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My Scientific Illustration Journal - Plants
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My Scientific Illustration Journal - Plants

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Grade Level Grades 3-5
Resource Type Activity
Standards Alignment
State-specific
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About This Lesson

This document is a mini science unit that integrates visual and literacy standards as well. This unit was written for third and fourth-grade students, however, can be adapted to fit your classroom of any grade! In this unit, students learn the material from the life science standards on photosynthesis and plant growth. Students create an illustration journal as they become scientific illustrators and document what they have learned. This unit encourages students to go outside and observe and explore nature.

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EdBrAIn uses AI to customize lesson resources for your students’ needs.

My Scientific Illustration Journal.pdf

Activity
February 13, 2020
4.85 MB

Standards

Include text features (e.g., formatting, pictures, graphics) and multimedia when useful to aid comprehension.
Introduce a topic; organize sentences and paragraphs logically, using an organizational form that suits the topic.
Use text features (e.g., pictures, graphics) when useful to aid comprehension.
Develop the topic with facts and details.
Use appropriate language, vocabulary, and sentence variety to convey meaning; for effect; and to support a tone and formality appropriate to the topic and audience.
Provide an introductory paragraph with a clear main idea.
Observe, analyze, and interpret how offspring are very much, but not exactly, like their parents or one another. Describe how these differences in physical characteristics among individuals in a population may be advantageous for survival and reproduction.
Analyzes and interprets historical materials from a variety of perspectives in Washington State or world history.
Biological classifications are based on how organisms are related. Organisms are classified into a hierarchy of groups and subgroups based on similarities in development and DNA sequences which reflect their evolutionary relationships. Species is the most fundamental unit of classification.

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