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Museum
Educator-led Programs
Pre & Post Visit Resources
Dynamic
Dinosaurs
Grades Prek-K
Scroll down the page to find items on the menu below or click on a link to jump to an item.
Program
Description and Frameworks
Program
Outline
Key
Terms and Concepts
Classroom Activities
Print and Web Resources
Go
to the Gallery of Dinosaurs and Paleontology page
Click
here for printable version of all resources listed above
Program
Description and Frameworks
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only this section
Imagine what the world was like in the time of the dinosaurs in
this multi-sensory program. What would it feel like to touch a Triceratops?
To stand next to a Stegosaurus? To be a T. rex? Learn more about
your favorite dinos and their prehistoric surroundings.
Location:
Discovery Room and Dinosaur Gallery
Length: 45 minutes
Grades: PreK - K
Massachusetts
Frameworks
Science and Technology/Engineering Strand 2
| 1 |
Recognize
that animals (including humans) and plants are living things
that grow, produce, and need food, air and water. |
| 6 |
Recognize
that people and other animals interact with the environment
through their senses of sight, hearing, touch, small, and taste. |
| 8 |
Identify
the ways in which an organism's habitat provides for its basic
needs (plants require air, water, nutrients, and light; animals
require food, water, air and shelter). |
New
York Standards
Standard 4 Science the Living Environment
| 1 |
Living
things are both similar to and different from each other and
non-living things. |
| 5 |
Organisms
maintain a dynamic equilibrium that sustains life. |
| 6 |
Plants
and animals depend on each other and their physical environment.
|
Program
Outline
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only this section
Introduction
When were the dinosaurs alive? How do we know about them? We will
discuss how people learn about dinosaurs by studying fossils.
Discussion
with Fossils
A hands-on discussion, using pictures, life-size drawings of tracks
and teeth, real fossils and replicas of teeth, skin, eggs, scat
and more! Students are shown images of different dinosaurs and
asked to describe characteristics of each one, focusing on locomotion,
body shape, and specialized adaptations like plates, horns, teeth,
and tracks.
This program
focuses on:
T. rex, Triceratops, Stegosaurus, and Apatosaurus. Students will
also learn what these dinosaurs ate. Students remain active throughout
the discussion, making noises and movements the dinosaurs might
have made, and examining and touching fossils. Students will also
compare their own size to dinosaur size, and compare living and
fossilized plants.
Interactive
Story
Students act out sounds and motions while a Museum Educator tells
the story of an Apatosaurus' day.
Conclusion
In the Dinosaur Gallery, see just how long a T. rex actually was.
Then dig for replicas of dinosaur bones in our simulated excavation
area.
Concepts
Covered
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only this section
- Dinosaurs
are no longer alive today, but were alive long ago. Scientists
learn about dinosaurs by studying fossils. Fossils
are formed over a long period of time. Fossils
are the remains or traces of things that once were alive. Teeth,
claws, bones, leaves, and footprints can all become fossilized.
Dinosaurs
are related to lizards, crocodiles, turtles, and snakes. Like
their reptilian relatives, dinosaurs had dry, scaly skin and laid
eggs. Some dinosaurs
ate meat and some ate plants. Different
dinosaurs had different specialized body parts that helped them
to survive, like Stegosaurus' plates and Triceratops' horns.
- Many dinosaurs
were very large compared to us.
Key
Terms Used During the Program
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only this section
- Dinosaur
a group of land-dwelling reptiles who lived on earth and became
extinct (are no longer alive) long before human beings existed.
- Fossil
the remains or traces of something that was once alive and is
preserved by minerals (the building blocks of rocks).
Pre
& Post Visit Activities
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only this section
Assessment:
Create a Dinosaur Word Chart
Before your visit to the Museum, ask the whole class to brainstorm
what comes to mind when they think about dinosaurs. Write down
and draw key words and ideas. Also encourage students to think
about what questions they might like to ask while they are at
the Museum. Repeat the exercise after your visit to see what has
changed.
Chocolate
Chip Cookie Excavation
Give each student a chocolate chip cookie, and encourage
them to use skewers, toothpicks, and plastic spoons to "excavate"
the chips from their cookie before eating it.
Dino Puppets
Students can make their own dinosaur puppets out of paper bags.
Put one arm inside the bag and use your hand to open and close
your dinosaur's mouth. The bottom of the bag becomes the dinosaur's
face. Use markers, colored paper, and googly eyes to decorate
your bag. Don't forget important dinosaur features like horns
(snow cone cups make great ready-made horns), plates, and teeth.
Discuss with students what kind of teeth a meat-eater would have
(sharp and slightly curved) and what kind of teeth a plant-eater
would have (long, skinny, pencil-like teeth in the front and/or
short, flat teeth [like our molars] on the sides).
Ten Little
Dinosaurs
Read Ten Little Dinosaurs by Pattie Schnetzler aloud to the class.
