Monday, April 6, 2015

Animal Inquiry Immersion

After our earlier sorting and categorizing of animal models and materials during our immersion stage, we were ready to arrange our classroom library to make it easier to find the books that we need.  Room 408 thought it would be easiest to organize the animal books in our classroom library by habitats, so we spent an intense afternoon sorting every animal book we could find.

Of course, by then we couldn't wait to dive into the books and see what we could find in our research.  We spent quiet time researching individually...

We spent time researching and talking with partners...


And of course, we found lots of cool facts to write down...


For our sharing time, we used our ipads to create a class chatroom on the todaysmeet website.

This is a great site to put our reading and writing skills to work for an authentic purpose!  We needed to use our literacy skills to read the prompt, to write so others could read it, and to read what others wrote.

Once we introduced ourselves in the closed chatroom, we shared some of the cool animal facts that we learned.  




Below is a transcript of our class chatroom conversation.  The prompt was:

Please tell us what stuck with you about your animal research today. 
When two lions meet they make a friendly sound
I want wita the yellow
chameleon can eat fly
Or a puffling
Sharks
Hummingbirds can fly in eny dreshin.
Elephants can weigh 11000 pounds
Sharks lose their fins to ster
A baby puffin is called a chick
The Emerald tree boa almost never comes down to the ground! WOW!
Elephant weigh 11,000
Crabs can have a cla bigger than the other.
Sterols have tef
Can rabbit be camfash yes they can
Sharks lose their fins to
Monkeys can live in cities and towns.
Sea Terdels have teeth
Some crabs eyes can be skinny
crabs can have a cla bigger than the other

We also read the book Actual Size by Steve Jenkins.

We started noticing numbers in the animal books we read, just like Steve Jenkins!

Researchers in Room 408 used our classroom rulers to measure out how long and tall some of these animals really are.
This is how tall a giraffe can be!


It takes about four of us to equal one giraffe!

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