupa. The pupa changes years, and others live for many years.) inside the cocoon and hatches into an adult butterfly.) Explain that larvae is A marsupial is a mammal that develops the plural of larva, another word from inside a pouch. The young are not fully Latin. The plural of pupa is pupae. developed when they are born. They crawl into a pouch on the mother’s Further Facts abdomen, where they feed on the mother’s milk and continue to develop. • The adult life span of some species of Kangaroos, opossums, and koalas are mayfly may be as short as 90 minutes. marsupials. Adult life spans of other species range from several hours to 14 days. A monotreme is a mammal that lays eggs! After they hatch, the young feed • Most butterflies live only a few days to on the mother’s milk. There are only weeks after emerging from the pupa but three species of monotremes: the duck- some species of butterfly that migrate billed platypus and two species of spiny or hibernate can live up to 8 or 9 anteater. months or longer. • A queen honeybee will live for about two Page 9 Insects years but worker and drone honeybees • Have students read the first paragraph live from 20 days to 4 months. on page 9 about insects. Explain that an • A queen leaf-cutting ant can live insect’s head contains its mouthparts, 10 years or more. Queen termites may eyes, and other sense organs; its thorax live up to 30 years. is where its legs and wings (if it has wings) are; and the abdomen contains the organs that digest food. 128 delta science reader © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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• After 17 years of dormancy underground, • Have students read the other paragraphs, one species of cicada emerges for five look at the photograph, and read the weeks and then dies. caption. Ask them to summarize the sequence of events in the life cycle of an Page 10 Amphibians Atlantic salmon. (A young salmon hatches from an egg. After two years, it swims • Have students read the first paragraph on downriver to the ocean. It lives in the page 10 about amphibians. Tell students ocean until it is an adult. Then it migrates that even as adults, amphibians other back up the same river. The female salmon than toads usually live in damp places or lays her eggs. After that, most adult near water. Toads, however, live mainly on salmon die.) Tell students that only some land, returning to water only to breed and fish migrate as salmon do. lay eggs. Page 12 Reptiles • Have students read the next two paragraphs and study the diagram. Ask, What other • Have students read the text about reptiles animals undergo metamorphosis? (insects) on page 12. Then have them look at the Assess understanding by having students photographs and captions. Ask, What are summarize the differences between some kinds of reptiles? (crocodiles, tadpoles and adult frogs. (Tadpoles live in alligators, turtles, lizards, snakes) What water, breathe with gills, have no legs, and are the main ideas you learned about have a long tail. Frogs live on land, breathe reptiles? (They have dry skin, scales, and with lungs, have legs, and have no tail.) breathe with lungs. Most lay eggs, and some give birth to live young. Most young Further Facts reptiles can live on their own right away.) • Amphibians evolved from fishes that had Primitive reptiles evolved from amphibians stubby leg-like fins. They emerged from about 320 million years ago. the oceans and moved onto dry land about 360 million years ago. Page 13 Fungus Life Cycles • Salamanders and newts keep their tails as • Before students read page 13, challenge adults. Salamanders breathe using lungs them to name something that looks like a or gills or by absorbing oxygen through plant but is not a plant. Give a hint: You their moist skin. can see these in the produce section of the market. Many have short, thick • Amphibians have soft, leathery eggs that stems and a broad cap. They are good must be kept moist. They lay their eggs to eat. (mushrooms) in water. • Then have students read the first • Some tree frogs lay their eggs on paragraph to learn about fungi. Ask, What vegetation near ponds. When the eggs is a fungus? (It is a living thing that is not hatch, the tadpoles drop into the water. a plant or an animal.) What are two examples of fungi? (mushrooms, bread Page 11 Fish mold) Explain that fungus comes from ancient Latin, and its plural is fungi. • Have students read the first paragraph on page 11. Ask them to summarize the main ideas. (Fish come in many kinds, sizes, and shapes. Most fish lay eggs, and others give birth to live young. Fish breathe with gills. Most fish have scales.) delta science modules Plant and Animal Life Cycles 129 © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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• Remind students that plants make their • Encourage students to discuss what own food. Explain that what makes personal qualities made Jane Goodall a fungi different is that they absorb food good scientist. (She was patient, hard- substances from dead or living matter. working, spent many hours observing Ask, What important role does this chimpanzees, and took careful notes.) way of getting energy serve? (Fungi What hardships do you think she had break down and recycle dead plants to face? (Students may mention and animals.) loneliness, boredom, and the physical problems of jungle life.) • Have students read the second paragraph and look at the photograph • Inform students that in all, Goodall and caption to find out about the life spent fifteen years studying the cycle of fungi. Then ask them to chimpanzees of Gombe. Ask, What