CLEAPSS Plants For The Classroom
CLEAPSS Plants For The Classroom
CLEAPSS Plants For The Classroom
June 2009
G42
June 2009
Contents
1.0 Why keep plants in school?................................................................................... 1
1.1 Common misconceptions.................................................................................................... 1
4.0 An alphabetical list of suitable classroom plants ................................................ 7 5.0 Poisonous plants .................................................................................................. 10 6.0 Activities with plants ............................................................................................ 11
6.1 Some twists on growing plants ......................................................................................... 13
8.0 Resources...............................................................................................................19
8.1 Primary plants................................................................................................................... 19 8.2 Growing Schools............................................................................................................... 19 8.3 Get your hands dirty ......................................................................................................... 19 8.4 The Biotechnology and Biological Research Council (BBSRC) ........................................ 19 8.5 Learning through landscapes............................................................................................ 20 8.6 The AstraZeneca Science Teaching Trust........................................................................ 20 8.7 The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew..................................................................................... 20 8.8 The Field Studies Council (FSC) ...................................................................................... 21 8.9 Gatekeeper guides ........................................................................................................... 21 8.10 Teachers TV ................................................................................................................... 21 8.11 4Learning........................................................................................................................ 21
9.0 Beekeeping............................................................................................................ 22
CLEAPSS 2009 Strictly Confidential Circulate to members and associates only As with all CLEAPSS materials, members and associates are free to copy all or part of this guide for use in their own establishments. CLEAPSS Brunel Science Park Kingston Lane Uxbridge UB8 3PQ Tel: 01895 251496 Fax: 01895 814372 E-mail: [email protected] Web Site: www.cleapss.org.uk
(Tall fescue) Only flowers are plants. Trees flower and so does grass both are green plants. Many tree flowers are small and discreet. Grass flowers, being wind-pollinated, dont need to be brightly coloured and so may resemble green tassels. When children are asked to name plants they usually chose those with large colourful flowers. They are more likely to name pot plants and to draw them than plants growing in natural surroundings. Plants dont do anything. Children may consider plants so dull that they cant even name many of them. If they are asked about habitats they will name animals but few plants. Yet plants grow and change and they even move (with some exceptions) very slowly. Plants growing near windows align their leaves with the sunshine. Balancing the light by putting a mirror behind them makes them grow more upright. Some plants do move relatively quickly. The sensitive plant (Mimosa) and carnivorous plants respond to touch or chemical stimuli, but all plants react to external stimuli. The tendrils on broad bean plants react to touching a support by twining round it. The roots of germinating seeds react to gravity by growing downward. If the roots are inverted they loop to grow down again.
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Plants are made from soil. Photosynthesis is the process by which green plants harness the suns energy to combine very basic raw materials water and carbon dioxide to make sugars. These provide all the energy that plants need to live, grow, repair themselves and to reproduce. These sugars are further combined and changed to make the structure of plants. With the exception of water, some carbon dioxide and tiny amounts of mineral salts, plants do not need to draw anything from the soil. Cuttings continue to grow if simply put in water. There is no other input and yet the cuttings get larger. Plants need food. Fertilisers are sometimes confusingly labelled plant food, which can lead children to think that these supplements are the equivalent of a meal. Plants do need tiny amounts of mineral salts for their health and these are commonly available in fertile soil. Poor soil can be enhanced using tiny quantities of chemicals. Plants dont breathe. Strictly, no they dont. Breathing is the mechanical process of drawing air into the lungs. However, plants do respire. They release energy from sugars using oxygen and produce water and carbon dioxide as waste products. They respire all the time, like animal, but unlike animals, they manufacture their own food in sunlight.
All leaves are green. This is not true. Some leaves are variegated so that only parts of the leaf are a rich green. The green colour in leaves is a pigment called chlorophyll, which is essential for photosynthesis. All leaves contain chlorophyll although other pigments red or brown may mask it. We dont need plants . They may be very pretty, but do plants serve a useful purpose? All life on Earth depends on green plants. They are the food source of all herbivores, which are in turn the food source of carnivores. Plants are also the source of many other essential materials eg, fuels, fabrics and furniture. Plants draw carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and as a result they reduce the build-up of this greenhouse gas. However, burning fossil fuels the remains of plants that lived long ago releases the stored CO2 and adds to the problem. Clearing forests also reduces the number of plants available to use the CO2. A combination of burning fossil fuels and destroying forests by slash and burn adds to the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Fungi are plants. Fungi now belong in a separate grouping to plants. At one time they were considered to be a type of plant, but they cant make their own food and their structure is not made up of cellulose.
