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Grade 4 Science

Core Unit: Fossils and Rocks

Unit overview:

This unit combines the Earth Science and Life Science broad fields. Students will acquire an understanding of processes of rock formation. The study of fossils gives students another perspective of geologic time, allowing them to examine evidence of plants and animals which existed on the Earth a long time ago. In the unit, students should be able to gain an understanding of how scientists make inferences from indirect observations.

Related units:

In grade 1 students learn about the planet Earth. The Optional Unit on Classifying Matter may also be of use in studying fossils and rocks.

The Optional Unit in grade 2 dealing with Dinosaurs is directly related to the study of fossils.

In grade 4, the Optional Unit on Vertebrates and Invertebrates is related to the study of fossils.

In grade 5 students investigate Resources. By understanding how rocks are formed, students may begin to appreciate the origins of fossil fuels. The Optional Unit on Machines and Work in grade 5 can also be related to some of the forces occuring in the Earth which cause rock formations to form and to move.

The grade 6 unit on Earthquakes and Volcanoes is very closely related. The dynamic changes taking place within the Earth's crust over long periods of time are responsible for rock formation. The Optional Unit on energy uses is indirectly related, since it can be referenced back to the grade 5 Core Unit dealing with Resources.

Suggested themes:

change, dinosaurs, fossils, rocks, soil, then and now

Factors of scientific literacy which should be emphasized:

Common Essential Learnings foundational objectives which should be emphasized:

Science foundational and learning objectives:

  1. Provide evidence of the Earth's history.
    1. Compare igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks.
    2. Explain how igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks form.
    3. Explain that soil consists primarily of rock which has been broken down.
  2. Describe how fossils are formed.
    1. Examine the relationships between sedimentary rocks and fossils.
    2. Classify fossils.
    3. Produce mold and cast reproductions of a shell or other artifact.
    4. Compare mold and cast reproductions to fossils.
  3. Recognize how inferences are made.
    1. Explain how fossil evidence can be used to make inferences about dinosaurs.
    2. Explain how inferences about the Earth's history are made.

Suggested Activities:

  1. Discuss the formation of both cast and mold fossils. Produce some of each type, using shells, leaves, bones, and other artifacts. (Refer to the grade 2 activity in the Core Unit on Habitats in which students make plaster of Paris casts of animal tracks.)

    Work some modelling clay until it is soft. Shape it around a bone or a sea shell. Gently peel the clay back. The impression formed in the clay represents a mold fossil. Prepare a plaster of Paris mixture by adding plaster of Paris to water until the mixture has the consistency of buttermilk. Pour it into the modelling clay impression and allow it to harden. The artifact formed by the plaster of Paris represents a cast fossil. This can be taken one step further, if desired. Put a thin layer of petroleum jelly on the plaster of Paris impression. Surround the artifact with a cylindrical sheet of construction paper. Pour plaster of Paris mixture into this cylinder. When it hardens, gently separate the two impressions. The first one made represents the cast fossil (it has the same shape as the original organism) and the second one represents the mold fossil.

    Make a cylindrical mold about 10 cm tall and about 4 cm greater in diameter than the maximum width of a shell. Press it into a sand base. (This just keeps things from leaking out the bottom.) Half-fill it with plaster of Paris. Allow the plaster of Paris to set for about three minutes. Then press a clam shell or oyster shell horizontally on the plaster. The lower side of the shell which first makes contact with the plaster should be covered with petroleum jelly. Pour more plaster of Paris into the cylinder, covering the shell. Colour this second layer of plaster of Paris with food colouring, to make the two layers more distinguishable.

    Once the plaster has dried thoroughly overnight, remove the cardboard cylinder. Chip away at the plaster using a hammer and a chisel, working through the plaster in the approximate location where the shell is located. (Wear safety glasses for this.) If there is only a small amount of plaster surrounding the shell, the two halves may break away cleanly. The objective is to have the shell embedded in one piece of the plaster, and the mold remaining in the other half. This is analogous to some of the fossil impressions that are left in sedimentary rock.

