How can you use fossils as a teaching tool? In my classrooms over the years,
fossils have never failed to spark fun and enthusiasm for learning about earth
sciences. I have seen students, otherwise disengaged in activities of learning,
become totally captivated with the process of uncovering the fossil hiding
beneath the surface of soft rock.
Fossils connect students to the
history of our planet. They can simultaneously imagine the situation of ancient
life, while examining current habitats and species that could become the fossils
of the future.
Perhaps you are looking to bring this sort of enthusiasm
to your classroom or your children at home. Fossils inspire all sorts of
questions. Consider these possibilities :
How old is this? (Leading to
the study of the Earth抯 history.)
What kind of animal was this? (Leading to
zoology and species classification.)
Where did it live? (Leading to habitats
past and present, including botany.)
How did it live? (Leading to a study of
vital functions梞ore zoology.)
How did it form? (Back to a study of geology
and earth science.)
The list seems endless. Fossils are not only
attention-getters; they are also incredibly versatile as a teaching tool.
Fossils make a great theme for integrated curriculum studies.
If you get
creative, there are all types of stories to be written: factual, imaginative,
and even poetry. Imaginations run wild when you hold the fossil of a
long-extinct species in your hand. You could write tales of life on the ancient
sea floor, or how that particular animal met its demise and became the fossil
you are holding today. You could create an entire language arts curriculum
around it!
If it抯 math you抎 like to kick into gear, working with the
geologic time periods offers opportunities for scientific notation, exponents,
scale (when placing them on a timeline), and comparisons between lifespan
lengths. Then there are the geometric qualities of the shells and chitinous
exoskeletons. You could study fractals or tessellations, just to name a couple
possibilities.
The biology-related curriculum is obvious.
Classification, developmental changes and adaptation to environment, vital
functions, and predator-prey relationships are just a few of the possibilities
for further in-depth study.
Likewise, geology takes on a new meaning
when seen through the fossils?eyes. The stone containing the fossil may have
once been an ocean floor, a swampy bog, or a boulder-filled riverbed. As
students look at the quality of the matrix that contains their fossil, they are
inspired to think about the material and situation that created it.
It
seems that using fossils as a teaching tool a creative teacher, parent, or
student would find an endless promise of topics to study, limited only by the
personal interest and creativity of the student.
There is truly nothing
like a fossil to inspire! Your students will show you the way卆nd love you for
letting them reach deep into their creativity to do it!
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