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Bees fertilise all the flowers. Not just bees! Plants have a number of ways of ensuring the continuation of the species. Green plants are not able to pull up their roots and go out to seek a mate. That means they have to rely on other distribution techniques, both for the male sex cells carried in pollen and for the fertile seeds. As a result, they reproduce in a variety of ways.
Some plants reproduce asexually. For example, the runners that grow from strawberry plants touch the ground, root and grow into new plants. Daffodil bulbs split and two plants grow where there was once one. This does not preclude sexual reproduction. Strawberry plants flower and of course fruit. Daffodils also flower and produce seeds. Blowing in the wind
Many plants reproduce by releasing clouds of pollen into the air, as hay fever sufferers are well aware. The pollen floats and may encounter the stigma of another plant. These plants do not need colourful flowers to attract insects, but they may have long, feathery flowers increasing the chances of trapping a passing pollen grain. Grasses and some trees disperse their pollen on the wind.
Insect couriers
Green plants with brightly coloured flowers are aiming to attract, by colour, scent and edible bait, a passing insect or other mobile animal that will carry their pollen to another flower. Honey guides fine lines on petals invisible to human eyes but visible to insects guide bees and other insects to nectar stored at their base. Pollen, accidentally carried by these visitors is brushed onto the stigma of other flowers to ensure cross-fertilisation. Self-preservation
If all else fails, many flowers can self-pollinate. The male anthers curl in to brush pollen on the stigma of the same flower.
Seeds drop to the ground. New plants growing alongside parent plants compete with them for space and resources. They also fail to invade new territory, making the species vulnerable to disease or forest fire. Seed dispersal is critical and plants have adapted to achieve this in many different ways. Seeds can be blown or carried by water, can attach to animals or pass through their gut unharmed, or may be projected by an explosion. Some seeds simply fall to the ground close to the parent plant. This suggests that like maize and wheat they depend upon human intervention. Some seeds seem to defy the ideas of dispersal. For example, coconuts sometimes sold in their thick fibrous husks have adapted to floating to new habitats. Avocado seeds may once have been intimately linked with megafauna now extinct. These were huge animals that could both swallow and pass the seeds. Fortunately, the Resplendent Quetzal bird is still able to swallow whole avocados, digest the flesh and cough up the stone. Seeds cant germinate in the dark. You might assume that a seed shoots before it roots. However, it stands to reason that if it is to secure itself and begin to absorb water it needs a root before its sprouts a shoot. Seeds contain food supplies that support initial growth but leaves quickly form once the shoot has broken out of the ground. In some cases the food stores themselves are drawn above ground and become the first seed leaves. All this can happen in the dark, thanks to that vital food store but seeds need water and warmth to germinate otherwise they may remain dormant for months or even years. There are records of date seeds from the time of King Herod two thousand years ago that have germinated into viable plants. Leaves dont do anything. The leaf is the plants food factory. It is here that the almost magical process takes place that turns the equivalent of fizzy water (water and carbon dioxide and a few mineral salts) into the plants food and structure, including wood. Photosynthesis harnesses light energy from the sun, using a green pigment called chlorophyll, combining water from the soil and carbon dioxide from the air to make first sugars and then starch and other more complex chemicals. Most living leaves are green or at least the ones that contain chlorophyll. However, there are other pigments ie, carotenoids, anthocyanins and betalains, which can mask the colour and the chlorophyll degrades and is lost in the dying red, brown and yellow autumn leaves. Leaves need to be exposed to the suns light and this accounts for their patterns on trees and other green plants. They may be paired, or grouped, or spiral up the stem following mathematical laws, but they need maximum exposure to contribute to the life of the plant. Look up from under a broad-leafed tree and you will see how the canopy cuts out virtually all the light.