    The activity can be related to Arts Education. When a bronze cast of an object is made, a replica made of wax is prepared first, and a plaster mold is then made around the wax. The wax is melted from within the plaster and removed through narrow channels. Molten bronze is poured into the mold. After it cools, the plaster is removed.

    Another way to relate the activity to Arts Education is by explaining that often people who have learned special technical skills can apply them in science for a variety of reasons. The quality of the artifacts produced in this activity, for instance, depends on the techniques used by the students.

    Fossil formation can be more readily understood if students undertake this type of simulation activity. If samples of fossils formed in shale are available, they can be compared to the mold and cast reproductions formed in the plaster of Paris and modelling clay.

    In the activity, the shell (simulating the organism fossilized) was covered by plaster (simulating rock) very quickly. Ask students to consider whether the rock that covered the organism formed over the same period of time as in the activity performed. Try other ways to enable them to relate the activity performed to the actual processes which took place in order to cause the fossil to form.

    Factors: A2, B1, B4, B10, B15, C3, C9, C12, F5, G1

    Objectives: 2.1, 2.3, 2.4, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9

  2. Find out if there are any fossil or petrified wood sites nearby. If they are available and suitable for exploration, arrange to take students to see them.

    Involve students in the planning and preparation for this activity.

    Factors: A2, B1, C3, C12, F3, G1, G3

    Objectives: 2.1, 2.4, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5

    Common Essential Learnings: Independent Learning. Students can discover for themselves the context of knowledge by actively participating in a field trip. First hand evidence extends resource-based learning to actual field experience. This gives students an accurate sampling of activities that historians and palaeontologists undertake when doing on-site information gathering. (Perhaps an expert in the field could be invited to come to speak the students in the class.) It helps to give them an appreciation of science, and promote life-long learning and interest.

  3. Have students conduct some research of available literature and report on the differences between carbonized, agatized, and petrified wood. The three topics could be assigned separately and presented separately. The rest of the class can determine what similarities and differences exist in the three things, based on information presented in the reports.

    Guide students through the various processes needed to complete this assignment. Work with your teacher-librarian, if available, to plan, teach, and evaluate components of this assignment.

    Factors: C1, C12, F3, G2

    Objectives: 2.1, 2.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9

    Common Essential Learnings: Independent Learning, Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking. In this project students would identify and appropriately use a variety of available resources. They would summarize the main information from those resources, re-organize them for the type of presentation they will be doing, and then present their understanding to the class. Students compare the information provided in each report, and assess the information to determine any similarities or differences between each type of fossil. Each phase in this project requires different skills. The activity also helps to point out that in some cases it may be desirable that research be conducted before experimentation actually begins.

  4. Make a fossil quarry for students to search. This activity simulates how fossils are excavated from a palaeontological site. Save some bones from chickens or game hens. (Trying to clean bones to prepare your own specimens is a tedious, difficult task, but students might enjoy the challenge.) For more interesting specimens, disarticulated skeletons can be obtained from scientific supply companies. Cover the cleaned, dry bones with a thin layer of petroleum jelly.

    Assemble a variety of molds, such as tart cups, plastic margarine containers, egg cartons, milk cartons. Pour plaster of Paris into the molds. Wait a few minutes for them to set partially. Place one or more bones in each mold and pour in some more plaster. (You might want to make one or two samples that do not have bones in them.) Allow each to set for several hours. As an alternative, prepare a few "bone fields" by placing a large number of bones into a bigger tray.

    Once all of the plaster molds have been prepared, divide them among the student groups. Students pretend they are palaeontologists at a site. Tell them that it is suspected that there might be fossils in the samples they have. One problem is that there is no way of knowing for sure if there is a fossil in the sample. Another problem is removing the plaster (simulating rock) very carefully, so that if there is a fossil inside, it can be removed without damage.

