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Digital Biology - All About Your Environment


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Keywords: Flip Video, ethnobiology, research, plants, animals, field guides,
Subject(s): Video, Technology, Geography, Life Science, Writing, Reading, Earth Science, Information Skills, Biology, Photography, English/Language Arts, Spelling, Grammar, Science, Journalism, Speech and Language
Grades K through 5
NETS-S Standard:
  • Creativity and Innovation
  • Communication and Collaboration
  • Research and Information Fluency
  • Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making
  • Digital Citizenship
  • Technology Operations and Concepts
View Full Text of Standards
School: Barbara B. Robey Elementary School, Litchfield Park, AZ
Planned By: Amanda Hughens
Original Author: Amanda Hughens, Litchfield Park
Step 1: Choose Your Organism

Students need to choose a plant or animal to research. Begin by introducing unique characteristics of your local environment. Have the class research the following:

What is the local weather like? Is it hot, cold, dry, wet?
What type of biome is it? Desert, ocean, mountains, plains
What challenges do plants or animals have to overcome to survive in the environment?
What adaptations or traits do those organisms have to help them survive?

Have the students explore and observe the environment - this can be done through nature walks, trips to parks, zoos, or gardens that highlight local species (take your Flip along with you for footage you may use later).

Have students select a plant or animal to research.

Step 2: Research & Pre-production

Use information literacy skills to help the students locate the organism's range, traits, adaptations, and ethnobiology (how humans interact with the species). Possible research sources should come from a variety of areas including print, electronic, interviews with experts, first hand observation, etc. Whenever possible use the Flip cameras to document the research. Create a storyboard that includes the following components:

- Introduction to the species (lifespan, physical traits, appearance, diet)
- Habitat - Range and other specific living area needs
- Explanation of adaptions (including anatomic structure, reproduction, defenses from other organisms, etc)
- Ethnobiology - How humans interact with the species (do we eat it, use its parts for other reasons, avoid it, include it in our culture, etc)

Step 3: Production

Use the Flip camera to film the various components in the storyboard. Use a video editing program if desired to "polish" the final project.

Step 4: Publishing

This is one of the most important steps. Find a way to publish their work whether it be online through a class webpage or a program such as TeacherTube, or even locally by burning a copy of the video or showing it to the class or school. Allow your students to be broadcast so that they can share their new found knowledge with their classmates, their families, and perhaps our entire global community.
Comments
I have done similar projects with students from pre-k through high school. It can be scaled up or down in both the academic content and the publishing based on skills, available equipment, or school policies. No matter what this provides a host of academic achievements combined with motivation and excitement which are the most important aspects to make the learning "stick".
Cross-Curriculum Ideas
Science, writing, information literacy, speaking, listening, technology,
Follow-Up
Red Carpet Night to introduce the Videos to the "public", using the videos to teach others in the class, school, world, match up with a school in a different environment to share information
Materials: Flip Video, Wildlife, Point and Shoot, Portable, Microscopes, Tripods, CDs and DVDs, Headsets, Video Tools
Other Items: 10 Headsets with microphones, $25 each, total of $250.00
10 Tripods, $35 each, total of $350.00
1 Projector, $500 each, total of $500.00
10 Digital still cameras, $100 each, total of $1000.00