
Science • Year 3 • 45 • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) – Grade 3
Lesson 1 of 3 – Exploring External Structures
By the end of this 45-minute lesson, students will be able to:
Total Time: 45 Minutes
Class Size: 22 students
Students should have basic knowledge of animals and be able to recognize and name common animals such as cats, birds, fish, and reptiles.
| Item | Quantity |
|---|---|
| Laminated animal picture cards | 1 set per group |
| Chart paper | 3 large sheets |
| Sticky notes | 1 pad per student |
| Markers / Colored pencils | 1 set per group |
| Magnifying glasses (optional) | 5 |
| Science journals/notebooks | 1 per student |
| Sentence stem strips | 22 total |
| Interactive “Guess the Feature” bag | 1 |
Objective: Get students actively thinking about animal features before formal instruction.
Activity:
Teacher Tip: Play up the mystery element to engage curiosity. Use different voices or sound effects related to the animal.
Objective: Students investigate external structures and begin organizing animals based on observable features.
Activity: Group Sorting Challenge
Guiding Prompts:
Differentiation:
Objective: Introduce proper terminology and connect observations to scientific explanations.
Mini Lesson:
As you present, use real animal examples (penguins, owls, desert foxes) with clear images projected, reinforcing vocabulary.
Objective: Reinforce learning through individual creative thinking.
Activity:
Students individually choose one structure from the anchor chart and write a short journal entry using the sentence stem:
“I learned that a ______ helps a ______ by _______.”
Encourage simple drawing of animal and structure with labels (e.g., feather going to an eagle; leg showing hopping kangaroo).
Objective: Informal assessment of understanding.
Activity:
Teacher Collects Notes to evaluate for misconceptions or areas that need reinforcement next lesson.
Take-Home Task: "Feature Safari"
Ask students to look for animals in their local environment (pets, outdoor animals, books at home) and draw one feature they see. Bring it to school for next class to expand the Survival Wall.
| Method | Purpose | Aligned Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Group Sorting | Formative | Identify structures |
| Anchor Chart | Visual/formative | Describe function |
| Journal Entry | Individual written response | Explain functions |
| Exit Sticky Note | Summative snapshot | Evaluate understanding |
Today’s lesson laid the foundation for recognizing how animals' physical features aren’t random — they’re essential tools for staying alive! By noticing the outside parts, third graders begin thinking critically about survival in the animal kingdom.
✅ Ready for Next Time: In Lesson 2, students will take a deeper look at animal structures based on environments — deserts, oceans, forests — and investigate how these adaptations provide advantages in those specific habitats.
🧠 Big Idea:
External parts of animals serve important purposes—helping animals move, eat, survive, and thrive in the wild.
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