Then practice counting with this chant to the tune of "Ten Little
Indians.
One little, two little, three little dinosaurs,
Four little, five little, six little dinosaurs,
Seven little, eight little, nine little dinosaurs,
Ten little dinosaur babies.
Make Your
Own Stegosaurus Plates
Make a headband out of strips of paper, with a long strip of paper
attached to the headband so it hangs over the child's head and
down his/her back. Take paper plates, cut them in half, and make
a fold along the straight edge so that there is a lip on each
one. Staple these to the paper strip so it looks like the back
of a Stegosaurus.
Suggested
Web and Print Resources
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only this section
Use the Berkshire Athenaeum’s on-line catalogue to search for these print resources in Central/Western Massachusetts.Print
Materials For Students
Barner, Bob.
Dinosaur Bones. San Francisco: Chronicle Books LLC, 2001.
Bright illustrations will keep your students' interest as the
book tells how scientists study dinosaurs. It also includes highlights
of a few of everyone's favorite dinosaurs.
Mitton, Tony.
Dinosaurumpus. New York: Orchard Books, 2002. Join in with
Triceratops, Stegosaurus and friends as the dinosaurs stir up
a Dinosaurumpus. Students will love the refrain that they can
say along with the reader.
Schnetzler,
Pattie. Ten Little Dinosaurs. Denver: Accord Publishing
Ltd., 1996. The silly escapades of ten different dinosaurs are
described in rhyming verses. This book has a pair of large googly
eyes that add humor to every page.
Touch
and Feel Dinosaur. New York: DK Publishing, Inc., 2002. Touch
T. rex's bumpy skin, Triceratops' smooth horns and Stegosaurus'
rough plates. This is a good book for students to explore individually.
Yolen, Jane.
How Do Dinosaurs Say Good Night? New York: The Blue Sky
Press, 2000. Dinosaurs bring humor to familiar good-night antics
known by every child.
Print
Materials For Educators
Benton, Mike.
Walking with Dinosaurs. New York: DK Publishing, 2000.
Clear explanations of how paleontologists know what they know,
and how the television show Walking with Dinosaurs was created.
Courtenay-Thompson,
Fiona and Mary Lindsday (Ed.) The Visual Dictionary of Dinosaurs
(Eyewitness Visual Dictionaries). New York: Dorling Kindersly
Publishing, Inc., 1993. A good basic introduction to the dinosaur
species and classification, including plenty of images.
Dixon, Dougal
et al. The Macmillan Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs
and Prehistoric Creatures. NY: Macmillan, 1988. This book
contains a huge number of fantastic color illustrations. It depicts
and describes many species of dinosaurs and lesser-known species
of prehistoric reptiles, amphibians, birds, fish, and mammals.
Norell, Mark
A., Eugene S. Gaffney, and Lowell Dingus. Discovering Dinosaurs
In the American Museum of Natural History. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 1995. A very informative book with illustrations of
fossils in the Museum's collection. It addresses the toughest
questions and controversies about dinosaurs, like, were dinosaurs
cold-blooded or warm-blooded and did birds evolve from dinosaurs.
It also describes the techniques used by paleontologists to study
prehistoric life.
Web
Materials for Students
Enchanted
Learning
This is a fun, educational site for audiences as young as preschool.
Visitors will find user-friendly sites about dinosaurs and fossils
along with craft projects and printable coloring pages. Rated
A+ by Education-World.com.
Nature
of New England
Illustrations of dinosaurs discovered in North America.
Zoom
Dinosaurs
This is an on-line hypertext book about dinosaurs. It is designed
for students of all ages and levels of comprehension with information
on dinosaurs, extinction, fossils and more.
Web
Materials for Educators NASA Classroom of the Future
This site offers online references, links, activities, crafts,
and lesson plans.
Fossil
Resource
Two Guys Fossils is a supplier of real fossils, replicas, posters,
and dinosaur models, with many items available at reasonable prices.
Fossils come with information about the species and the location
where the specimen was found.
National
Geographic News
A search of the archived news stories will yield many interesting
articles about new findings in paleontology in a brief, easy-to-understand
format. University
of
California Museum of Paleontology
If you are looking for specific information, using their search
function is very helpful, as this site has many different kinds
of resources to offer, including online exhibits, a site called
Dinobuzz covering exciting new research and controversial topics,
and modules for educators on topics like Understanding Evolution,
Explorations Through Time, and Learning from the Fossil Record.
Smithsonian
National Museum of Natural History's Department of Paleobiology:
Dinosaur Exhibits
This site provides information about specific species of dinosaurs
and includes images of fossils that are in the Museum's collection.
Other features include a Top 10 list debunking common misconceptions,
an article on field work, information about prehistoric life forms
other than dinosaurs, and a step-by-step look at how dinosaur
skeletons are reconstructed for Museum display.
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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