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District Focused Professional Learning in Mathematics and Science

District Focused Professional Learning in Mathematics and Science. 3rd Nine Weeks 2009 Grade 3 Content Overview. “We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”  ~Native American Proverb. Agenda. Session Goals and Ground Rules Overview of :

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District Focused Professional Learning in Mathematics and Science

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  1. District Focused Professional Learning in Mathematics and Science 3rd Nine Weeks 2009 Grade 3 Content Overview • “We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”  ~Native American Proverb

  2. Agenda • Session Goals and Ground Rules • Overview of : • Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia • Unit 6: Interdependence and Pollution • Model lesson : Unit 6- Interdependence and Pollution • Provide opportunities to share ideas and best instructional practices in science instruction • Embed interactive technology, differentiation, and questioning strategies

  3. Session Goals Provide a content overview of the Georgia Performance Standards (GPS) Quarter 3 Grade 3: Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Unit 6: Interdependence –Pollution/Conservation Discuss the rigor of knowledge and skills expected in each GPS unit

  4. Session: Ground Rules Respect the value of each individual’s contribution No sidebars Share the air Honor time limits Participate and take ownership No cell phones or checking e-mail Parking Lot

  5. APS Resources Locations Math & Science Resources SRT-4 Resources

  6. CRCT 2009: Grade 3 Science 70% 69% 67% 67% 65% 65% Earth Science Physical Science Life Science

  7. CRCT 2009: Grade 3 Science 48% 42% 33% 32% 25% 20% Needs Improvement Meets Criteria Exceeds

  8. What To Look For • Provide examples of how the 5 categories were addressed in the lesson. Categories: • Managing the Learning Environment • Learner Engagement • Differentiated Instruction • Questioning Strategies • Technology Integration

  9. There’s More to Teaching Science Read the article on your table. As a table group, locate some of the APS 26 Instructional practices outlined in the poem. Discuss how you can work to make sure that these items are implemented in your labs and other science activities.

  10. What do you know about habitats? Think about the different habitats that you can find in Georgia. On your own or with friends, make a list of five different habitats in Georgia. Now pick one of those five habitats from your list and describe five more habitats contained within that single habitat. (Hint: Think about the habitats of small organisms like reptiles and insects.)

  11. Habitats Coastal Piedmont Ocean – underground mtn, fish of deep sea, snail, sea anenome Mountains – cave, gorge, stream, foothills, lake, soil valleys Marsh/Swamp – Forest/Woodlands- trees, dirt, caves, plants

  12. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaStandard S3L1 Participants will investigate the habitats of different organisms and the dependence of organisms on their habitat. Elements: a. Differentiate between habitats of Georgia (mountains, marsh/swamp, coast, Piedmont, Atlantic Ocean) and the organisms that live there. b. Identify features of green plants that allow them to live and thrive in different regions of Georgia. c. Identify features of animals that allow them to live and thrive in different regions of Georgia. d. Explain what will happen to an organism if the habitat is changed.

  13. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Enduring Understandings 1. For any particular environment, some kinds of plants and animals survive well, some survive less well, and some cannot survive at all. 2. A habitat provides the optimum conditions for the organism to survive. 3. Different organisms live in different areas in Georgia (mountains, marsh/swamps, coast, Piedmont, Atlantic Ocean). 4. Organisms include all living things such as plants, animals, fungi, and microorganisms.

  14. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Enduring Understandings 5. Plants have features that allow them to live and thrive in different regions of Georgia. 6. Animals have certain features that allow/help them to live and thrive in different regions. 7. Changes in a habitat force the organisms living there to die, change/adapt, or move. 8. Organisms interact with one another in many ways including providing food to create a habitat.

  15. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Essential Questions 1.What is a habitat? 2. How are regions in Georgia different? 3. How do the characteristics of the habitat determine the organisms that live there? 4. How are Georgia habitats different from other habitats? 5. How do the features of a plant help it survive in a certain region of Georgia? 6. How do an animal’s features and/or characteristics allow it to live and thrive in its habitat? 7. How do changes in a habitat affect the organisms living there?

  16. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Essential Questions Habitats: How does a piedmont/swamp/ocean differ from other habitats? What characteristics are found in a piedmont/swamp/ocean? How do these characteristics interrelate to form a piedmont/swamp/ocean? What plants and animals would be found in a piedmont/swamp/ocean habitat? How can a piedmont/swamp/ocean habitat be affected by natural causes and by man?

  17. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Essential Questions Georgia Habitats: What characteristics make piedmont/swamp/southern Atlantic Ocean unique in Georgia habitats? Why do certain plants and animals survive and grow in Georgia's piedmont/swamp/Atlantic Oceans? How can Georgia’s piedmont/swamp/ocean habitat be affected by natural causes and by man?

