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IntroductionThis lesson was developed by SUNY Cortland students in EDU 314 and EDU 373. After reading the book Wolf Journal by Brian A. Connolly, we decided to create a lesson on it. This lesson is based around information from chapters 12 through 16 in Wolf Journal. The lesson is intended to guide the students on their own tracking adventure like ones they read about in the book. Students will be able to learn what real animal tracks look like and use this information to go tracking. Learners This lesson is designed for sixth grade students with a language arts and science base. This lesson could easily be extended to seventh graders and possibly to fifth graders. More or less teacher help may be needed depending upon the grade. Before starting the lesson, students will have needed to read Wolf Journal through chapter16. Students will need the knowledge in the book to understand how animals can be tracked. They will also need to understand the value of tracking and how it can help humans. This lesson could probably be conducted without reading the book but the students would need to know these basic facts about animal tracking. Standards
The Living Environment (intermediate) Students will understand and apply scientific concepts, principles, and theories pertaining to the physical setting and living environment and recognize the historical development of ideas in science. 5. Organisms maintain a dynamic equilibrium that sustains
life. 6. Plants and animals depend on each other and their physical environment. 7. Human decisions and activities have had a profound impact
on the physical and living environment. English Language Arts Standards Standard 1 - Intermediate Standard 2 – Intermediate This lesson is intended to be completed after the students have read chapters 12 through 16 of Wolf Journal by Brian A. Connolly. The lesson should take about one hour period. The lesson involves both English language arts with reading and writing as well as Science involved in the knowledge of wolves and tracking them and other animals. The students will be divided into groups of three or four. The students will perform their own research and then track different animals. The teacher needs to be prepared to set up a “trail” for the students to use and track the animals. This could be done in a classroom, hallway, or gym depending on the space that is available.
Resources Needed
This lesson will require: -A copy of Wolf Journal by Brian A. Connolly for each student -Internet access for each group -Pictures of different animals, plants, and animal tracks -A large enough space for the trail to be made One teacher is fine for the lesson. The teacher may want to confer with the physical education teacher or the principal to make use of a gym space or hallway. EvaluationAfter the lesson has been completed, the teacher will look at the information the students have found on each animal and the questions they have completed about relating their tracking experience to the book. The students will show their understanding of how humans are able to track animals and what importance tracking has. They will use written statements to show that they have read the chapters assigned and understand how they relate to lesson. Each student will receive a copy of the rubric. ConclusionAfter completing this lesson, the students will better understand how animals leave signs that can be tracked by humans. They will be able to make a connection to the book and in turn better relate to the information in the book. The students better understand how animals, humans, and the environment are all related. http://www.bear-tracker.com/guide.html http://www.princeton.edu/~oa/nature/tracking.shtml CreditsCreated by students in EDU 375 and EDU 314 Based on Wolf Journal by Brian A. Connolly Created from a template on The WebQuest Page |