BY: VIRGINIA HOEPER, JOANNE LANIER, AMY BLACKBURN The First Week of Kindergarten.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
My Five Senses Created by:.
Advertisements

Year 10 ISA Controlled assessment Week starting March 4 th 2013.
The Five Senses SmellTasteTouchHearingSight.
WHAT ARE THE 5 SENSES? UNIT 2 The five senses are sight, touch, taste, smell, and hear.
Practicing Science: Hands-on Activities
The Five Senses A first grade Web Quest Created By Julie Bonafilia.
The Five Senses Julia Morales.
THE FIVE SENSES Mrs.Whitmore CCSD Standard- (3)2.2 use and identify five senses, matching the appropriate body part to each sense.
SCIENCE 1 st Nine Weeks. What is Science? …. Science is the discovery of everything around us.
WHAT ARE THE 5 SENSES? Learning Objectives Health information. The student knows the basic structures and functions of the human body and how they relate.
Life Skills.  Physical Science  K.1  Observe, manipulate, sort and generate questions about objects and their physical properties. K.1.1 Use all senses.
Tuesday, October 30th AGENDA:
Practicing Science Grade K Topic II: Five Senses and Related Body Parts Using the Five Senses Quarter 1 Division of Academics - Department of Science.
SCIENCE PROCESS SKILLS
Christa Richards Kennesaw State University. Georgia Performance Standards Kindergarten: Physical Science SKP1. Students will describe objects in terms.
Observing Our World Standard (1.1): Makes observations and asks questions.
Krissy Breidinger ITC Summer 1 MENU Sight Hearing Touch Taste Smell Test Yourself.
DO NOW What Is Science?? - In your own words, write down any ideas or thoughts to explain what science is all about! -Take out homework if you did not.
TODAY’S AGENDA 9/16 FTF (Blocks D & A only) 1. Complete models (5 minutes only!). Students who are finished will use this time to practice their brief.
By: Jennifer Stone. Your five senses play an important role in your daily life. Every moment in your life, you use at least one of your five senses.
GETTING DIRTY WITH PLANTS AND SOIL. OBJECTIVES As students actively participate and are involved with scientific processes, they will be excited to learn.
Yolanda Casas Kindergarten The sense of Sight Take one minute to look at these pictures. Cover your eyes. Try to name them.
THE SEEING SEE LITTLE.
Grade 1 Nature of Science Big Idea 1: The Practice of Science Quarter 1 Topic 1 Practicing Science Department of Science.
 Observation is describing an object using your five senses (sight, hearing, touch, smell, & taste) or measurement (numbers).
MY FIVE SENSES Teacher: Carlos García Can you name your five senses? sight hearing smell taste touch.
The nature of science. Scientific knowledge is the product of observation and inference. Observations and Inferences.
Mrs. Anna Ward Qualitative versus Quantitative Observations.
Observation vs. Inference “You can observe a lot just by watching.” - Yogi Berra.
My Senses by MarcelaR. My senses These are my senses.
Aim: What are observations? Using your senses to collect data about the properties of an object or an event. senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch, and.
THE SENSES. SIGHT it's used to see The organ is the eyes It let us know the colors, sizes, shapes and distances Exposing the eyes to the right light Eating.
Exploring the Five Senses Created By: Mrs. Koontz.
GRADE K SCIENCE The 5 Senses.
Are they really necessary? Can you do science without doing observations?
Properties of Matter. Matter  Matter is anything that has volume and mass and takes up space.
THE FIVE SENSES Click on the play button to begin. Click the arrows to move to the next questions and the squares to try again if you answer the question.
Division of Academics - Department of Science
What Do Scientists Do? Written by Mrs. Vlacovsky’s Kindergarten
The 5 Senses Angie Miller Kindergarten
What do you know about the five senses?. Five Senses (Tune: Where is Thumbkin) Five senses, five senses We have them. We have them. Seeing, hearing, touching,
Chapter 3 Writing with Detail. Is it better to write about what you know personally in you own experience, or to write about things that are far removed.
The Five Senses 1 st Grade Science Ms. Donato Click to Continue.
DESCRIPTIVE WRITING. WHAT DOES DESCRIPTIVE WRITING MEAN?  Word choice  Adjectives  Using our five senses.
Our Five Senses Seeing Hearing Touching Tasting Smelling.
Science Foundation The Human Body. We have talked a lot about nature and how nature is science. Did you know that our bodies are science too?
conceited Definition: too proud of himself or herself Sentence: The conceited basketball player thought he was better than others on his team. Question:
FROM TASTING TO DIGESTING SENSE ORGAN – “TONGUE” TONGUE AND ITS TASTE BUDS.
OUR SENSE ORGANS EARS EYES HANDS NOSE TONGUE THE SENSE ORGANS GAME.
DIDACTIC UNIT ``Our senses’’ Jéssica García Zorita
GRADE 1 SCIENCE Topic D: Senses Our Five Senses Seeing Hearing Touching Tasting Smelling.
PART OF SPEECH DEFINITION SYNONYM SENTENCE NAME TEACHER AND DATE1 WORDS OF THE WEEK.
PART OF SPEECH DEFINITION SYNONYM SENTENCE NAME TEACHER AND DATE1 WORDS OF THE WEEK.
Animals including humans
Grade 1 Nature of Science Big Idea 1: The Practice of Science SC. 1. N
The Five Senses Ban Atto.
PowerPoint Credit: Ban Atto
Five Senses By Sylvia Chelebieva.
The Science of Observation Vocabulary
Standard (1.1): Makes observations and asks questions.
Thinking Like a Scientist
Observations and Inferences
Learning about our world
Observations.
My 5 Senses Touch Sight Taste Smell Hear
11 Qualitative v. Quantitative Observations
MY FIVE SENSES Aracely Maldonado.
SENSES.
The Five Senses By: Mandy Eaves.
My Five Senses By Miss O’Rourke .
Presentation transcript:

BY: VIRGINIA HOEPER, JOANNE LANIER, AMY BLACKBURN The First Week of Kindergarten

Monday Have students discuss the definition science. Introduce the idea that scientists rely on the five senses by reading “What is a Scientist?” by Barbara Lemen Have students identify the five senses. Day 1 focuses on sight:  Teacher demos classification by physical appearance.  Groups students based upon: Height Clothing coloring  With a partner student practice grouping buttons based on observable physical characteristics.

Tuesday Day 2 focuses on taste:  At their seats students will taste 2 types of baby food: sweet and sour.  After each tasting the students will be instructed to draw a picture of what they just tasted. i.e. banana, etc.  Students will regroup on the carpet and discuss their drawings making comparisons about sweet and sour items.

Wednesday Touch:  Feel boxes: At stations students stick their hands in boxes and feel different textures and materials. The item in each box is also present outside of the box and the students are to try to match what they feel with what they see.

Thursday Hear:  Have students close their eyes for one minute and listen to the sounds that they hear. Discuss the sounds as a class.  This activity will help students to make connections between what they hear and the objects that cause these sounds.

Friday Smell:  Take students outside to the outdoor classroom and have them investigate the nature around them.  Smell:  Air  Grass  Flowers  Dirt  Trees  Pavement  Rocks