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Unit #1

Science • Year 1 • 30 • 10 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

Science
1Year 1
30
10 students
28 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 7 in the unit "Exploring Planet Earth". Lesson Title: Introduction to Earth Lesson Description: Students will learn about Earth as our home planet. They will explore its basic features, including land, water, and air, through a storytelling session and visual aids.

Unit #1

Lesson Title: Introduction to Earth

Curriculum Area:

  • Science – The New Zealand Curriculum, Level 1
  • Strand: Planet Earth and Beyond – "Explore and describe natural features and resources."
  • Linked Key Competencies: Thinking, Using language, symbols, and texts, Relating to others

WALT (We Are Learning To):

  • Understand that Earth is our home planet.
  • Identify basic features of Earth: land, water, and air.

Success Criteria:

  • I can tell someone that I live on planet Earth.
  • I can name land, water, and air as parts of Earth.
  • I can share one fact about land or water or air.

Lesson Duration:

30 minutes


Materials Needed:

  • Large globe or inflatable Earth ball
  • Storybook: "Our Planet Earth" (dyslexia-friendly font if possible, e.g., OpenDyslexic)
  • Sensory tactile materials: sand (land), water spray bottle/mist (water), fan or feather (air)
  • Visual cue cards (symbols for land, water, air)
  • Large sheet of paper and crayons
  • Simple Earth posters around the room
  • Calming music (e.g., nature sounds)

Lesson Outline:

1. Warm–Up: Earth Welcome (5 minutes)

  • Activity: Gather students in a circle on the mat.
  • Teacher Talk: “Today we are going to talk about a very special place – our home – Earth!”
  • Sensory Connection: Pass around the globe or Earth ball for each student to touch and hold.
  • Engagement Prompt: “What do you think lives on Earth?”

2. Storytelling: "Our Planet Earth" (10 minutes)

  • Activity: Read aloud the story "Our Planet Earth" with large, bright pictures.
  • Use a dyslexia-friendly font version for students who prefer or need visual supports.
  • Sensory Connection:
    • When mentioning land, pass around a small box of clean sand for students to touch.
    • For water, mist a little water into the air with a spray bottle.
    • For air, gently wave a fan or feather over them.
  • Encourage students to gently interact when comfortable (important for sensory-sensitive students).

3. Interactive Visual Exploration (5 minutes)

  • Activity: Display large images of mountains, oceans, forests, sky.
  • Discussion Prompts:
    • "What do you see?"
    • "Where do you see lots of water?"
    • "Can you see the sky where you live?"
  • Support: Use Image/Symbol Cue Cards for pointing if verbal response is difficult.

4. Creative Activity: Earth Collage (7 minutes)

  • Activity:
    • On a large shared paper, students will create a simple Earth collage using crayons.
    • Each student colours or adds to one part: blue for water, green/brown for land, white for clouds/air.
  • Support:
    • Pre-draw simple circles or shapes to guide students.
    • Offer chunky crayons for better grip.
    • Allow finger smudging or sensory play for those who prefer using hands instead of tools.

5. Closing Circle: "Our Home" Reflection (3 minutes)

  • Teacher Talk: “We live on a beautiful planet called Earth. It gives us land to walk on, water to drink, and air to breathe.”
  • Call-and-Repeat Chant:
    • Teacher: "We love our…!"
    • Whole Class: "Earth!"

Differentiation Strategies:

  • For Sensory Needs:

    • Students can opt out of tactile experiences if preferred.
    • Provide individual trays with sensory materials for those who prefer minimal group sharing.
  • For Communication Needs:

    • Use visual pointing or choice cards for non-verbal students.
    • Allow "thumbs up" or "high five" to show understanding.
  • For Attention Variability:

    • Movement breaks embedded (allow standing/stretching during storytelling).
    • Keep sensory activities short and varied.
  • For Students Needing Additional Support:

    • Pair students with a buddy or teaching assistant.
    • Repeat key concepts using gesture and sign language where possible (e.g., Makaton for "Earth", "water", "air").

Extension Activities for Advanced Learners:

  • Question Prompts:
    • "Where do you think the water in rivers comes from?"
    • "Can you think of a place you've seen lots of mountains?"
  • Drawing Challenge: Create your own mini Earth showing your favourite places.
  • Extra Reading Basket: Books about space and Earth at an accessible level.

Teacher Tips:

🌟 Wow your students with multi-sensory learning! Think texture, sound, movement, and visuals.
🌟 Use student's ideas in the collage — let their choices lead part of the session if energy allows. 🌟 Celebrate mistakes! If a student colours the sky green? That’s fine! It shows creative engagement.


Final Notes:

  • Stay flexible and responsive to the needs of the students.
  • Prioritise calm, sensory-friendly transitions between activities.
  • Remember: for our tamariki, feeling safe and valued is the biggest success!

🌏 Together, we begin our magical journey exploring Planet Earth!

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