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Why do birds have beaks?
Plant & Animal Superpowers Unit | Lesson 2 of 7

Why do birds have beaks?

Plant & Animal Superpowers Unit | Lesson 2 of 7
Lesson narration:
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DISCUSS: How are these beaks different?

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Thinking Activity (Part 1)

A bird’s beak is like a tool that helps the bird eat. What kinds of tools would you use if you wanted to:

  • Crack a nut open?
  • Scoop cereal out of a bowl filled with cereal and milk?
  • Sip soda from a tall glass?
  • Catch a slippery fish?

Can you think of a bird beak that works like these tools?
If you’re stumped, advance to the next slide to see our ideas.

Thinking Activity (Part 2)

At Mystery Science, we use nutcrackers for cracking nuts. A parrot’s beak is short and strong, and it works like a nut cracker.

A spoon is good for scooping up soggy cereal. It works like a duck’s broad bill.

A straw helps you sip soda from the bottom of a tall glass, just like the hummingbird’s beak lets that bird sip the sweet juice called nectar from the bottom of a flower.

A fork can stab a slippery fish, just like the pointy beak of an egret.

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shape


1 of 13

how something looks, such as circle, square, or triangle
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size


2 of 13

how big or small something is
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structure


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the specific form and shape of something

function


4 of 13

what something does
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needs


5 of 13

something an animal or plant must have in order to live
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food


6 of 13

something that animals eat
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beak


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the part of a bird that it uses to eat
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mouth


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the opening animals use to take in food and water
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tongue


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a part of the body, inside the mouth, used for taste
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stomach


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a part of the body where food goes after being eaten

survive


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to stay alive
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model


12 of 13

a pretend version of something that scientists use when the real thing is too big, small, or complicated to work with

experiment


13 of 13

a test used to discover new information about a question

Featured Reviews

“The kids loved the timed portion. They were racing to see who could get the most "food" into their cups. My students did a great job with the discussions as well since the activity was hands on and very helpful for my visual learners.”
“I LOVED the activity! So did my first graders. I would have never thought of something as simple as a straw and cup to represent beaks.”
“I loved the wonderful worksheets that went along, great assessments! The kids had a blast with the hands on activities. The videos were excellent support for visual learners. Thank you! Can not wait until the next adventure!”
“The students were SUPER engaged with this lesson! Thanks for creating age-appropriate, standards-based lessons that students can't wait to dive into!”
“I love how it goes step by step and we can choose our own pace. The students really enjoyed watching animals use different adaptations. The short clips of the fish, monkey, elephant etc. really sparked their curiosity!”
“The kids loves picking up the "food" and each child got the chance at the same time. They REALLY love the videos with the slow motion examples. I love that the videos walk the teacher through the mystery.”
“The step-by-step instructions with video demonstrations. I teach in Korea where all my students are learning English as another language. The visual and verbal directions are key! We also talk about Doug now like we really know him. Haha! "Let see what Doug says about this" and "What do you think Doug thinks?" are regular sentences in our classroom!”
“This lesson allows our young scientists to follow the Scientific Inquiry Process as we work through the activity. The videos are great support!”
“The students loved the activity where they were actually practicing "eating" with their beaks. I appreciated the step-by-step directions for implementation. ”
“Wow - I did this with my summer kindergarten students and they LOVED it. What a great activity; not sure if you realize this, but the "beaks" provide lots of fine motor practice, and we had the students count their "stomachs" of food which then turned into a supplemental math lesson. You guys are awesome!”
“The kid's involvement. It was also pretty dang simple to whip it all together. ”
“The kids were so determined to pick up the food and really explored which beak could do the job the best. ”
“Kids making predictions and realizations! Love that it was easy to do and Doug walked us through it! They were engaged the whole time!”
“The short videos and interactive lessons were a great way to introduce students to animal superpowers. The students were very engaged with the process and developed a great understanding of the concept. They love Mystery Science! I can't wait to see what new lessons will be introduced.”
“Highly motivating and fun, too! Doug has the perfect voice and someone did the perfect script for ELD scaffolding while engaging native English speakers too!”
“Students loved the activity pretending like birds and collecting food in their cups. All materials for the activity are easy to find and helped students to learn the lesson concept.”
“All of my students were engaged and it was simple enough that my struggling students could understand it, but also interesting and challenging enough that my higher students were not bored. It was fabulous, and I can't wait to do more of these lessons!”
“My principal loved it! Thanks!”
“Easy to follow and my Special Ed students could follow and do!”
“The class was so engaged! We loved the animal videos and the discussions we had were so rich! ”
“The students really liked the activity and learned a lot from doing it. They did not realized that different animal parts actually were there to perform unique functions. They even started discussing other animals and their parts on their own!”
“Very easy to carry out, very clear for the children. The objective was clear and the children loved it.”
“This is a fantastic lesson. The students loved it. Directions were clear. The images and videos provide great visual examples to show students real-life examples of birds using each type of beak. Thanks for the fun science lesson!”
Lesson narration:

Grade 1

Plant & Animal Structures And Survival

Animal Structures & Survival

1-LS1-1

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students carry out an investigation to determine the relationship between the shape of different bird beaks and the food each bird eats. In the activity, Find the Best Beak, students experiment with long pointy beaks that are great for picking up seeds and wide flat beaks that are good for scooping. They discover that different beaks are best for different kinds of food.
Preview activity

Exploration

15 mins

Wrap-Up

5 mins

Grade 1

Plant & Animal Structures And Survival

Animal Structures & Survival

1-LS1-1

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