2.2 Science and Technology in the National Curriculum for Northern Ireland
Animals and plants At Key Stage 1 students should be given opportunities to find out about the variety of animal and plant life both through direct observations and by using secondary sources eg, drawing and naming living things seen on the way to school, in and around school or on a school visit. This helps students to sort living things into the two broad groups of animals and plants, and to recognise and name the main parts of flowering plants including root, stem, leaf and flower. At Key Stage 2 students should be given opportunities to observe similarities and differences among animals and among plants, find out ways in which animal and plant behaviour is influenced by seasonal changes eg, find out about some trees losing their leaves in autumn, buds opening in spring or hibernation and migration in winter. Students can also investigate local habitats, including the relationship between the animals and the plants found there, and develop skills in classifying animals and plants by observing external features. They can also investigate the conditions necessary for growing familiar plants including light, heat and water, and learn about the life cycle of flowering plants including how pollen is taken from the stamen into the stigma, fertilised in the ovule and a seed is produced which is dispersed in a variety of ways.
Busy lizzy. All the varieties grow well on sunny windowsills if watered and fed. This small plant grows well in shade and semi-shade too and flowers profusely. Stem cuttings root in water or in soil and the pollinated flowers produce exploding seed heads. The flowers are claimed to be self-cleaning and the exploding seed pods show a good example of seed distribution very well. There is a tall, wild form of the species called Policemans Helmet. You can see water moving through a plant. Busy lizzy plants have translucent stems, so coloured water use dilute ink or water in which water-based felt pens have been soaked can be seen being carried up to the leaves.
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Cacti. The spines can be painful, especially the barbed ones, which are difficult to remove. If brushed against, whole branches can break off and stick into skin. These can be removed by putting a pocket comb between the cactus and the skin and flipping sharply upward into an empty space. If you have to handle cacti, use a folded cloth to circle the plant. Cacti need bright sun and very little water especially in the winter. They can flower vigorously, contrary to the belief that they only flower every seventh year. Some produce numerous baby plants round the base and these can be detached and potted. Chlorophytum or spider plant. This is a tough plant that can survive some neglect. Plantlets, complete with roots, grow on trailing stems and can be removed and potted. Coleus. A good classroom plant, providing it has plenty of light and is not allowed to go short of water. The leaves are multi-coloured but the flowers are insignificant. The flowering shoots should be removed to maintain the large coloured leaves. Cress. Cress may be familiar to you, but it can still be novel to your students. Its great quality is that it can be grown for eating without needing soil. The seeds are sticky so they can be stuck to any wet surface. They grow on paper towels or pieces of cloth, or dip a ball of wet cotton wool in cress seeds and then suspend it in a jar to keep it damp. You can grow a green ball of cress in four or five days. Duckweed. These small pond plants can be grown easily in saucers or plastic petri dishes on windowsills. You can also try growing them in pond water, rainwater, tap water, distilled water and very dilute fertiliser solution. Count the fronds. Where do the plants grow best? Geraniums. These are tough plants that can withstand baking on sunny windowsills. Cuttings can be taken or side shoots can be snapped off and rooted in soil or water. Ginkgo (Maidenhair fern). This is an unusual plant that needs to be grown outside as it increases in height. This tree was alive in the time of the dinosaurs. There are claims that the leaves have medicinal properties, but they should not be eaten.
Mung beans. Mung, masoor and urd beans are common pulses and important food sources in southeast Asia. Their history and use is mapped on the Kew Gardens plant culture site: www.plantcultures.org/themes/food_beans.html. These can be grown in warm, dark places and produce the bean sprouts used in Chinese cooking. You can buy them from supermarkets or health food shops. Soak a handful, allow the beans to drain and put them in a jar. Cover the top with a cloth secured by an elastic band and put the jar in an airing cupboard or warm dark place. Add water to the jar daily, rinse well at least twice and drain-off the excess. The long roots that are produced are edible. However, if you leave the germinating seeds the seed coats are pushed off and the leaves sprout. If you leave the seeds in the dark the shoots will be yellow as used in Chinese cooking. If you put them in the light they produce green leaves. To remove the discarded seed coats, fill the jar with water and the seed coats will float to the top. Mung beans grow into an edible salad vegetable in hygienic conditions. They show the effects of growing in light or darkness or using colour filters under coloured light. It is easy to measure and record the root growth.
