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Exploring Soil Habitats

Science • Year 3 • 90 • 20 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Science
3Year 3
90
20 students
22 March 2025

Teaching Instructions

LI: To understand the habitat soil provides and its importance in supporting life

Chunk 1: Activity: Investigate soil as a habitat, looking at the organisms it supports and its role in the ecosystem.

Chunk 2: Activity: Explore composting and the concept of soil health.

Chunk 3: Activity: Explain how soil provides a habitat and supports biodiversity

Exploring Soil Habitats

Lesson Overview

Subject: Science
Year Group: Year 3
Duration: 90 minutes
Curriculum Area: Science – Working Scientifically & Living Things and Their Habitats
UK National Curriculum Link:

  • Living Things and Their Habitats: Pupils should explore and use classification keys to group, identify and name a variety of living things in their local and wider environment.
  • Working Scientifically: Asking relevant questions, setting up simple practical enquiries, making systematic observations, and drawing conclusions.

Learning Intention (LI):

To understand the habitat soil provides and its importance in supporting life.

Lesson Structure

Starter (10 minutes) – Introducing Soil as a Habitat

Objective: Engage students by activating prior knowledge and generating curiosity.

  • Begin with a mystery bag activity: Show a sealed bag containing soil. Ask: What do you think is inside? What might live here?
  • Discuss predictions and record responses on the board.
  • Briefly explain: Soil is more than just ‘dirt’—it is a living habitat full of tiny creatures that help support life.

Chunk 1: Investigating Soil as a Habitat (30 minutes)

Objective: Explore soil organisms and understand their role in an ecosystem.

Activity – Soil Exploration

  1. Hands-on Investigation

    • Divide the class into small groups (4–5 students per group).
    • Provide each group with a tray of soil collected from different areas (e.g. school garden, park).
    • Give out magnifying glasses and mini-spades. Let them explore, noting textures, smells, and any visible organisms.
    • Ask: Can you find anything living? What differences do you notice between samples?
  2. Observing Soil Life

    • Use ID charts (printed or on the board) to identify common UK soil organisms such as worms, woodlice, springtails, and beetle larvae.
    • Discuss findings using scientific vocabulary: decomposers, microhabitat, nutrients, food chain.
  3. Class Discussion

    • Ask groups to share their findings.
    • Explain that these creatures break down organic matter, making soil fertile and essential for plant growth.

Chunk 2: Exploring Composting & Soil Health (25 minutes)

Objective: Introduce the importance of composting and how it improves soil health.

Activity – Composting in Action

  1. Demonstration:

    • Show a jar with soil and organic matter (e.g. leaves, banana peel).
    • Explain: Decomposers break this down into rich nutrients—this process is called composting.
  2. Sorting Activity:

    • Hand out sorting cards with different materials (apple core, plastic bottle, leaves, cardboard box).
    • Ask: Which materials can decompose and improve soil health? Which ones do not break down?
    • Discuss why composting is important in reducing waste and enriching soil.
  3. Mini Compost Challenge:

    • Have students plan how they could start a mini classroom compost experiment using leftover fruit scraps.
    • Explain: Over time, this compost will turn into soil, supporting plant growth and wildlife.

Chunk 3: How Soil Supports Life & Biodiversity (20 minutes)

Objective: Summarise the learning by explaining soil’s role in biodiversity.

Activity – Nature’s Web

  1. Food Chain Game:

    • Put students in pairs. Each pair picks an organism they identified earlier (e.g. worm, spider, plant).
    • As a class, connect the organisms into a food chain. Example: Leaves → Worm → Bird → Fox.
    • Demonstrate how removing soil organisms could disrupt the food chain.
  2. Creative Task:

    • Ask students to draw their own “Soil Hotel”:
      • What animals live in the soil?
      • How do they interact with plants and other creatures?
      • Label key species and their role (e.g. worms = soil aeration).

Plenary (5 minutes) – Reflection & Consolidation

  • Think-Pair-Share: Why is soil important? What would happen if there were no soil organisms?
  • Exit Ticket: Give each student a sticky note to write one thing they learnt or loved about today’s lesson.

Resources Needed

✔ Soil samples from different locations
✔ Magnifying glasses
✔ Mini spades or spoons for digging
✔ Invertebrate ID charts
✔ Jar with soil & organic matter (for compost demonstration)
✔ Sorting cards with decomposing vs. non-decomposing materials
✔ Large paper for food chain activity
✔ Sticky notes for exit tickets


Assessment & Next Steps

Formative Assessment: Observation of discussions, student responses in group work, and exit ticket reflections.
🔎 Further Exploration: A follow-up lesson could focus on how plants depend on soil and conduct a simple experiment on growing seeds in different soil types.

This lesson uses hands-on exploration, curiosity-driven inquiry and interactive discussions to engage Year 3 students in understanding soil as a habitat, helping them develop their scientific thinking and environmental awareness. 🌍🌱

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