    Make sure that students wear safety glasses while they chip away at the plaster to discover the "fossil." They can use screwdrivers as chisels, tapping them with small mallets or hammers. Sandpaper can be used to remove the material very close to the specimen. The petroleum jelly placed on the bones when the casts were made makes the removal of the plaster easier.

    If the bones from an entire animal were used to prepare the "fossils", students can try to piece them together to identify the type of animal they might have come from. Silicon caulking or wire can be used to hold the bones together. If a few of the bones are missing (as often happens in actuality), students can predict the shape and size of the missing bones. Modelling clay can be used to make the missing bones, so that the entire skeleton can be pieced together.

    (Note: Instead of using plaster of Paris, wax may be used instead. It is an easier material for students to work with. Heat paraffin wax in a double boiler. For coloured layers of wax, melt a few crayons in the wax. Keep the hot wax away from open flames. Prepare molds prior to the activity, to eliminate any risk of students being near molten wax. Reuse plastic dairy food containers as molds. Partially fill the molds with molten wax. Allow the wax to cool slightly. Once a solid layer has formed on top, gently place the bones on top. Reheat the remaining wax and pour it over the bones to complete the molds. Once the wax hardens, remove the molds. Students can use popsicle (tm) sticks or nails to chisel away at the wax. Ensure that all students take part in the search for bones and in reporting data to the class.)

    It is possible to introduce and incorporate bison "kill sites" into this activity. Interesting finds have been discovered at these sites. Two examples of sites are Besant (between Regina and Swift Current) and the Wanuskewin Heritage Park near Saskatoon. These places would be worth visiting.

    Factors: A2, B1, B4, B15, C1, C3, C8, C9, C12, F2, F3, F5, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 2.3, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4, 5, 7c, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and CreativeThinking. This activity is similar to some of the quarry work actually done by palaeontologists. It provides students with an authentic view of what some scientists and technicians do in order to further knowledge. Students get a realistic presentation of how knowledge is advanced in science. They may also perceive the inaccuracies in the stereotyped portrayal of scientists as men, having grey hair, being slightly demented, wearing white lab coats, working frantically in laboratories on bizarre experiments.

    The activity also reveals that once fossil evidence has been uncovered, the knowledge obtained from that evidence is still tentative and subject to close scrutiny. Different theories can and do develop based on the same fossil record.

  5. Invite local collectors of fossils and petrified wood to show their collections and to discuss the techniques of finding fossils.

    In this activity, students relate their learning in class to a real life experience and see science being pursued within a social context. By seeing an individual engrossed in the pursuit of a science-related activity, students may recognize the potential that science has for nurturing a life- long interest in the pursuit of knowledge.

    Factors: A2, B4, C3, C12, F2, F3, G1

    Objectives: 2.1, 2.2, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3

  6. Visit local museums which contain fossil collections.

    Factors: A2, B4, B15, C1, C3, F2, F3, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 1.2, 2.1, 2.2, 2.4, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3

    Common Essential Learnings: Independent Learning. Museums are wonderful places, designed to be enjoyed and appreciated by all. They provide the school with a valuable resource, making it possible for students to have experiences not easily duplicated within a school. A visit to the local museum can enrich learning and provide an opportunity to explore ways that are available for them to extend their learning on their own, out of school.

  7. Visit, or encourage the students to visit, the Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Drumheller, Alberta Royal Tyrrell Museum Site {1022:35} . The museum, located near the Red Deer River in Alberta's badlands, is one of the finest museums of its kind in the world. It is a fascinating place. Inside, a wide range of information pertaining to natural history is presented. The museum is located in a region where many fossil discoveries have been made.

    An overnight campsite can be obtained at Dinosaur Provincial Park, which is about an hour's drive from the museum. The park has interpretive trails and naturalists who lead tours. The park has some splendid geological formations. Tours can be arranged to visit sites in the park where dinosaur bones are being excavated by scientists, technicians, and university students.

