The Scoop on Sharks

$9.99

In The Scoop on Sharks you’ll learn about shark diversity, and get a sense of their body sizes and habitats.

Valerie shares tips and strategies for teaching real (and super cool) scientific concepts to young kids.

Description

Do you think all sharks are scary? Well, they aren’t! Sharks come in a wide range of shapes and sizes (over 300 different kinds) and eat  different kinds of food from oysters to tiny plankton. In  The Scoop on Sharks from  Be Naturally Curious  you’ll learn about shark diversity, and get a sense of their body sizes and habitats. You’ll also learn about the special anatomy of sharks and how the jaws of different sharks match the kind of food they eat. Ready to become a museum expert on sharks and build your own stuffed shark? Dive right in!

Mini-course is provided as a 29-page PDF including a Science Tool Kit page to use to collect your badges.

Course Contents for The Scoop on Sharks

  • Story: The Scoop on Sharks.  Join Mrs. Puffer and her class of turtles, crabs, and fish, to hear the students present what they’ve learned.
  • Activity 1: Sharkify: Make a Shark!  Turn a stuffed animal into a shark (temporarily) by adding important anatomical features.
  • Activity 2: Shark Lengths and Locations.  Use string to compare the sizes of different sharks and the included map to see where each kind lives. Use the included Experimental Journal to think more deeply about what you’ve observed.
  • Activity 3: At the Museum: Mix and Match Jaws.  See how the structure of a shark’s jaw matches the jaw’s  function (what it eats). Become a museum expert and share your knowledge of shark jaws with others!
  • Activity 4: Shark Rock-Paper-Scissors Tag.  Who will win: sharks, students, or pollution?
  • Curiosity Connector.  Curious about people who swim with the sharks? Use these links for interesting videos and extra games to test your knowledge.
  • Tools for Your Tool Kit.  See if you can answer all the questions about shark anatomy and diversity to earn Tools for your Science Tool Kit.
  • Glossary.  Learn the scientific terms for describing shark anatomy and behavior.

Materials Needed

Stuffed animal, scissors, sandpaper, black construction paper (plus a few other colors), string or yarn (at least 80 feet!), 2 small balloons, 2 safety pins, measuring tape, colored pencils, markers, or crayons (black, gray, red, green, blue), play dough or similar clay, wide-open space, masking or painters tape, glue (optional).

 

Homeschooling Science? Check out the SEA blog for some great articles to help.

In addition, you might also like:

See with your Ears

Freddie and His Ocean Friends

Amazing Animal Migrations

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