Tuesday, February 5, 2008


This week, my first graders heard a story during their science time about shadows, which relates to the first benchmark mentioned in the previous post. To assess prior knowledge, my CT asked the students if they knew what a shadow was and what had shadows (people, buildings, animals-everything!), which the kids were able to answer without difficulty. They began to struggle however when asked where shadows came from or how shadows formed.
They also knew that shadows couldn't always be seen, only sometimes, but they were unsure as to why. We explained to them that light and in contrast, darkness to block the light, were necessary. I went on to explain briefly the phases of the moon, as well how day and night is related to shadows. The kids were shown the first page of the book, which portrayed several children and their shadows, and I asked them what came first, the shadow or the child. The story explained shadows at a surface level, and asked the question "whose shadow is this" and displayed a shadowed, which actively engaged the kids in guessing the shadow before turning the page to see what formed the shadow-they loved guessing and came up with such funny answers! In response to a shadow of what looked like a large bird, one boy said "its a bush or something cut out like a bird"! The kids liked this lesson because they could relate it to everyday life; they have all seen & created shadows before and know how to make shadows & make shadows move, but they didn't know WHY all of this occurred. This lesson helped them understand the relation between light & darkness and how shadows form from the contrast of both.

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