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Teaching Science with Kidlit: NGSS Performance Expectation 1-LS1-1, Part 5

1-LS1-1. Use materials to
design a solution to a human problem by mimicking how plants and/or animals use
their external parts to help them survive, grow,
and meet their needs. [Clarification Statement:
Examples of human problems that can be solved by mimicking plant or animal
solutions could include designing clothing or equipment to protect bicyclists
by mimicking turtle shells, acorn shells, and animal scales; stabilizing
structures by mimicking animal tails and roots on plants; keeping out intruders
by mimicking thorns on branches and animal quills; and, detecting intruders by
mimicking eyes and ears.]

We’ve looked at
this PE in a whole bunch of different ways over the last few weeks, but the trickiest
part of all is the engineering component. Some of you say, “Why are second
graders supposed to look at this content through an engineering lens?” It’s a
god question, and I don’t have a good answer. If I were writing standards, I
wouldn’t have done this, but when given lemons . . .

Here
are a few books that really can help you make lemonade, so to speak:

Iggy Peck, Architect by Andrea Beaty

Winter’s Tail: How One Little Dolphin Learned to Swim Again by Juliana Hatkoff, Isabella Hatkoff, and
Craig Hatkoff

Baby Brains and RoboMom by Simon James
+

How Ben Franklin Stole the Lightning by  Rosalyn Schanzer

Papa’s Mechanical Fish by Candace Flemming

Neo Leo: The Ageless Ideas of Leonardo
da Vinci
by Gene Baretta

Mining the Book

After reading Winter’s Tail, work with r class to create a table that
focuses on the problems
the team faced while designing and
building the prosthesis and how they dealt with each
challenge. The table might look something like this:

 

Problem  

Solution

No tail
joint for attaching the prosthesis

Made a
mold of her tail stub and created a sleeve that fits her body perfectly

Worried
about irritating Winter’s skin

Developed
special silicone gel that made prosthesis comfortable

The
prosthesis must mimic real tail movements

After
several tries, developed a design with two sleeves

Winter
might not like wearing the prosthesis

Trainers
worked with Winter

Then
ask the following questions:

·   How did the people in this book solve
Winter’s problem?
(They designed a prosthetic tail and trained Winter to
use it.)

·   How did Winter’s prosthetic tail mimic, or
work in the same way as, a real dolphin tail?
(It powered Winter through the water
by moving up and down.)

Turn to the
backmatter section entitled “Kevin Carroll and Hanger Prosthetics &
Orthotics.” After paraphrasing the information in this section in
student-friendly language, ask the following questions:

·   Was Kevin the only person from Hanger
Prosthetics & Orthotics involved in solving Winter’s problem?

·   What do you think are the advantages of
working as part of a team?

Now
write the following steps on a chart paper and let your class know that they
represent the steps scientists and engineers usually follow when designing and
building something new:

1.
Identify a Problem

2.
Identify Challenges

3.
Share Ideas

4.
Design

5.
Build

6.
Test

Compare
the steps to the process described in Winter’s
Tail. How are they similar? How are they different?

Activity

Divide
the students into five design teams and assign each team one of the following
design tasks:

  • You need to water a vegetable garden, but the
    garden hose is full of holes and you can’t get to the store to buy a new
    hose.

  • You need to clean up a wad of gum stuck to the
    ceiling before your mom gets home.

  • You need to get a bouncy ball trapped under a
    dresser. 

  • You need to clean up a spill, but you don’t have
    paper towels or a sponge.
  • You
    need to find your way around a dark place without a flashlight, candles, or
    anything else that produced light.

Let
students know that to solve their assigned problem, they will design a gadget that
mimics, or works in the same way as, one of the plant or animal body parts in
the data table below.

Plant/Animal Part and Use
Data Table



























Plant/Animal Part



How It Is Used



Tree
trunk





Carries
water from the tree’s roots to its leaves



Tree
roots



Soaks
up water



Mole
nose



Has
sensors that help a mole avoid getting lost in underground tunnels



Anteater
tongue



Sticks
way out to catch food



Gecko
feet



Can
walk up walls and across ceilings, so a gecko can find food and escape from
enemies


 Ask
students to review the six-step design process one more time. Explain that since
they now know the problem (Step 1) and the challenge (Step 2), each team should
brainstorm to share ideas on small, handheld whiteboards (Step 3) as they develop
a design. Encourage the children to use their imaginations for this activity.
Let them know that that even though the people in Winter’s Tail built and tested their designs, the class’s final
step will be to draw a visual model (picture) of their group’s design (Step 4).


When
the students have finished the activity, invite the groups take turns sharing
their visual models with the class. As the children present, encourage them to explain
their designs and how they mimic the actions of their assigned plant or animal
body parts.

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