do summarize the stages of the life cycle. you think made her continue this (A spore grows threadlike structures study for so long? (Accept reasonable called hyphae. The hyphae produce responses, such as her love for the more spores.) Ask, What other living chimpanzees and her desire to learn things reproduce using spores? about them.) (mosses and ferns) Why do you think mosses and ferns are classified as Further Facts plants, not fungi? (They make their own food as other plants do.) • Jane Goodall was born in London, England, in 1934. Her work at Gombe • Have students read the third paragraph began in July 1960. about yeast. Ask, How is the way yeast cells reproduce different from the way • In 1965 Goodall received a Ph.D. in mushrooms and molds reproduce? ethology (the study of animal behavior (Yeasts don’t produce spores. The cells under natural conditions) from divide in two in a warm environment Cambridge University in England. with nutrients and water.) Ask, What is one useful thing yeasts do? (They • Goodall’s famous account of her life make bread dough rise.) among the chimpanzees, In the Shadow of Man, was published in 1971. People in Science (page 14) • Goodall wrote that after watching Jane Goodall, Wildlife Biologist chimpanzee mothers with their infants, she used some of the same techniques • Before they read, ask students how in raising her own child Hugo (who was they think scientists learn about animal called Grub). life cycles, behavior, and life spans. (by observing the animals) Then have them read page 14 to find out about a famous woman scientist who studied chimpanzees. 130 delta science reader © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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Did You Know? (page 15) About Emperor Penguins AFTER READING Summarize • Before they read, ask students whether they have ever seen penguins at a zoo or Complete the KWL chart you began with an aquarium. Invite them to share what students before reading by asking them to they know about these unusual birds. If share the answers to their questions. Call on necessary, tell students that penguins volunteers to retell each text section. Then cannot fly. They use their short, stubby have students use the information in the KWL wings as flippers to swim underwater. chart to write brief summary statements. • Then have students read page 15 to find Discuss with students how using the KWL out about emperor penguins, look at the strategy helped them understand and photograph, and read the caption. Ask, appreciate the book. Encourage them to What is the most interesting or share any other reading strategies that surprising fact you learned about helped them understand what they read. emperor penguins? (Responses will vary.) Direct attention to the fourth column in the • Have students study the table of Newborn chart and ask: What questions do you still Animal Sizes. Engage students in a have about plant and animal life cycles? discussion and comparison of the facts What would you like to explore further? presented. Ask, Which of these animals Record students’ responses. Then ask: Where has the largest newborn? (the gray do you think you might be able to find this whale) Which has the tiniest? (the information? (Students might mention an opossum) Which newborn animal do you encyclopedia, science books, and the think has the biggest parent? (the gray Internet.) Encourage students to conduct whale) What size do you think an adult further research. giant panda is? After students speculate, tell them that an adult giant panda is Review/Assess 1.5 m (5 feet) tall and weighs 100 kg (220 pounds)! Use the questions that follow as the basis for a discussion of the book or for a written or • Explain that opossum young are so tiny oral assessment. because when they are born they are not fully developed. They continue growing in 1. What is a life cycle, and what do the life a pouch on the mother until they are old cycles of plants, animals, and fungi have in enough to leave the pouch. They are common? (A life cycle is the changes that marsupials. take place during a living thing’s life from when it begins to when it ends. All these living things grow, change, and reproduce.) 2. What parts of a plant are involved in making seeds, and how do they do this? (The pistil, stamens, pollen, and ovary make seeds. The stamen makes pollen. When pollen is ripe the stamen releases the pollen. The ovary is where new fruits and seeds form.) delta science modules Plant and Animal Life Cycles 131 © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.
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3. What are the six main categories of animals discussed, and what do they have in common? (The six categories of animals are birds, mammals, insects, amphibians, fish, and reptiles. Almost all animals come from eggs. Most need air to breathe, water, and food to eat. They all reproduce.) Writing Link/Critical Thinking Present the following as a writing assignment. Jane Goodall spent fifteen years studying chimpanzees. She made many important discoveries. How can a study of any living thing be useful and important? Explain what we can learn from studying living things. (Accept reasonable responses.) If you could spend time studying a living thing, what would you choose? Why? Science Journals: You may wish to have students keep the writing activities related to the Reader in their science journals. References and Resources For trade book suggestions and Internet sites, see the References and Resources section of this teacher’s guide. 132 delta science reader © Delta Education LLC. All rights reserved.