Who is Awake at Night? Lesson Plan
Reading Objective:
Children will learn about several nocturnal animals and some ways that they survive and find food at night.
Next Generation Science Standards:
K-LS1 Animals’ Survival Needs;
1-LS1 How Animals Use External Parts to Survive
Vocabulary:
raccoon, whiskers
Project this page to do as a whole class or copy it for students to do on their own:
1. What do bats look for at night (food)
2. What helps an owl hunt at night (big eyes.)
3. What will raccoons eat? (They will eat anything. )
4. Why do you think raccoons can get people’s trash at night without getting caught? Draw a picture of raccoon getting into trash in the dark. (Answers will vary.)
Go online to print or project the Reading Checkpoint.
- Animals that are awake at night are nocturnal.
- Raccoons come out at night because their enemies are sleeping then. Nobody bothers them.
- Worms come out at night. In the daytime, they stay underground. The sun can dry out their bodies.
- Moths drink nectar from flowers that bloom at night. Nectar is a sweet juice that flowers make.
Materials: pencils, a small object to observe such as a small toy or piece of fruit, copies of the skill sheet
Overview: Children will learn about the senses and how nocturnal animals survive in the dark.
Directions:
- How do nocturnal animals find their way in the dark?
- Some animals can see in the dark. But some use their sense of smell, touch, or hearing toexplore their nighttime world.
- Ask kids to close their eyes. Place in front of each child an object such as a piece of fruit, a pencil, or a small toy. It’s OK if some peek.
- Ask children to feel their object. Is it smooth or rough?
- Have children shake their object. Do they hear a sound? If so, is it loud or soft?
- Have children smell their object. Do they like the smell? Record observations on the skill sheet.