DISCUSS:
How do you think mosquitoes could be dangerous?
Hint...
Could sucking blood have something to do with it?
Why do you think there are more mosquitoes in tropical places?
DISCUSS:
Given what you’ve learned about mosquitoes and their life cycle, what are some suggestions you would give people to help them avoid getting bitten by mosquitoes after a rainy spring?
Bug Off! Backyard worksheet | 1 per student |
Bug Off! Picnic Area worksheet | 1 per student |
Bug Off! Playground worksheet | 1 per student |
Problem Solver’s Sheet worksheet | 1 per student |
We suggest students work in pairs so they can share their ideas with a partner. Homeschool students can work on their own.
We have provided three Bug Off! worksheets, each picturing a different location in town. In a class, we suggest giving students a choice of which site they’d like to work with. You could also choose to have everyone come up with a solution for the same site. If students finish early, you can have them work on other sites so they can think of multiple solutions to the mosquito problem.
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.
Take a (really) close-up look at the mosquito’s bite. (Warning! You may want to close your eyes for some of the yucky parts.) (2:55, PBS)
How can mosquitoes make you sick? Watch this video to find out. (1:29, Wadada)
In the movie Jurassic Park, fictional scientists create dinosaurs from blood found in long-dead mosquitoes. When that movie was made, nobody had ever really found a blood-filled mosquito from millions of years ago—but now they have. Could blood from a real 46-million-year-old fossilized mosquito be used to resurrect dinosaurs? Well, no—but it’s still a cool find. (2:18, D-News/Seeker)
Shelly Redovan grew up in Florida where there are lots of mosquitoes. Watch this short video where she talks about the details of her job as a mosquito biologist. (2:50, WGCU Curious Kids)
You can elaborate student learning and engagement with Mystery Science mini-lessons.
If you are in an NGSS state, this mini-lesson supports the DCI LS1.B: Growth and Development of Organisms
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