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Self-guiding
in the Galleries
Pre-During-Post Visit Resources
Gallery
of Dinosaurs and Paleontology
While
this section is of value to visitors of all ages, the resources for this gallery
were designed primarily with Pre K - grade 2 in mind.
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
Things You Don't Want to Miss
Discussion Questions Activities
Go to the Gallery of Dinosaurs and Paleontology page
Before and After Your Visit
click
here for printable version
Important Terms and Concepts
Activities
Print and Web Resources
Things You Don't Want to Miss
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Apatosaurus Femur
This is a life-size replica of a leg bone that helped carry one of the largest land animals ever to walk the earth. Weighing up to 25 tons, this plant-eating, long-necked dinosaur lived 150 million years ago in the western United States and reached a length of 69 feet!
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Stegosaurus Plate
This replica allows visitors to feel all of the bumps and grooves on a Stegosaurus' plate. The plate belonged to a 30 foot, 2 ton animal that lived about 150 million years ago. There is some debate about the primary function of Stegosaurus' plates, but they were most likely an early form of climate control, allowing the large plant eater to regulate temperature. Undoubtedly they also provided some defense and may have attracted potential mates.
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Dinosaur Dig
With goggles in place and brush in hand, children are transformed into junior paleontologists, as they excavate replicas of dinosaur skeletons at this simulated excavation site. Nearby signs help visitors identify the bones they uncover. |
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Dino Den
A cozy spot to play with dinosaur puppets and figures, read picture books, and piece together puzzles. |
Discussion Questions
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Which dinosaur is your favorite? Why?
How do we know what we know about dinosaurs?
How are fossils formed? What's the difference between a fossil and a rock?
Were people and dinosaurs living at the same time?
How can you tell a dinosaur from other prehistoric animals?
Activities to Do in the Dinosaur Gallery
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Activities: Pre K - K
Compare and Contrast
The dinosaur gallery's walls are painted with life size dinosaurs. After observing the walls, have students make statements comparing themselves to different dinosaurs, or comparing and contrasting two dinosaurs. For example, "The Apatosaurus is bigger than me, " or "The Velociraptor is smaller than the Triceratops."
Dino Hunt!
Have students, working with partners, go on a scavenger hunt. Click here for a printable page of items to search for. You can give each student a copy of the page and ask them to circle each item as they find it in the gallery, or you can give each pair of students one item to search for at a time: simply cut the page into strips, so that each item can be given out individually. Click here for complete directions/worksheet.
Activities: Grades 1 - 2
Excavate!
Visit the Dinosaur Dig, a simulated excavation site where students can uncover replicas of dinosaur skeletons. As students are digging, challenge them to think about what kind of bones they are finding. What part of the dinosaur's body have they found? Which kind of dinosaur might they have found: a long-neck, a meat-eater, a duck bill, a triceratops, etc.? Diagrams adjacent to each section of the Dig provide a key identifying the type of bones to be found and the dinosaur they represent.
Important
Terms and Concepts You may wish to familiarize students with these terms before your visit.
Terms:
PreK - K print
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
remains or traces of something that was once alive, preserved by minerals
(the building blocks of rocks). Terms:
Grades 1 - 2 print
only this section - Carnivore
an animal that eats other animals, or meat. - Herbivore
a plant-eating animal. - Paleontologist
a scientist who studies prehistoric life through the examination of fossilized
remains. - Reptile
a group of air-breathing animals that relying on sources outside of their
bodies, such as the sun, for heating and cooling their bodies, most of whom lay
eggs and have skin covered with scales or bony plates. - Mammal
a group of animals that nourish their young with milk produced by mammary
glands, have hair, and regulating internal body temperature through internal means
such as burning food for energy, shivering, sweating, etc. - Extinct
no longer existing. - Replica
a copy or close reproduction of something. - Classify
to arrange into groups based on shared characteristics.
Activities
PreK
- Kindergarten print
only this section 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. 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. Activities:
Grades 1 - 2 print
only this section Make
Your Own "Fossil" Imprint Discuss the difference between a fossil remain
(when part or all of a living thing becomes a fossil) and an imprint (an impression
left behind by a living thing that becomes a fossil, like a foot print). To help
students understand the concept of an imprint, give each student a small ball
of play dough or clay. Hand out an object to each student to press into the dough
(or clay) to create an impression. Shells, chicken bones, plastic fish, plastic
insects, or even plastic all work well. Then set the impressions aside to dry.
Dino Dioramas
Ask students to pick one particular dinosaur to focus on. Encourage them to research
what their dinosaur was like, including what it ate, where it lived, and what
other plants and animals it might have encountered. Students can then create a
small sculpture of their dinosaur out of clay. Shoeboxes make an excellent dinosaur
habitat (ask a local shoe store to save boxes for you). Students can design a
prehistoric habitat for their dinosaur inside their box using colored paper, pipe
cleaners, colored clay, paint and markers. Assessment:
Make a K-W-L Goal Sheet As a class, make a K-W-L chart. Include these
three columns or sections…What I Know about Dinosaurs…What I Want to Learn about
Dinosaurs…What I Learned about Dinosaurs. Pre-visit, have the students brainstorm
ideas for the first two columns of the chart. Post-visit,
ask the students to share what they have learned and fill in the third column.
Print and Web Resources Resources:
PreK - K
print
only this section Print
and Web Materials for PreK - K 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.
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.
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.
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.
Print
and Web Materials for PreK - K Educators 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 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.
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.
NASA
Classroom of the Future
This site offers online references, links, activities,
crafts, and lesson plans.
Resources:
Grades 1 - 2 print
only this section Print
and Web Materials for Grade 1 - 2 Students Aliki
(Aliki Brandenberg). Digging Up Dinosaurs. NY: HarperCollins Publishers,
1988. A charming, cartoon-illustrated book that leads the reader through all the
steps of paleontology, from locating and excavating fossils, to cleaning and studying
them, to the final assembly of a skeleton in a Museum.
Nature
of New England
Illustrations of dinosaurs discovered in North America.
Wahl, Jan and
Bob Doucet. The Field Mouse and the Dinosaur Named Sue. Cartwheel Books,
2000. This engaging story about a displaced field mouse walks readers through
the process of assembling the skeleton of the now- famous T. rex named Sue at
the Chicago Field Museum.
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.
Print
and Web Materials for Grade 1 - 2 Educators 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 groups and species, and includes 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.
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.
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.
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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