Classifying and organising living things using images: Difference between revisions
SimonKnight (talk | contribs) (moved the photo links to the activity page) |
SimonKnight (talk | contribs) (adding 'additional resources') |
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* To have experience of and develop confidence with the different ways in which living things can be classified into groups | * To have experience of and develop confidence with the different ways in which living things can be classified into groups | ||
* To develop knowledge of and use some of the characteristics of living things and ways to classify and organise them. | * To develop knowledge of and use some of the characteristics of living things and ways to classify and organise them. | ||
|additional resources= | |additional resources= See activity outline below - you'll need sets of photos and computers to allow pupils to organise the materials | ||
|useful information= Using photo organization/slideshow software (Picasa) students organise images that have been provided into various groups or categories. They may also add labels and/or descriptions where appropriate. | |useful information= Using photo organization/slideshow software (Picasa) students organise images that have been provided into various groups or categories. They may also add labels and/or descriptions where appropriate. | ||
|related resources=[[Organising images for a narrative]] | |related resources=[[Organising images for a narrative]] |
Revision as of 14:34, 18 June 2012
Lesson idea. Lesson activity and sample materials.
Teaching approach. This lesson offers opportunities to explore ways to classify living things as well as characteristics which might be relevant, and how to address difficulties that may arise when trying to classify things in this way. The activity may be enhanced by the use of ICT(i) software (e.g. Picasa) but could be carried out with paper-based resources.
This lesson presents a good opportunity for small group work(ta) and some inquiry(ta) into how we classify; and why some classification methods might be more useful, or more scientifically interesting than others. There is also a good opportunity to use different sorts of questioning(ta); to encourage pupils to question each other; to engage in peer assessment(ta) and to focus discussion(ta) on the scientific method(ta) using key vocabulary(ta). (edit)
Resource details | |
Title | Classifying and organising living things using images |
Topic | [[Topics/Living things|Living things]], [[Topics/Using images|Using images]] |
Teaching approach | [[Teaching Approaches/Assessment|Assessment]], [[Teaching Approaches/Questioning|Questioning]], [[Teaching Approaches/Language|Language]], [[Teaching Approaches/Group work|Group work]], [[Teaching Approaches/Inquiry|Inquiry]], [[Teaching Approaches/Discussion|Discussion]], [[Teaching Approaches/Scientific method|Scientific method]] |
Learning Objectives |
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Subject | [[Resources/Science|Science]] |
Age of students / grade | [[Resources/Primary|Primary]] |
Additional Resources/material needed | See activity outline below - you'll need sets of photos and computers to allow pupils to organise the materials |
Useful information | Using photo organization/slideshow software (Picasa) students organise images that have been provided into various groups or categories. They may also add labels and/or descriptions where appropriate. |
Related ORBIT Wiki Resources | |
Files and resources to view and download |
Extension to Astronomy images: Second activity is more an annotation or show and tell one with a set of astronomy images that studenst could annotate, label (with tablet) or organise
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