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Persian violet. The Persian violet (Exacum affine) is native to Yemen. This plant has small flowers and is a good plant for growing in shade. It can be grown in the winter and summer. During the warm summer days it flowers very quickly. Philodendron. There are a thousand or more species of these arum flowers. They are a popular group of plants that are grown for their ornamental foliage. Indoor plants thrive in warm temperatures and can survive at lower light than other house plants. Wiping the leaves with water removes any dust and insects. Plants in pots with good roots systems benefit from having a weak fertiliser solution applied every few weeks. Piggyback plants. Tolmea is a plant that produces baby plants at the junction of the leaf stalk. If these are not removed more plantlets grow on the leaves of the first plantlet. Plantlets can be grown in potting compost. Sensitive plant. Mimosa pudica grows well in a moist atmosphere so its wise to bring the plants in only to demonstrate the folding of the leaves in response to a stimulus. Cut the base from a two litre soft drinks bottle and put it over the plants until the leaves are spread. Then remove the bottle and blow on the plant gently. The leaves respond by folding and dropping down. They recover quickly for further demonstrations. The folding is due to a rapid loss of pressure in cells close to the leaf base. Sensitive plants can be grown from seed. Spiderwort. Tradescantia plants grow well on windowsills and benefit from regular watering and feeding, and are also fairly resistant to neglect. After a year the plants lose their healthy appearance. If you make cuttings they grow well in water and produce roots. This plants main scientific interest is as an indicator of harmful radiation, which changes the colour of its stamens from blue to pink not a primary science activity! Umbrella plant. Umbrella plants or Nile grass are one of the few plants that tolerate over-watering. The plants can withstand bright sunlight but should be kept standing in a bowl of water. The flowering umbrellas root if they are planted with 3 cm of their stem resting the umbrella on the soil, or placing the umbrella upside-down in a shallow dish of water.
Trees and shrubs Broom seeds Privet all, especially berries Cherry laurel leaves and fruits Rhododendron leaves and flowers Holly berries Snowberry fruits Horse chestnut leaves, flowers and conkers Spindle tree Laburnum all, especially seeds Yew all, especially seeds Vegetables and fruit Beans French and red kidney, raw or undercooked Rhubarb leaves Potato all green parts, including tubers Tomato leaves Tomato and bean seeds, and seed potatoes have been offered to schools as part of the Year of Food and Farming. Parts of these plants contain toxins. See over for further advice on care with them. Tomato and potato plants are members of the Solanaceae family and contain toxic glycoalkaloids although the concentration is low in tomato fruits and cooked potato tubers. Quite large quantities of inedible parts of the plants or raw potatoes need to be eaten to cause more than mild gastrointestinal problems. Bean seeds and some varieties of peas contain variable quantities of toxic lectins and other harmful substances. These can be inactivated by soaking and cooking. Children should be told not to eat these parts of the plants, including raw potatoes or beans and it is wise not to let young children handle seeds as they may eat them and choke or become ill. Gloves may be useful for people with sensitive skin. So keep planting. Its great for children to see their food growing! Information on growing potatoes can be found at: www.potatoesforschools.org.uk.
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Do all seeds absorb water? Some seed coats eg, the dark coats of sweet pea seeds and the coats of nasturtium seeds are waterproof. To start them germinating, an adult can cut away a small piece of the coat before putting them in water. Take great the coats are hard and slippery. Seeds that germinate in nature need soil with a high moisture content.
How much water do seeds take up? Put mung bean seeds in a measured amount of water and observe how much is absorbed. You can also weigh the seeds before and after; or both. How does water travel through a plant? The familiar stems-in-coloured-water activity is still a thrill for children. Try celery stalks in dilute ink and after an hour or two cut the stems to see how far the ink has travelled. You can colour white carnations in the same way, or split the stems and put the ends in two different colours for a multi-coloured bloom.
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Where does the water go? You can demonstrate transpiration the loss of water from a plant by putting a plastic bag over a potted plant and sealing it to the pot with an elastic band. Strictly you should cover the soil surface to prevent losing water from there. Water condenses and accumulates on the inside of the bag. It has been drawn through the plant and lost from the leaves. Transpiration also helps to cool plants on hot days.
