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¿Qué comen las plantas?
Web of Life Unit | Lesson 2 of 7

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¿Qué comen las plantas?

Web of Life Unit | Lesson 2 of 7
Lesson narration:
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CONVERSEMOS (1 de 2):

Esos 4 millones de libras de madera vienen de algún lugar. ¿Qué crees que comen las plantas? ¿Estás seguro o segura que comen algo?

CONVERSEMOS (2 de 2):

¿Cómo podrías averiguarlo?

CONVERSEMOS:

Haz una predicción. Si el árbol se ha estado comiendo la tierra, ¿qué crees que observaría el científico?

¿Por qué?

Weight of sapling and soil

CONVERSEMOS:

¿Crees que el aire tiene peso?




¿Qué podrías hacer para averiguarlo? ¿Se te ocurre algún experimento en el que podrías pesar el aire?

Paso
01/16
Platiquen sobre esta pregunta en grupo.
Paso
02/16
A nosotros se nos ocurrió esto.
Paso
03/16
Encuentra un compañero o una compañera con quien trabajar.
Decidan quién será el Maestro de los Globos y quien será el
Maestro de las Medidas.
Paso
04/16
Obtén estos materiales. Cada grupo necesita estas cosas.
Paso
05/16
Maestro de los globos: estira el globo. Después, ínflalo. No lo
amarres, solo detenlo para que no se salga el aire.
Paso
06/16
Platiquen sobre sus respuestas a estas preguntas.
Paso
07/16
Maestro de los globos: sujeta el globo. Maestro de las medidas:
pon el mecate alrededor del globo. Las puntas deben de quedar
casi tocándose.
Paso
08/16
Maestro de los globos: tuerce la punta del globo de esta forma
y dóblalo así. Luego, Maestro de las medidas: ponle un clip.
Paso
09/16
Ahora, vas a colgar los globos en la balanza, así.
Paso
10/16
Después que todos los globos estén en la balanza, fíjate que
la regla todavía esté nivelada.
Paso
11/16
Contesta las preguntas número uno y dos en tu hoja de trabajo.
Paso
12/16
Platiquen sobre sus respuestas a estas preguntas en su grupo.
¿Hay algún desacuerdo sobre lo que sucederá?
Paso
13/16
Cierra el clip para mantener todo en su lugar.
Paso
14/16
Abre el clip, y ponlo en la punta del globo. Desenrolla la parte
torcida del globo y hasta que se escuche que se está saliendo el aire.
Paso
15/16
¿Cómo te fue? Si algo te salió mal, está bien. Regresa al último
paso y vuelve a intentarlo usando tus globos extras.
Paso
16/16
Cuando se desinflen los globos de un lado, contesta la pregunta
número tres en tu hoja y conversemos.
Slide Image
Slide Image

suelo


1 de 12

pedacitos de piedras y de otros materiales que cubren la superficie de la Tierra

oxígeno


2 de 12

un tipo de gas que los animales respiran y que las plantas liberan

dióxido de carbono


3 de 12

un tipo de gas que las plantas ingieren y que los animales liberan al respirar
Slide Image

estomas


4 de 12

aberturas pequeñas en las hojas de las plantas por las que entra el dióxido de carbono y sale el oxígeno
Slide Image

productor


5 de 12

un ser vivo que produce su propia comida
Slide Image

cadena alimenticia


6 de 12

la manera en la que los seres vivientes están conectados en base a lo que comen y quién se los come
Slide Image

materia


7 de 12

lo que constituye cualquier objeto; sabemos que está ahí porque ocupa espacio
Slide Image

flujo de la materia


8 de 12

el movimiento de material a través de un ecosistema, por ejemplo, a través de cadenas y redes alimenticias
Slide Image

investigar


9 de 12

averiguar la respuesta a una pregunta o entender cómo funciona algo
Slide Image

medir


10 de 12

describir algo usando números que después se pueden comparar
Slide Image

balanza


11 de 12

una herramienta que pesa dos objetos y los compara para ver cuál es el más pesado
Slide Image

experimento


12 de 12

una prueba que se usa para descubrir más información sobre una pregunta
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Exploration
bacon by By warszawianka
vegetables on a plate by Mila Supinskaya
bacon strips by Sergiy Kuzmin
pigs by yevgeniy11
corn by Vaclav Volrab
burger by fotocrisis
cow by DnD-Production.com
grass by antpkr
chicken legs by Tsekhmister
chicken by Tsekhmister
meal by anakondasp
chickens roaming grass by FiledIMAGE
beetle by Ryan Hodnett
pan of general sherman by David Gair
general sherman by NAParish , used under CC BY-SA
elephant by Kletr
acorn in hand by Colin Browne , used under CC BY-SA
acorn by Petr Salinger
girl standing on scale by Alan Poulson Photography
farmer/tree/field by Feylite
man holding dirt by Photo Africa
Jan von Helmont by Art Serving Science , used under Public Domain
flower pot by Vitaly Korovin
dirt by grafvision
sapling by Protasov AN
watering can by Vitaly Korovin
leaves by vovan
water by Fisher Photostudio
Female Scientists Using Microscopes In Laboratory by Monkey Business Images
Plant Stomata by D. Kucharski K. Kucharska
wilted pot plant by OhEngine
empty hand green background by Chutima Chaochaiya
woman in greenhouse by Dragon Images
general sherman by Songquan Deng
redwood trunk by Galyna Andrushko
Wood circle texture slice background by Sergieiev
corn growing by bergamont
chemistry by Africa Studio
Activity
trees forest by BMJ
basketball by Lightspring
beach ball by Olga Popova
balloon by Vladimir Skopcev
pinched hand by photka
weighing scales by EdBockStock
gold scales by graphixmania
balloons by Luis Santos
trees with faces by Kyle Pearce , used under CC BY-SA
Other
Unit: empty plate on wood background by koosen