  18. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Misconceptions

  19. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaVocabulary • Habitat • Georgia • Organism • Mountain • Marsh/swamp • Coast (coastal plains) • Piedmont • Atlantic Ocean • Ridge and Valley • Appalachian Plateau

  20. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaTasks S3L1. • Identify green plants, fungi (mushrooms), and animals present on the school grounds and around your home. Make a list of the aspects of their habitat that are necessary for the organisms to survive. Remember to include organisms that live in fresh water or salt water environments if you live near lakes, rivers, or the ocean. • Research green plants, fungi (mushrooms) and animals that live in other regions of Georgia. Using informational resources including maps, match animals and plants with their homes (areas in Georgia where they live: mountains, marsh/swamp, coast, Piedmont, Atlantic Ocean).

  21. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Tasks Contact other third graders in Georgia and share your lists of green plants, fungi (mushrooms) and animals and their habitats that live in your area with them. Ask them to share their lists with you. Compare and contrast the lists to determine similarities and differences. Write an illustrated story telling what you found out about the organisms in your area, such as where they live, what they consume, and what external features the animals or plants have that enable them to live where they do. Use what you know about other areas in Georgia to conclude if the organisms could live in those other habitats.

  22. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Tasks • Identify external features of animals that allow them to live and thrive in different regions (cold, warm, wet, dry, etc.). Explain why certain animals need to live in a certain region due to their life cycles. External features may include but are not limited to • Body covering • Size and relative scale of body parts • Movement • Food gathering

  23. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaTasks Choose an organism that lives in a place other than Georgia. Do a report about that organism, its needs, its habitat, and why, based on its needs and features, it lives somewhere other than Georgia. For example, penguins do not live in Georgia except in zoos or animal parks. You would find out why penguins are not native to Georgia, what it needs to live, and its habitat. Visit a zoo or botanical garden and find out what accommodations in food, environmental conditions, and habitat the caretakers had to make to keep exotic organisms alive in Georgia.

  24. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Tasks • Identify external features of green plants and fungi (mushrooms) that enable them to live and thrive in different regions of Georgia (mountains, swamps/marshes, coasts, fresh water, Atlantic Ocean, and Piedmont). • Seeds, cones, flowers • Leaf structure (leaf shape, thickness, etc.) • Size • Shape • Compile information into a research display of different plants and animals and their external features that help them thrive in different kinds of places. Use maps to show locations.

  25. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Tasks • Choose an organism that has unusual features. Do a report about that organism, its needs, and why, based on its needs and features, it lives in a specific habitat. • Produce a display (diorama, multimedia presentation, brochure, etc.) about external features of organisms. For example, you could compile a brochure about beaks or feet of different birds. You could do a presentation about different leaves or fungi.

  26. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaEssential Labs • Saving Water • pp. 70-72 (Use with Pages 230-231) • Keeping Warm • pp. 73-75 (Use with Pages 244-245) • Observe An Environment • pp. 76-77 (Use with Pages 264-265) • Plant And Animal Homes • pp. 79-81 (Use with Pages 276-277) • Changing The Environment • pp.82-84 (Use with Pages 292-293)

  27. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaCulminating Tasks: Zoo (Part 1) Goal: To help develop a zoo that will have a sample of the plants and animals from all the habitat regions of Georgia. Role: You are a biologist sent to find out what kinds of plants and animals live in each of the five habitat regions and what adaptations they have to live in those regions. Audience: General Public

  28. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaCulminating Tasks: Zoo (Part 2) Scenario: Build a zoo that will house samples of both plants and animals from the different regions of Georgia. Find out about the plants and animals that live in those regions and the features that they have that allow them to thrive there. Make a list of what you will need to include in your zoo to insure their survival. Product: A drawing of the zoo showing what conditions your area would have to have in order for the plants and animals from that region to survive there. A report on the plants and animals from your region.

  29. Unit 5: Habitats of Georgia Culminating Tasks: Exhibit Goal: Your goal is to create an exhibit for the Georgia Wildlife Federation to show the regions of Georgia and the plant and animal life that is indigenous to each habitat. Role: You are part of a team selected by your teacher to create an exhibit for the Georgia Wildlife Expo. Audience: Spectators from all across the state, Judges of Georgia Wildlife Federation Contest

  30. Unit 5: Habitats of GeorgiaCulminating Tasks: Exhibit • Scenario: – Your teacher has entered the class in a contest sponsored by the Georgia Wildlife Federation. You are to follow the rules and guidelines of the contest in order to create an exhibit. Rules and Guidelines for the Contest are as follows: • All work must be student created and original. • Information presented must be valid. • There must be visual representations of plants and animals in their habitats • Product: The purpose of this project is to show the plant and animal life within each of the habitats of Georgia.