    An excursion such as this, in spite of the distance, is an experience that students will remember long after they complete their formal schooling. Enriching experiences such as these are the most pleasant and memorable ones, retained for a lifetime. Fund raising for a major trip is also a valuable learning experience.

    The class can be involvoed in the planning required for such an important project .

    The Museum of Natural History, the Saskatchewan Science Centre in Regina, and the Museums of Geology and Biology at the University of Saskatchewan are other interesting places to visit. They provide students with a fascinating science excursion, though perhaps less related to this Core Unit as a trip to Drumheller would be.

    Factors: A2, B1, B4, B15, C1, C3, C8, C9, C12, F2, F3, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 1.2, 2.1, 2.2, 2.4, 3.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9

  8. Obtain a variety of rocks and minerals Smithsonian Gem and Mineral Collection {1021:37} . (Kits containing samples are available from several sources.) Prior to the activity, classify the samples as igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic. Arrange the rocks accordingly.

    Have students examine each group of samples. Indicate that the rocks in each group have been classified in a certain way. It is up to them to try to find out how they have been classified. Students should be looking for any distinguishing features of the rocks found in each group which make them distinct from the rocks found in the other two groups. They may come up with a variety of interesting responses when given this problem to solve!

    Consider their responses. None of the groups may be close to determining how the rocks have been grouped. If not, perhaps you could tell them that the rocks are grouped according to how they were formed. Then provide them with another opportunity to develop a hypothesis of how the rocks in each group were formed. Have the class consider each hypothesis, commenting on its strengths and weaknesses.

    Students will indepemdently develop several different classification schemes. Each may have inherent advantages which should be explored.

    Factors: C1, C3, C8, C9, C12, F3, F5, G1

    Objectives: 1.1, 1.2, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7c, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and CreativeThinking. If students were given the task of classifying the rocks themselves, according to how they were formed, they would have to be cognizant of the main distinguishing features of igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks. The whole point of the activity would then vanish! There would be no hypothesizing, and few opportunities for conjecture. Critical thinking would not be promoted. By presenting the rock samples after they have already been classified, students are attempting to determine the rules or criteria that were used in the classification. In this case, this is far more interesting and appealing, since it presents students with a challenge that will engage and stimulate their curiosity.

    This suggests that quite often the way in which a particular lesson is planned and structured is crucial in determining the outcome as well as the ways in which the Common Essential Learnings will be developed.

  9. Minerals can be tested for hardness by having students perform scratch tests on a variety of minerals and arranging them in order of hardness.

    There are variations of this activity. The mineral can be scratched on a porcelain streak plate to examine the colour of the dust produced. Sometimes the dust will be a different colour than the mineral. The rocks and minerals from the previous activity could be used in the same groups in which they were classified, to build upon ideas relating to classification.

    In a scratch test, two minerals can be rubbed against one another to see if one will scratch the other. The one which ends up being scratched is not as hard as the other. This test enables the minerals to be arranged in order of hardness.

    (Minerals are arranged in order of hardness on a scale of 1 to 10. For comparison, a fingernail has a hardness of about 2.5, so if a rock will scratch a fingernail it has to have a hardness which is greater than 2.5. Similarly, a copper penny has a hardness of about 3, while a steel knife blade has a hardness of about 5.5. For reference, the Mohs' Scale of mineral hardness, which can be found in any geology textbook, is shown below.)

    Mohs' Scale of Mineral Hardness

    1 Talc Soft, flakes on fingers
    2 Gypsum Scratched by a fingernail
    3 Calcite Scratched by a penny
    4 Fluorite Scratched by a knife blade
    5 Apatite Barely scratched by a knife blade
    6 Feldspar Can scratch glass
    7 Quartz Can scratch a steel file
    8 Topaz Can scratch quartz
    9 Corundum Can scratch topaz
    10 Diamond Nothing else can scratch it.

