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Self-guiding in the Galleries
Pre & Post Visit Resources

In the Dark


Grades 6-8


Pre Visit Questionnaire
Scroll down the page to find items on the menu below or click on a link to jump to an item.


During your visit

click here for printable version

Scavenger Hunt
Learn More About In the Dark

Before and After Your Visit
click here for printable version

Important Terms and Concepts
Activities
Print and Web Resources



In the Dark Scavenger Hunt


In the Dark Scavenger Hunt
This is a great activity to do during your visit to the Museum, but you should print out and copy the worksheets ahead of time and bring them with you on your visit. During your time self-guiding through In the Dark, students can search through the exhibit to find the animals in this scavenger hunt. They can circle each animal as they find them. Can you find any clues to tell you how these animals survive in the dark? Click here for hunt worksheet.


Learn More About In the Dark

Important Terms and Concepts
You may want to familiarize your students with the following terms before your visit to the museum
Adaptation




a feature or behavior that helps a living thing to survive in its habitat.
Echolocation

the ability of some animals like bats and dolphins to give off high-pitched sounds that bounce off of objects in the area and return to the animal, who can then figure out the size, shape, and location of the objects from this "echo;" bats use echolocation to navigate (find their way) and to find prey (food).


Ecologist

a scientist who studies the relationships between organisms and their environment (both the physical environment and the other living things around them).


Ecosystem

all the living and non-living things in a given area.

 

Habitat

the place where an organism lives naturally.

 

Nocturnal

a word to describe an animal that is active at night.

 

Organism

a living thing.

 

Population

the number of organisms of a given species living in a given area.

 

Species

a distinct type of organism that can interbreed with others of the same species.

 

 


Concepts
  • Some animals live in places like forests and deserts, and are active at night. Others live in places like caves, underground, and the deep sea, that are dark all of the time.

  • Many animals are active in the dark (nocturnal), some are active during daylight hours (diurnal),and others are active mostly at dawn and dusk (crepuscular).

  • Animals have different ways of surviving in the dark. Some have well-developed senses of smell, hearing, or touch. Some have specialized physical features, and some can do things that humans can't do (like bat echolocation).

  • Many different types of organisms, from bacteria to bobcats, have adaptations for the dark
    .
  • Over time, organisms can evolve new adaptations as environmental conditions change.

Activities: Before and After Your Visit



Access Excellence: Experience Echolocation
This activity requires good weather outdoors and some setup, but it does provide a memorable way for students to experience a simulation of echolocation using supersoakers. The lesson plan is clearly written and includes specific goals for student measurements, data collection, and analysis, including mathematic calculations.

American Museum of Natural History: Hall of Ocean Life, Ecosystem Learning Resources
This is a menu page with links to many excellent activities for students to do online. "Let's Talk with Cindy Lee Van Dover about the Ecology of Deep Sea Vents" and "Is It Alive?" (a game which asks you to determine which parts of an ocean floor ecosystem are alive), are both activities focusing on the deep sea that area appropriate for middle school. "Video: Life at the Deep Sea Vents" is another useful resource.

Biomimicry
Many inventions and technological developments have been inspired by nature, including those that assist humans in the dark, like sonar and radar. Ask students to select one interesting natural adaptation for the dark that they learned about during the Museum visit (or in their own research), and to use it as the inspiration for their own invention. To share their idea, they should create an advertisement for their product with an image, a name, and a price. Ask students to consider: to what audience would they market their invention?

Science Fiction Story Board
Imagine that you would like to make a movie about an animal that evolves over time. The first step would be to create a story board to "pitch" your idea to a film company. Ask students to select a real animal that is well-adapted to being active in daylight and imagine how it might evolve over time if its environment became very dark. Create a series of three drawings, with the first showing the original animal, the second after 10,000 years, and the third after 50,000 years. Write 2 - 3 sentences for each drawing explaining how the animal changes. Then write an additional paragraph explaining why those changes occurred-- why are they beneficial adaptations for the dark?




Suggested Web and Print Resources

All of these resources, except those noted with *, are available through the Central/Western Massachusetts (C/W MARS) library system. Use the Berkshire Athenaeum’s on-line catalogue , to search for these print resources in Western Massachusetts.


Print and Web Materials For Students

American Museum of Natural History: Hall of Ocean Life, Ecosystem Learning Resources
This is a menu page with links to many excellent activities for students to do online. "Holy Smokes" provides information on deep sea vents in a fun and accessible way for upper elementary grades. "Video Gallery: Life at the Deep Sea Vents" is also a useful resource.

BioMEDIA: How Do Animals See in the Dark?
This visually striking page focuses on the vision systems of animals at night and during the day. A clear and concise source of important background information and good visual aids.

