Monday, September 17, 2012

Lesson Plan- Spiders


Nature School
Sept. 17th, 2012
Spiders

Welcome Song

Letter of the day- S for Spiders

Are you all ready to learn about spiders today?


Pretend Play:
First, let's pretend to be spiders. Let's curl up in a ball and pretend to be a spider egg. We have to squish together because spider eggs are all close together in a little sac. Then we burst open! Now we are a baby spider called a spiderling. Let's stretch out legs out and our arms out. We have to learn how to walk. It's hard! Then we shed our exoskeleton and grow bigger and bigger. Now we are an adult. We are HUGE! We can stomp around and jump and run really fast! Let's now pretend to make a web. We have to work really hard to make a beautiful and useful web. Then we CATCH bugs in it. Yum, yum, yum!

Did you know?.....
Spiders have 8 legs- their legs can grow back if they are broken off!
Spiders are NOT insects, they are aracnids
Spiders can climb
Spiders eat bugs
Spiders make webs


Hike and exploration time:
As you hike, look for an area where the kids can explore and look for orb weaver webs. Let the children lead. Ask them where they think spiders might like to live and make a web. When the children find one, give them plenty of time to examine and talk about it. Remind them to be gentle and not destroy it. The web is important to the spider. The spider has worked hard all night to make a useful web where it will be able to catch food. 

Find an area where the kids can explore and find natural items. Have them find multiples of one type of item- sticks, leaves, cones, flowers, etc. Count the number of natural items each child found. Lay out the items in groups 1-10. Let the children look at the groups and work on counting together.



Songs:
Sing The Itsy Bitsy Spider and add other verses such as:
Big Gigantic Spider (say with loud low voice and instead of fingers crawling use hands)
Very Quiet Spider (with a very quiet voice)
Hairy black spider (point at your hair)
Little baby spider (sing in a baby voice)

Poem:
The spider is knitting a magnificent web,
"I will use the silk as silver thread" She said.
She is webbing all day, she is webbing all night,
She is making a web unique and bright.
Her spinning glands and eight legs,
Help her to make a home for her tiny eggs.
In that house, the insects will be trapped,
With her silver thread, they will be wrapped.
A spider can be found in a garden, or in a barn
Always knitting a web, with its silver yarn.

Craft:
Paper plate spider web
Coloring page with body parts


Fun Facts for moms and dads about spiders:

Chart of Spider Facts
There are 37,000 known species of spiders in the world. Approximately
3,500 in the U.S. and Canada.
Spiders lay between 2 and 1,000 eggs.
Their skeletons are on the outside of their bodies. This is called an
exoskeleton.
The mother wolf spider carries her eggs with her and keeps the young
spiderlings on her back until they are old enough to care for themselves.
Some spiders live underground and catch insects for food by jumping
out at them.
Spiders use a sticky silk to make their webs. The silk comes from six
“spinnerets” located on the underside of their abdomen.
They use the silk as parachutes, as shelter and to catch food.
Spiders have as many as 12 eyes.


Coloring Page:


Spider Body Parts:

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