    For an extension of this activity, in addition to streak and scratch tests, students could do other tests on the minerals, such as an acid test, by placing the mineral in vinegar to see if it changes. There is computer software available which asks a series of questions about a mineral, including such things as hardness, which, when answered, help identify the mineral. Investigate the possibility of using Computer Assisted Learning software where appropriate.

    Correctly identifying some of the less common minerals can be a challenging task. However, making a correct identification is only of peripheral importance in this activity. Of more importance is that students recognize that problem solving can by systematized into small, incremental procedures, each of which is relatively simple, but when taken together are able to solve a much more complex problem, which would be more difficult to solve otherwise.

    Factors: A2, B10, C1, C3, C9, C12, E5, F2, F3, F5, G2

    Objectives: 1.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9

  10. Test different types of sedimentary rocks for porosity. Determine the mass of sedimentary rock samples. Place the samples in water and let them soak overnight. Remove the rocks from the water, dry their surface, and find their new mass. Calculate the difference in mass before and after soaking. What conclusions can be drawn about the porosity of the different types of sedimentary rocks?

    Factors: B1, B10, C3, C8, C9, C12, F3, F5, G2

    Objectives: 1.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 3, 5, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Numeracy. Measurement and calculations is emphasized in this activity. Once the difference in mass is determined for all the samples, students need to develop a method of comparing the changes of mass in each smaple, since the masses of the rock samples were likely not the same to start with. Ratios can be used to express the proportion of water in the sample after it had been soaked. The amount of water can also be expressed as a percentage of the total mass.

  11. To grow some crystals, prepare hot, saturated solutions of the substances to be crystallized. (Powdered alum, rock or table salt, water softener salt, and sugar can be used. Bluing, found on the shelves with bleaches and detergents in supermarkets, is also good to use, if it is mixed with some ammonia.) To produce a saturated solution, put enough solid into room temperature water so that there is some solid remaining undissolved. Then add some more solid and stir while heating. Place the solutions into small drinking cups. Tie a string to a pencil and allow the string to hang suspended in the cup. The string will provide a support on which the crystals will grow. Allow the solutions to cool slowly, and to remain undisturbed for about a week Growing Crystals {860:168} .

    As a variation of this activity, two identical samples of the hot solutions could be prepared. Cool one rapidly, by placing the cup in an ice-water bath, and allow the other to cool more slowly. Compare the crystals that have formed in each cup.

    Students can examine the crystals with hand magnifiers. They should sketch the shape of the crystals. If the variation with cooling taking place quickly and slowly was done, they should develop a hypothesis to account for any differences observed in the crystal formation.

    Crystals reveal different patterns of symmetry. Some of the more common shapes are cubic, hexagonal, tetragonal, monoclinic, orthorhombic, and triclinic. Locate a diagram and prepare a large poster for the classroom, which will provide students with the information they need to recognize these shapes.

    Examine some rocks to see if crystal patterns are evident within them. There are many good books available on rocks and minerals, with photographs of crystal structures. Refer to the Bibliography for elementary science.

    To relate crystallography to the study of rocks, point out that there are some naturally occurring minerals which have regular, crystalline shapes. The activity serves as a model of how crystals form in nature. However, it might be pointed out that it takes long periods of time for the crystals to form naturally.

    Factors: B1, B10, B15, C3, C8, C9, F5, G1

    Objectives: 1.2, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and Creative Thinking. Students might wonder why some crystals have different shapes. For an enrichment activity, pose this as a question. Allow students to suggest possible explanations.

    There may be students who are not able to understand what this activity has to do with rocks. The connection should be made by showing students rocks which have a crystal structure and asking them to speculate about how the rocks came to be crystalline.

  12. To investigate the formation of sedimentary rock, place some shells, gravel, sand, dust, and soil in a large jar. Add water to cover the contents and put a lid on the jar. Gently shake the jar. Allow it to settle. Students can then observe and record the order of the layers formed in the sediment.

