Awakening the Earth: Observing, Understanding, and Appreciating Spring
For extra enrichment, try the in depth Zoo Studies. To tailor for additional middle or elementary school family members, prepare for your library visit with the Spring Holidays Booklist.
DAY 1: Signs of Spring — Observation & Awareness
Activities:
-
Phenology Walk: Go on a 30–60 minute nature walk. Note changes in:
-
Buds and blossoms
-
Migrating or nesting birds
-
Insects, frogs, or amphibians returning
-
Ground plants emerging (e.g., crocus, daffodils, dandelions)
- You may want to use nature journaling supplies
-
Journaling:
-
In your nature journal, create a “Spring Signs” log: include sketches, temperature, plant/bird/insect notes
-
Prompt: “What do I notice that wasn’t here a few weeks ago?”
-
-
Science Component:
-
Learn about plant dormancy and what triggers budburst.
-
Researcg and write about climate change effects on spring onset.
-
DAY 2: Insects and Pollinators
Activities:
Poetry/Lit:
- “Spring” by Gerard Manley Hopkins
- “Lines Written in Early Spring” by William Wordsworth
- “A Light Exists in Spring” by Emily Dickinson
-
Outdoor Observation: Look for bees, flies, butterflies, and other insects.
-
Use a field guide to ID them.
-
Set up a simple nectar station and observe the visitors.
-
-
Science Component:
-
Define and provide an example of pollination ecology and mutualism in your notebook
-
Investigate how different insects contribute to pollination. Include a page on at least three of these in your notebook.
-
-
Art & Writing:
-
Sketch an insect you observed and label its body parts.
-
Creative prompt: “A Day in the Life of a Spring Bee” (short story or poem).
-
DAY 3: Trees, Buds, and Blossoms
Activities:
-
Tree Bud Identification:
-
Choose 2–3 local trees and examine their buds. Document what you see in your nature journal.
-
Record shape, size, leaf-out stage of at least two different types of leaves.
-
-
Botany Study:
-
Learn basic parts of a flower and how flowering differs among species.
-
Optional: dissect a flower and label its parts.
-
-
Math/Nature Integration:
-
Measure bud or leaf growth each day for 5 days and graph the results.
-
Learn about Fibonacci sequences in flower petals or seed arrangements.
-
-
Creative Writing Prompt:
-
“If a tree could tell the story of spring, what would it say?”
-
DAY 4: Birds, Nests, and Migration
Activities:
-
Bird Watching:
-
Watch and identify birds for 20–30 minutes in the morning or evening.
-
Note calls, colors, behaviors (mating, nest-building, feeding) in your notebook.
-
-
Science Topic:
-
Study spring bird migration: why birds migrate, how they navigate.
-
Learn about one local migratory bird in depth and document with drawings and research in your notebook.
-
- If you love birds, try out the Raptors unit study.
- Art Component:
Draw or paint a local, non-migratory bird species (resident species).
-
Make a simple bird feeder or nesting material station.
-
Writing Prompt:
-
“Why do you think birds return each spring?”
-
DAY 5: Water, Soil, and Life Beneath Our Feet
Activities:
-
Soil Observation:
-
Collect soil samples from different spots (forest, lawn, garden).
-
Compare color, texture, moisture and record in your notebook.
-
-
Water Study:
-
Visit a local stream or pond.
-
Observe spring runoff and insect life (mayflies, beetles, tadpoles).
-
-
Science Extension:
-
Study soil organisms: earthworms, decomposers, mycorrhizal fungi. Write about each of these and their importance in your notebook.
-
-
Final Creative Prompt:
-
Write a reflection: “What have I learned from watching spring unfold?”
-

.png)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.