Do plants need light to grow? Seeds do germinate in the dark (as they must if they are underground) and the plants grow at first using the seed food store. Green plants need light to manufacture food so plants grow long and straggly in the dark a process called etiolation in an effort to reach the light. There is a lack of chlorophyll, needed for photosynthesis and etiolated plants are yellow and unhealthy. Given light, plants regain their green colour and thrive. Do plants grow differently in different coloured light? Cut the bases from plastic soft drinks bottles of different colours and stand them over growing plants cress is ideal. Compare the differences in the growing plants. Do plants grow towards the light? Grow cress on a damp cloth or paper towel on a sunny windowsill. The plants bend towards the window, spreading their leaves to catch as much sunlight as possible. Now put a mirror made from cooking foil behind the bending plants the opposite side from the window. This balances the light and the cress grows straight upward again. Can plants find the light? Grow a plant in a box keeping it watered with a small hole through which the light can enter. The plant etiolates, but will eventually emerge from the hole. Does coloured light make a difference? It is easy to investigate the effect of light on mung beans. Try putting a jar in daylight and another in the dark, or under a coloured gel to filter the light. You can study growth, water absorption and temperature effects.
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Does fertiliser affect plant growth? Grow two similar plants, one with and one without fertiliser. Children may suggest that other growing media milk, cola will enhance plant growth and these are worth trying, although the results may not be easy to explain. How do plants break paving stones? Soak some broad bean seeds and plant them in compost in small containers. Cover the compost surface with a centimetre layer of liquid plaster of Paris and let it harden. The beans grow to push their way through the plaster. Small plants like beans cannot break paving stones, but larger woody plants can. Do flowers move? Daisy flowers close at night and open in the daytime. Daisies are composite flowers the flower heads are a mass of smaller flowers. You can show this with two clumps of daisies one in water on a windowsill and the other in a cupboard. Observe the differences then swap them over. This movement is called nyctinasty and there is no clear explanation for it. Charles Darwin suggested that folding the petals, and the leaves of some beans, helped prevent cold and possibly frost damage. Another scientist called Bunning suggested that some plants were sensitive to moonlight and this confused their measurement of day length. (A full Moon might be recognised as a false day). Some forest floor plants can be overwhelmed by bright sunlight and close their sensitive leaves 10 seconds after exposure to the sun. This is an area where your students might make a new discovery! There are more ideas at: www-saps.plantsci.cam.ac.uk/docs/p4pp/lp/lpE.pdf.
Fluid sowing. Seeds suspended in cold water paste stick to moist surfaces. Germinate cress, mustard or lettuce seeds on paper towels then wash them off into mixed school paste and stir. Put the mix in a plastic bag, cut-off one corner and use the bag to sow the seeds on vertical surfaces, or to write letters or words. Plant hair. Put wet cotton wool in an eggshell and draw a face on the outside. Shake on some cress seeds and your egg head soon grows green hair. Sprinkle seeds on wet unglazed pottery, plaster of Paris or a house brick. You can also write letters or words in seeds.
Root cuttings. Tradescantia and busy lizzy both root well from cuttings to produce new plants. Make cuttings using a very sharp knife or razor. This is a teacher demonstration rather than a student activity. First, identify a node the point where the leaves are attached to the stem. Then cut short lengths (about 10 cm long) from the plant just below the node. Push the length into potting compost or place in water, first removing any leaves that might be underground or underwater. Tradescantia, busy lizzy, geraniums and coleus all root well in water. When the cuttings have rooted, they can be transferred to potting compost. Some science suppliers sell transparent jelly for rooting cuttings. The roots are clearly visible as the cuttings grow. You shouldnt need rooting hormones for this activity. However, if you do use rooting hormones lock them away when you are not using them. Bottle gardens. Glass containers have obvious disadvantages, but large plastic bottles especially sweet jars with their wide apertures are ideal for the task and can be planted upright or stood on their side. Bottle gardens demonstrate a small water cycle water transpires from the leaves, condenses and runs back into the soil. Small slow growing plants, including ferns and mosses are best planted in a few centimetres of compost. Bottle gardens should get plenty of light, but not direct sunlight. Exploring stinging nettles. Stinging nettles are not suitable classroom plants. However, many animals are not troubled by the stinging hairs on nettles and feed on the plants. A surprising number of these animals can be recovered by putting the stems of nettles inside plastic bags and shaking them. You might find aphids, plant sucking bugs, ladybirds and ichneumon flies, along with caterpillars in season.