    Factors: B1, B10, B15, C3, C12, F3, F5, G1

    Objectives: 1.2, 1.3, 2.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5, 7c, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and Creative Thinking. Students will conclude how sedimentary rock forms. Several distinct layers form, with the larger, heavier material being at the bottom.

    The location of the shells can be considered to be analogous to fossils being found in distinct layers in sedimentary rock, though not necessarily for the same reason as this model might suggest. This last point is very important. While models serve a variety of uses in science, they do have their limitations. If the model is subjected to close scrutiny, its accuracy in portraying reality may begin to break down. Models are only rough approximations at best. For instance, the build up of sedimentary layers in this model occurs within a few minutes; the build-up of sediment to form rock occurs over a time span of hundreds of thousands of years. The many different events of this longer time frame limit the accuracy of this model.

  13. To investigate the formation of sedimentary rock, half fill a jar 20 cm to 30 cm tall with water. (Preparing an additional specimens for a backup may be a good idea.) Pour in a layer of cement about 4 cm thick. Record what was done and the date on a poster above the jar. Allow the cement to harden for several days, without disturbing the container. Add more water if necessary, to replace any that may be lost due to evaporation. Pour in another layer made up of a mixture of sand and cement. Allow it to settle and harden. The second layer need not be as thick as the first. Again record the date and the ingredients used to make the layer on the poster. Pour in a layer of plaster of Paris and sand, and record the details on the poster. Allow this to harden for several days. Add fresh water and some food colouring. Pour in a mixture of plaster of Paris and sand, again allowing it to harden for several days and recording the date and type of mixture.

    Pour off any remaining water and remove the hardened material. To do this, securely wrap the jar in a cloth and strike it with a hammer to break the glass. (Use gloves and safety glasses to do this. Students should not perform this step, and should not be nearby when the jars are being broken.) Carefully remove the cloth and any small pieces of glass. Have students examine the material which has been formed. They should refer to the poster to determine when and how each of the layers was formed.

    This activity is a good model of how sedimentary rock is formed. Have the students examine a sample of sedimentary rock and compare it to the material which was made in class.

    Factors: A2, B1, B15, C3, C12, F2, F5, G1, G2

    Objectives: 1.2, 3.3

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5, 7c, 8

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and Creative Thinking. This concrete activity will enable students to think critically about an abstract concept such as sedimentary rock formation. During this stage of a child's development, a wide variety of concrete experiences should be explored.

  14. Encourage students to start a rock collection. Conduct an outing to a rock quarry, a hill, or a stream bed to gather a few samples to start the collection. Each student will need a small bag to carry rocks and a notebook. Bring along a small prospector's hammer and shovel to dislodge and chip small samples for the students. (Eye protection should be used when rocks are being chipped with prospector's hammers.) When students obtain a rock sample, they should record a description of the rock and the place where it was found. Emphasize the importance of written records made during the field work. They are crucial to proper scientific investigation. The samples need not be any larger than a chicken egg.

    Continue this activity back in the classroom. Have each student bring a cardboard egg carton to school to store the rocks. The rocks can be examined closely and identified, if possible. Students can classify their rocks in different ways.

    An extension of this activity is to twin the class with a class elsewhere in the world. Correspond back and forth. Send a small parcel to students in the other class, including stories about the trip, drawings of interesting activities or occurences, and samples of the rocks that were collected. Those students will have a collection of rocks found in Western Canada. Perhaps your class will receive samples of rocks that are commonly found elsewhere in the world. If so, have students compare them with the rocks they found. As an added challenge, they can try to identify those rocks.

    For this activity, twinning between classrooms in the northern and southern parts of Saskatchewan would be interesting, since rocks vary so much throughout the province. Students can share information about what they are doing in other subjects as well.

    If the twinning project is undertaken, students may develop an understanding of people from different backgrounds and cultures.

