Science • Year 6 • 60 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum
This is lesson 1 of 3 in the unit "Exploring Living Ecosystems". Lesson Title: Introduction to Ecosystems Lesson Description: In this lesson, students will explore the concept of ecosystems, including the components that make up an ecosystem such as producers, consumers, and decomposers. Through interactive discussions and a short video, students will learn how these components interact and depend on each other for survival.
This is the first lesson in the "Exploring Living Ecosystems" unit. Students will be introduced to ecosystems by exploring the different components that make up an ecosystem (producers, consumers, and decomposers) and how they interact. Using interactive discussions, a hands-on activity, and a short video, students will develop a foundational understanding of ecosystems, preparing them for deeper exploration in later lessons.
By the end of this lesson, students will:
✅ Define what an ecosystem is.
✅ Identify key components of an ecosystem (producers, consumers, decomposers).
✅ Understand the importance of balance and interactions within an ecosystem.
🔹 Teacher Prompt: "Imagine a forest, a pond, or even your backyard… What lives there? How do these living things survive?"
🗣 Think-Pair-Share:
📽 Watch a short educational video (teacher selected) explaining producers, consumers, and decomposers. Pause at key points to ask:
🤔 Quick recap:
🌟 Fun Class Challenge:
Write different organisms on the board (e.g., tree, rabbit, mushroom, insect) and ask students:
"Which category does it belong to—Producer, Consumer, or Decomposer?"
🔬 Objective: Students will create a mini-ecosystem in a jar to understand mutual reliance.
🛠 Materials (per group of 3-4 students):
📝 Instructions:
🔍 Discussion Prompts:
📝 Quick Write:
🤝 Pair Up & Share:
🔍 Formative Assessment:
🌱 Extension Activity:
🔥 Teacher Tip: Consider linking this to a local Māori perspective by discussing the interconnectedness of ecosystems with Te Ao Māori concepts such as kaitiakitanga (guardianship of the environment).
This lesson immerses students in hands-on, inquiry-based science learning that aligns with New Zealand’s curriculum. By creating their own mini-ecosystem, students see ecosystems in action—fostering curiosity and deep understanding.
🎉 Get ready! Next lesson, we’ll explore food chains and energy flow. ✅
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