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How many different kinds of animals are there?
Animal Adventures Unit | Lesson 1 of 4

How many different kinds of animals are there?

Animal Adventures Unit | Lesson 1 of 4
Lesson narration:
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DISCUSS:

How could you convince your friends that your animal was real?

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DISCUSS (1 of 2):

What kind of animal do you think it is?

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DISCUSS (2 of 2):

Here’s one person’s drawing of the animal. (It doesn’t look quite like the real animal, but it might give you some ideas.) Does this give you any new ideas about what the animal was?

Camelopard Drawing
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DISCUSS:

Look at these 6 animals. How many different ways can you group them? Why would you put certain animals together?

Six Animals
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DISCUSS (1 of 2):

What are some characteristics of this animal, other than its colors or patterns?

Flamingo

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DISCUSS (2 of 2):

What are some characteristics of this animal, other than its colors or patterns?

Fish

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Anchor Connection Discuss. Look at the "Wonder" column of your class See-Think-Wonder chart. Have any questions been answered by the past lesson?
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Step
01/15
If you want to put animals into groups like scientists do, you need to ask at least three questions. Study these questions, then discuss. What does each drawing mean?
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Step
02/15
This box describes one type of animal. Can you figure out what type it is?
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Step
03/15
Check your answer on the first box. Then, go on to the next one.
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Step
04/15
Check your answer. Then, go on to the next one.
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Step
05/15
Check your answer. Then, go on to the next one.
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Step
06/15
Check your answer.
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Step
07/15
The scientists in Bracken Cave sent us an email. Let’s read it!
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Step
08/15
Read the email from the scientists. Then, Think-Pair-Share. Does this email tell us which type of animal lives in Bracken Cave?
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Step
09/15
Discuss. Is the animal in Bracken Cave a bird, mammal, reptile, or invertebrate? How do you know?
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Step
10/15
Now we know it is a small mammal in the cave. But it could be almost any small mammal.
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Step
11/15
Read what these students thought, then discuss. Does their original
guess fit with what the scientists told us? Why or why not?
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Step
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Look back at your own Drawing Number 1. Then discuss. Does your
original guess match what the scientists told us? Why or why not?
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Step
13/15
When scientists learn new things, they update what they think. You
might need to do the same thing now that you have learned new
things.
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Step
14/15
If you are going to make a second drawing, get a new sheet. Write
your name. Write that this is Drawing Number 2. Then write and draw
which small mammal you think lives in the cave.
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Step
15/15
When you are done, keep your second drawing and your first. Put
them both back on a bulletin board or somewhere else safe.
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🎉 That’s it for this lesson! How did it go?
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Activity: Kinds-of-Animals Bulletin Board

Set up the bulletin board by dividing it into 5 blocks, labeling one for each group of animals:

  • Mammals (bones, hair/fur, live birth)
  • Birds (bones, feathers, lays eggs)
  • Reptiles (bones, scales, lays eggs)
  • Boneless Animals (no bones, no fur/feathers, lays eggs)
  • ?? Where do these belong??

If you like, have students color these full-page animal cards . Go to the next slide for how to use the bulletin board as a class activity.

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Activity: Kinds-of-Animals Bulletin Board

Use the bulletin board to review and expand students' knowledge of animal groups.

1) Put animal cards into the appropriate blocks. (You can use cards from the activity or full-page animal cards .

2) Challenge students to suggest other animals, then write (or draw) them on 3 x 5 cards. Discuss where each animal belongs, then put the card in that group.

3) If students can't agree, put that animal in the “??” block. Ask students how they could figure out where it belongs. (Scientists sometimes disagree on how to classify animals, too.)

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Bulletin Board Activity Extension: More Challenge Cards

Here's a great addition to your bulletin board.

  • Print out more challenge cards for each student. (Each printout includes two sets of three cards.)
  • Use these step-by-step instructions to figure out where each of these animals belongs. Be warned: these animals are really challenging. Expect a lot of discussion!
  • Put each card in the appropriate group on your bulletin board.
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animal


1 of 11

a living thing that needs to eat other living things
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characteristic


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something you can observe about an object, place, or living thing
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birth


3 of 11

when animals have babies
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mammal


4 of 11

a type of animal that has hair or fur and usually does not lay eggs
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bird


5 of 11

a type of animal that has feathers and lays eggs
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reptile


6 of 11

a type of animal that has scales and lays eggs
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hatch


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to come out of an egg
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bones


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the hard parts inside many animals that help give their bodies shape
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vertebrate


9 of 11

a type of animal that has bones
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invertebrate


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a type of animal that does not have bones
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pattern


11 of 11

something that happens again and again and again in a way that can be predicted
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Arabian camel by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: konradrza
DSLR camera by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Marcio Jose Bastos Silva
Zoo entrance by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Trong Nguyen
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giraffe on tv screen by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: gmstockstudio
girl presenting in front of class by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Monkey Business Images
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notebook in hands by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Leklek
pair of giraffes by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Vaclav Volrab
red kangaroo by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Bradley Blackburn
single giraffe by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: jaroslava v
walking leopard by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Iakov Filimonov
woman looking at map by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: topten22photo
woman looking with Binoculars in the forest by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: topten22photo
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Lesson narration:

Grade 2

Animal Biodiversity

Biodiversity & Classification

2-LS4-1

20321 reviews

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students examine how scientists organize animals into groups based on their characteristics. In the activity, Animals Sorting Game, students study animal traits and use these traits to sort animal cards into mammals, birds, reptiles, and invertebrates. Students are then challenged to make decisions about animals that don’t fall neatly into any of those categories.
Preview activity

Exploration

21 mins

Grade 2

Animal Biodiversity

Biodiversity & Classification

2-LS4-1

20321 reviews
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