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Carnivorous plants. Plants like Sundew and Venus fly traps and the many pitcher plants originate in soil that is low in nutrients. As a result, they have evolved the ability to catch and digest flies as a source of mineral salts. Children have a macabre interest in carnivorous plants which can be bought quite cheaply at garden centres and flourish in the right conditions. The plants are supplied with growing instructions, but exposing them to the summer sun and heavy watering with rainwater is usually successful. However, move them out of direct sunlight in winter. Do not use tap water and, of course, do not give them fertiliser. The Sundew and Venus fly trap snap shut very quickly in response to stimulus trigger hairs on the leaf initiate the leafs response. Frequent stimulus leads to a slower response time. Pitcher plants offer insects a slide to destruction. The plants funnels have covers, but these do not close; presumably they simply hinder escape. Charles Darwin investigated carnivorous plants, finding that they responded to complex stimuli but not to falling rain. They will close over dead insects, so your students can feed them. Do point out that most plants do not eat in this way and like any green plant, they cannot survive without photosynthesising.
Discovering dandelions. These plants are abundant, persistent, fast growing and are ideal for investigations. The QCA Scheme of Work for Science for England, Unit (5/6H), introduces the skill of sampling a population by counting dandelions. Dandelions are hugely successful plants. They have found an environmental niche and filled it. They are best suited to disturbed habitats and grow in lawns and gardens because their tiny, wind-borne seeds can lodge in the cracks in broken ground. They grow vigorously with their shape adapting to welltrodden paths and to sheltered corners. They spread flat on paths, or grow up towards the light when they are rooted in the shade. Their long taproot can draw water from below the dry topsoil in a drought, keeping them green when all around is brown grass. Investigating how dandelions grow. Are flat and upright dandelions different plants? One way to find out is to swap them. Put a food tin, with both ends removed and no sharp edges, round a flat plant. Tread down on it and lift a core of soil and most of the dandelion. Do the same with a tall dandelion growing in the shade. Exchange the plants, watering them in. The different conditions quickly lead to changes in the shapes of each plant, which can be related to their need for light. The plant in the shade grows up towards light while the plant in the centre of the field spreads to catch the bright sunlight. Dandelions as a medicine and in history. Today, dandelions are considered to be invasive, persistent, deep-rooted weeds. But not so long ago they were valued plants respected for their nutritional and medicinal qualities. Their Latin name, Taraxacum officinale, derives from the Greek words for illness or disorder taraxots and remedy or medicine akos and officinale, of the herb markets. Dandelions or Dent-de-lion (lions tooth in Old French) with their jagged leaves were first recognised as a medicine by the ancient Greeks. In the Middle ages the diuretic root was used to treat kidney and liver disorders. An 11th century Arabian medical text, Avicennas Herbal, is the first written record of their medicinal properties. Dandelions spread to America with the first settlers where the Cree tribe then used them to treat jaundice, eczema and anaemia.
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Several suppliers offer a large felt flower with a bee for pollination explanations at around 40. Philip Harris also supplies a glove puppet bee that can be used to transport pollen. Economatics offers a large floor foam puzzle with the five main parts of a plant for around 20. Scientific and Chemical is one supplier that has a Tree for all seasons for around 30 that can be used to illustrate the annual changes in a tree and a set of magnetic illustrations of plant life cycles for 20.
Many salad plants rocket, basil and lettuce can be cultivated in weeks from seed and eaten. But remember that they have not completed their life cycles they will not have flowered and seeded. Seeds from science suppliers should not have been treated with fungicide and so can be handled safely. You can grow cress, mustard and mung beans all year round. They sprout quickly and, if you keep them in hygienic conditions, you can eat them. They may not be novel to you but your students will still be excited by these old favourites. Timstar offers bulk packs of broad bean, cress, pea and sunflower seeds. Scientific and Chemical supplies broad beans, peas, maize, wheat, mustard, barley, oats and mung beans without fungicide dressing in 500 g bulk jars. Garden centres have a huge range of plants including engaging ones like carnivorous plants. You will have to follow cultivation advice carefully for these carnivorous plants. For example, Venus flytraps, must be given only rainwater and suffer if their traps are continually sprung. Growing plants in transparent containers of gel allows students to see plants roots and helps them to understand that plants do not draw all that they need from soil. Root windows and flat-sided observation tanks are intended to hold soil, but the roots grow against the sides of the tank, so that they can be seen easily.