Featured Reviews

“The kids were able to see a difficult concept to understand in action. AND it was very easy to implement.”
“Students enjoyed the balloon activity that proved that air has weight, but I think they were more WOWED by the fact that a tree takes in that much air per/day/year/life!! Well presented new information!”
“The students really enjoyed the hands-on activity of weighing air. It was a great connection to understanding where the weight of tree comes from. ”
“Everything was very organized and the lesson focus was taught in such a fun way. My students thoroughly enjoyed it!”
“They loved learning about the Sequoia trees and making the connection between this and that air does weigh something. ”
“I was surprised that kids really thought that air weighed nothing. The looks on their face when I let the air out of the balloons was priceless.”
“The kids enjoyed blowing up the ballons and using the balance scale. They had great team work and will remember that air has weight.”
“Love showing kids General Sherman and the story of how scientists mathematically proved that plants do not eat soil”
“Great investigation. Simple to put together, and students could really see that air does weigh something! Thanks.”
“The kids were shocked to see air weighed something. The looks of wonder and amazement were everything I science teacher hopes for! Thank you!!!”
“The kids loved the balloons and understood why the balance worked to show that the air had weight. I teach special education and was glad to see that they understood the mystery.”
“Students went from thinking that air has weight because they have read or heard that, to KNOWING it, because their experiment proved it beyond a doubt. Taking it back full circle to trees having weight partly because the air they take in has weight was a lightbulb moment for them. Very fun lesson!”
“The kids LOVE the experiments! The lessons are super fun, engaging, and interactive - they make me feel like a great science teacher. Students commented what a "fun" week it was with all the science. It's really easy for me to prepare, utilize, and teach. Thank you!”
“The discussion around,"Does air have weight?" was phenomenal and has had led to some other connected investigations.”
“Weighting air was tricky to execute, but worth it. The discussions during the exploration part were very animated. The students were very engaged. ”
“Slowly watching the air hiss out of the balloon, the balance scale momentarily swung down on the deflated side, and the students thought they were right (deflated balloons would be heavier was their hypothesis) so when the balance scale swung in the other direction, there were cheers, sighs, and so much engagement!”
“The "aha" moments in this one were great. It was a surprise to me to learn that taking in air could account for so much of the growth of trees as well. The balloon activity gave a fantastic visual. Please please please can you create a program for middle schoolers? We are going to be so sad to not have Mystery Science next year.”
“Learning that air has weight!”
“Kids were right into the experiment with the balloons. Still discussing it independently the next morning.”
“The children learned a lot and enjoyed the mystery. THe experiment actually worked. I have tried weighing air a number of times and it always failed. I guess the solution was to blow the balloons to the maximum...many popped in the process! ”
“Kids were in awe of General Sherman and paid close attention to the web of life. WE enjoyed playing the game - and will definitely do it again next year.”
“Students were really engaged in something they had never thought through before. Loved the joke at the end :)”
“The visual aids really help students understand the procedures.”
“The kids were glued to the Exploration Video. They loved the build up to letting the air out of one side of the balloon. It was fun to see how their hypotheses changed over the course of the lesson!”
“I read the activity first and din't want to do it, but after I watched the video--oh yes, it was cool!”
“The weight of air experiment was fantastic!”
“Loved the video. The experiment was easy too!”
“Loved the way the slides were setup and the easy explanations of the narrator. Students were engage from the beginning of mystery!”
Lesson narration:

Grade 5

Ecosystems & The Food Web

Matter & Plant Growth

5-LS1-1, 5-LS2-1

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students discover the surprising nutrient which accounts for most of a plant's food. In the activity, Weighing Air, students blow up balloons and place them on both sides of a large balance scale constructed from a yardstick. Then, students let the air out of all the balloons on one side of the balance to directly observe that air has weight.
Preview activity

Exploration

21 mins

Wrap-Up

4 mins

Grade 5

Ecosystems & The Food Web

Matter & Plant Growth

5-LS1-1, 5-LS2-1

Slow internet or video problems?
 
Ecosystems Lesson 2: What do plants eat?

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