  31. Unit 6: Interdependence – Pollution/Conservation Standard:S3L2 Participants will recognize the effects of pollution and humans on the environment. Elements: • Explain the effects of pollution (such as littering) to the habitats of plants and animals. • Identify ways to protect the environment. • Conservation of resources • Recycling of materials

  32. Unit 6: Enduring Understandings Enduring Understandings There are harmful effects of pollution and various ways to protect the environment from pollution.

  33. Unit 6: Essential Questions Essential Questions 1. How do I identify distinguish, and correct effects of pollution? 2. What are the effects of pollution on plants and their habitats? 3. What are the effects of pollution on animals and their habitats? 4. How does conservation protect our environment? 5. How does recycling help reduce pollution?

  34. Unit 6: Misconceptions

  35. Unit 6: Vocabulary • Pollution air • Pollution land • Pollution water • Habitats • Environment • Aerosol ozone layer • Littering land • Conservation acid • Rain water

  36. Unit 6: Tasks S3L2. Research other ways to help the environment such as conservation of resources and recycling. Look around your school and home for ways to help conserve resources and recycle products. Make posters to display around the school informing other participants of the need to conserve water and land resources by careful use and recycling. Celebrate Earth Day in April by sharing what you have done to help “save the planet.”

  37. Unit 6: Tasks S3L2. Sometimes pollution such as littering changes an organism’s habitat. Anchor a piece of paper on a grassy area on the school ground. Leave the paper for two weeks. Remove the paper and observe the impact the paper had on the grass. Develop a plan to help clean up the area so that the organisms in the area are more likely to survive. Publicize your plan and write letters to encourage others to help with the plan. Test your plan and keep a record of the number of organisms or the condition of the organisms before and after implementing the plan.

  38. Unit 6: Essential Labs • Mining Resources • pp. 85-87 (Use with Pages 312-313) • Pollution And Plants • pp. 88-90 (Use with Pages 324-325) • Taking A Look At Trash • pp. 91-93 (Use with Pages 338-339)

  39. Unit 6: Culminating Task Goal: Sharing with others the ways you’ve learned to conserve resources to protect our environment Role: You have been hired by the Environmental Protection Agency to design a poster to present to the School Board to use for the county to teach children how to protect the environment. Audience: Your School Board members and the members of the EPA will decide if your poster reflects pollution prevention.

  40. Unit 6: Culminating Task Scenario: You must present your poster to the board members and EPA. You must show evidence that you understand conservation, recycling, reusing and reducing waste. Product: You will make posters to display around the school informing other participants of the need to conserve water and land resources by careful use and recycling.

  41. Unit 6: Interdependence – Pollution/Conservation -- Literature 1. Just A Dream – Chris Van Allsburg, (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1990) 2. The Giving Tree – Shel Silverstein, (Harper Collins Children’s Books, 1964) 3. The Paper Bag Prince – Colin Thompson

  42. Unit 6: Planning Questions What is the lesson about? What do they already know? What about this group? Do you have manipulatives? Did you give a pre-assessment? 7/25/2008

  43. Model LessonUnit 6: Interdependence/Pollution Third Grade

  44. Engage: Pollution Reflect on the following questions: • What is pollution? • Why is pollution bad for the environment? • How can pollution travel? • Why types of things pollute water? • What types of things pollute air?

  45. Engage: Pollution As you watch the video would you revise your answers:

  46. Engage: What is pollution?

  47. Standard: S3L2 Students will recognize the effects of pollution and humans on the environment. Elements: • Explain the effects of pollution (such as littering) to the habitats of plants and animals. • Identify ways to protect the environment. • Conservation of resources • Recycling of materials

  48. Essential Q & Objectives EQ: What are the effects of pollution on plants and their habitats? What are the effects of pollution on animals and their habitats? Objectives: • Students will be able to identify types of materials that will or will not mix with water. • Students will be able to describe the effects of pollution in water to the environment. • Students will be able to identify the ways that pollution travels.

  49. Explore: Literature Connection • Follow the Water from Brook to Ocean • by Arthur Dorros Explores water's journey, how it shapes the earth, and why it is important to keep it clean • Grades K-4

  50. Explore: Technology Hotlist: http://www.kn.att.com/wired/fil/pages/listquartercc.html Teacher Resources • http://www.kiddyhouse.com/Themes/Environ/Water.html • http://www.zerofootprintkids.com/kids_teacher.aspx?cat_id=9

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