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Outdoors, grow beds and grow bags can contain and promote plant growth. It is worth comparing plant pots and tray prices with local garden centres. Miniature greenhouses and propagators can help accelerate plant growth, but are quite expensive. You can achieve similar effects with a two litre soft drinks bottle. Cut off the base and put the bottle over the growing plant. Removing the bottle top reduces misting. Many suppliers offer compost and you can compare this with garden centres for prices and convenience. Compost should be peat-free, dry and clean to use. You can mix it with dry soil, but do not grow pot plants in ordinary soil.
8.0 Resources
8.1 Primary plants
Primary plants, Martin Braund, 2001 (ISBN 9781841900384) is published by Continuum Books at 29.99. This book is fully illustrated and includes a CD-ROM with many beautifully photographed images of plants and flowers. This is a versatile resource for whole-class teaching and students own topic work. Contents: Introduction; 1. Our world of plants; 2. Variety is the spice of plant life; 3. Carry on growing; 4. Feeding the world; 5. Water: a question of balance; 6. Carrying on; 7. Plants and the environment; 8. Mighty microbes; 9. Celebrating with plants; 10. Progressive planting; 11. Resources; Concept Summary. An excellent guide to activities with plants in schools. www.continuumbooks.com
Build your own cell is an extension cut and paste activity introducing plant and animal cells for 1011 year olds and is also curriculum relevant for 1213 year olds. Easy PEAsy seed germination is a germination and variables activity for 811 year olds. Stings and things is an extension investigation into pH for 1011 year olds and is curriculum relevant for 1213 year olds. Photosynthesis explored is a fact sheet and investigation for 1013 years. Seeds and plant growth discovery pack is designed to allow students aged 5 12 to explore the world of seeds and plant growth. All the activities can be used to encourage children to care for and appreciate living things, and to think about the world around them. The activities can also be used to encourage children to think about health and safety issues. The plant detective is an interactive presentation suitable for 8-11 year olds, describing the different parts of plants. The plant detective covers topics such as reproduction, photosynthesis and adaptation. To use The plant detective you need to have a Flash Viewer installed on your computer. Alternatively you can view a text only version. If you would like further information about any of these resources contact BBSRC at [email protected].
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8.10 Teachers TV
The Blue Dragon a cartoon science series for Key Stage 1 students includes a programme on plants: www.teachers.tv/video/1776. The Blue Dragon follows the story of four real animals and a dragon that embark on a journey. Through their experiences the animals learn about science in the world. The programme explores: plants as living things; different parts of a plant; different parts of vegetable and fruit plants the roots, shoots, stem, flowers and fruit; the idea that some plants can be dangerous and should not be eaten; how seeds can grow into plants; how different seeds grow into different plants and why plants need air, water and light to grow.
8.11 4Learning
Seeing science Plants is one of nine CD-ROMs in the Key Stage 2 Seeing Science series, with video clips and activities. The subject areas covered are What are Plants?, Growth and Nutrition, Plants Provide and Life Cycles. A site licence is available for around 10.
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9.0 Beekeeping
The British Beekeepers Association (BBKA) has developed a schools pack for Key Stages 1 and 2, which is a useful tool in teaching about the plants and animals that surround us, including minibeasts, pollination and care for the environment. It is available in two forms as a conventional ring binder or as a CD-ROM. The file has 90 pages with both line drawings and colour photographs and was revised in 2008. It is full of lesson ideas and the worksheets if used selectively are appropriate for Key Stage 1 and 2 students. The pack costs 15 including postage and packing, from the BBKA. The CD-Rom version is structured as a self-contained website so you dont need an internet connection. It has two sections the teacher-supporting staff room and the interactive classroom. Children can browse this safely, learning by exploring. The CD-ROM costs 10. More about this resource and order forms for both products are available at www.britishbee.org.uk/bees4kids/.
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