Burnie, David and Don E. Wilson (Editors). Animal. NY: Dorling Kindersley, 2001. This Smithsonian Institution book includes sections on mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fishes and invertebrates. The introduction covers essential topics like evolution and classification and is followed by a section on world habitats. It also includes a glossary of terms. An excellent reference resource for teachers and students that profiles over 2,000 species of animals with vivid color photos; maps locating habitat, biome, and population status; and concise information about behaviors, adaptations, social units and ranges.

Lawlor, Elizabeth P. and Pat Archer (Illus.). Discover Nature at Sundown: Things to Do and Things to Know. PA: Stackpole Books, 1995. A black-and-white guide with activities, experiments, and information useful for nature study of plants and animals in the evening.

* Nightlife: Creatures of the Deep. New England Aquarium and Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute (Dir.) and Peter Benchley (Nar.). New England Aquarium and Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute, 2001. This video documents bioluminescent animals of the ocean such as anglerfish, giant tubeworms, and six-gilled sharks through underwater footage. To order this video you may contact New England Aquarium, Conservation Department, Central Wharf Boston, MA 02110-3399, (617) 973-5288, wowfilms@neaq.org.

Oakland Museum, CA: California Underground Online Exhibit
On this page, students can see pictures of different species of bats and listen to their echolocation patterns (modified so that they can be heard by the human ear). By selecting different items on the left menu bar, students can also explore other online cave exhibits, which include photos and slide shows explaining different types of cave formations, unique types of cave life to be found in different regions of a cave, and a calculator to find out how many insects you would need to eat if you were a bat.

Virtual Cave Site
Information on different types of caves, including diagrams and photos.


Web and Print Materials For Educators

Animal Diversity Web: Starnosed Mole
Clear, well-organized, comprehensive information on this unusual species.

Applehof, Mary. Worms Eat My Garbage. MI: Flower Press, 1997. A guide to starting and maintaining a worm composting system in your classroom.

BioMEDIA: How Do Animals See in the Dark?
This visually striking page focuses on the vision systems of animals at night and during the day. A clear and concise source of important background information and good visual aids.

Burnie, David and Don E. Wilson (Editors). Animal. NY: Dorling Kindersley, 2001. This Smithsonian Institution book includes sections on mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fishes and invertebrates. The introduction covers essential topics like evolution and classification and is followed by a section on world habitats. It also includes a glossary of terms. An excellent reference resource for teachers and students that profiles over 2,000 species of animals with vivid color photos; maps locating habitat, biome, and population status; and concise information about behaviors, adaptations, social units and ranges.

Eastern Kentucky University Ornithology Course Syllabus: Nervous System: Brain and Special Senses
Extensive information with very helpful graphics, photos and links. Covers the structure and function of the avian eye, night vision, echolocation, and more.

How Stuff Works: How Bats Work
A very informative article about bats including topics like flight, echolocation, roosting, and their place in the ecosystem.

Lawlor, Elizabeth P. and Pat Archer (Illus.). Discover Nature at Sundown: Things to Do and Things to Know. PA: Stackpole Books, 1995. A black-and-white guide with activities, experiments, and information useful for the study of plants and animals in the evening.

MSNBC: Secret Formula for a Firefly's Glow
An article describing how researchers figured out the mechanism behind firefly bioluminescence. For even more information on this research, visit www.ase.tufts.edu/biology/Firefly/.

Oakland Museum, CA: California Underground Online Exhibit
On this page, students can see pictures of different species of bats and listen to their echolocation patterns (modified so that they can be heard by the human ear). By selecting different items on the left menu bar, students can also explore other online cave exhibits, which include photos and slide shows explaining different types of cave formations, unique types of cave life to be found in different regions of a cave, and a calculator to find out how many insects you would need to eat if you were a bat.

Ocean Atlas
Go to the home page of this UN and NOAA maintained web site, and search for "deep sea ecosystems" to find information, images, news stories and more.

Olympic National Forest: Underground Ecosystems
A concise description of the underground ecosystem of the forest floor and why it is important.

Science Daily.com
Science Daily's searchable archives are a great resource for research.

Science News Online: Snake Pits, Viper Heat Sensors Locate Cool Spots
Up-to-date information describing new scientific experiments and how they revealed a previously unknown function of the viper's pits.

University of Nebraska, Cooperative Extension: Build a Bat House
A simple design for a bat house that students could make in technology class.

Virtual Cave Site
Information on different types of caves, including diagrams and photos.


The Institute of Museum and Library Services, an independent Federal grant- making agency dedicated to creating and sustaining a nation of learners by helping libraries and museums serve their communities supports the Berkshire Museum.

 

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