DISCUSS:
What's your favorite thing you can do now that you couldn't do when you were a baby?
DISCUSS:
How could you draw a picture that shows how you’ve changed since you were born?
DISCUSS:
If all animals eventually die, will animals exist in the future?
How do you know?
In this lesson, students explore animal life cycles by thinking about their birthday buddies—all the animals that were born on the exact same day as they were born—and what happens to those birthday buddies over the course of their lives. In the activity, Birthday Buddies Timeline, students develop a model to compare the life stories of different animals. Using this model, students discover that although the lives of animals can be very different, they all have in common birth, growth, reproduction, and death.
Preview activityBirthday Buddies Animal Cards worksheet | 1 per pair |
Birthday Buddies Timeline worksheet | 1 per student |
Glue Sticks
Tape will also work.
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Details
1 glue stick per student
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Scissors
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1 pair per student |
Scrap Paper (8.5 x 11")
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1 sheet per student |
We suggest students work in pairs. Homeschool students can work on their own.
For animals that give birth to live young, their birthday is straightforward. For those animals that lay eggs, we use the day that they hatch from their egg as their birthday. Many science standards state that all animals are born, equating hatching with birth.
Student slideshow: English | Spanish
Teacher printout: English & Spanish
In this reading, students learn how some mischievous people at Mystery Science made a "fruit salad" while thinking like plant scientists.
In this reading, students learn about two scientists who study wild sunflowers.
You can elaborate student learning and engagement with Mystery Science mini-lessons.
Why do flies just appear in the trash? In this mini-lesson students explore how knowing about fly life cycles helps explain why they seem to appear out of nowhere!
Are butterflies the only animals that start out as caterpillars? In this mini-lesson students explore the life cycles of animals that go through metamorphosis, such as butterflies.
If you are in an NGSS state, these mini-lessons support the DCI LS1.B: Growth and Development of Organisms
Make a Poster — Have students research two different animals and then make a poster comparing and contrasting the life cycles of those animals. For students who need help getting started, check out these free printable coloring pages showing the life cycles of Birds (chicken, penguin), Fish, Reptiles (turtle), Amphibians (frog, salamander), and Insects (ladybug, mealworm, butterfly, ant, mosquito, dragonfly).
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