    Factors: C1, C3, C9, C12, F2, F3, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 1.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9

  15. Collect a number of samples of soil, and encourage students to bring in additional samples from home. Examine each soil sample with hand magnifiers. Students should begin to understand that one of the components of soil is crushed rock.

    Consider twinning during this project, to obtain soil samples from students who live in a different parts of the province.

    Factors: A2, B1, B4, C3, C9, C12, F3, G1, G3

    Objectives: 1.1, 1.3, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 3, 4, 5, 8, 9

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and Creative Thinking. Students can begin to wonder about what caused rocks to break up to form soil. Ideas from grade 3 which deal with soil and weathering can be reviewed.

  16. Invite an elder or an archaeologist to demonstrate the traditional art of flint-knapping.

    Customary courtesies should be extended to an Indian elder. Offer transportation if the elder accepts an invitation to visit the classroom. Arrange to provide a gift in exchange for information or service. Emphasis should be placed on sharing. During oral communication, students should ask a question and allow pause time for the question to be reflected upon before an answer is given. Permission to photograph or videotape the demonstration should be obtained beforehand. Other courtesies that are normally offered to any visitor to the school should be extended.

    Factors: A2, C3, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 1.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5

    Common Essential Learnings: Personal and Social Values and Skills, Technological Literacy. This activity supports students in interpreting the social and cultural aspects of science. Because of its characteristic properties, flint has been an important material in the development of technology. Early hunters used flint to make knives, spears, axes, and arrows. It was also used to make fires.

  17. An interesting place to hunt for fossils is in the limestone used in buildings across Saskatchewan. Possibly the best is the Tyndall stone, a limestone quarried at Tyndall, Manitoba. It is used extensively through Saskatchewan as a facing for buildings. The stone is white and machine-cut to a smooth finish. The marks of circular saw blades often can be seen on the stone.

    Have students go on a fossil hunt along the outside wall of a building! Bring along some modelling clay. If you check with the building security people, they may permit you to take impressions of the fossils. Push the clay into the stone to form an impression of the fossil. Remove the clay from the wall. Use an old toothbrush to remove any reside from the building.

    Make plaster impressions of the modelling clay patterns, to obtain an exact replica of the fossil pattern, as it appears in the limestone facing. (This would also be an interesting way to record permanently some information on the cornerstone of a building.) Examine limestone facings on buildings in your community for evidence of fossilization.

    Instead of using modelling clay, have students draw sketches of the impressions on the wall, or use a camera to take photographs.

    Factors: A2, B1, B4, C3, C12, F3, G1, G3

    Objectives: 2.1, 3.1

    Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4, 5

    Common Essential Learnings: Critical and Creative Thinking. The activity enables students to examine ways in which knowledge is extended in science. Unanticipated, but important, discoveries occasionally result through circumstances such as quarrying for gravel, or excavating for a building foundation or road. All it takes is someone with the presence of mind to sense that the remarkable does exist within the ordinary. Some of the most amazing discoveries in science have been stumbled upon in this way. Serendipity has its amusing way of adding to the body of scientific knowledge.

  18. A set of slides for use in class may be developed in a team approach with a teacher who is teaching at the Secondary Level. Science teachers or Industrial Arts teachers may be interested in this project, because of applications they can make to their subject area.

    If you need a set of slides illustrating rock formations, have the secondary teacher assign to a group of students the project of photographing locations with interesting geological features. Similar projects at other grades include topics such as magnets in use, simple machines, corrosion, gardening, farming, and animal habitats.

    Factors: C3, C12, F3, G1, G2, G3

    Objectives: 1.1, 3.2

    Assessment Techniques: 2, 3, 5

    Common Essential Learnings: Personal and Social Values and Skills. In a project like this students work cooperatively with others. In a small rural school, a project like this helps make the older and younger students feel more comfortable with each other. A caring climate can develop, leading to a greater appreciation of the school by students, parents, and other members of the community.

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