k-3 - moody gardens · national day for thanksgiving. 8 the annual macy’s thanksgiving day parade...
TRANSCRIPT
LEARNING RESOURCE GUIDE
RIO © 2014 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
K-3
1
1 Along with all the other carnivals of Brazil, the Rio de Janeiro Carnival marks the beginning of Lent, the forty-day sacrifice period before Easter.
2 In 2011, 4.9 million people took part in the festivities in Rio. 400,000 of those were foreigners.
3 The first festival dates back as far as 1723.
4 There are more than 2 million people on the streets every day during the carnival.
5 More than 200 different samba schools from Rio participate.
6 The main Carnival parades takes place in the Sambadrome.
7 The samba dance, originating from the Bahia region with African rhythms, came to Rio de Janeiro around 1920.
8 Carnival is a national holiday in Brazil.
9 Many Rio habitants not wanting to participate in the festival actually leave the city for quieter places during the festival.
10 The Rio de Janeiro Carnival is often cited as the “world’s largest party”.
1 The Plymouth Pilgrims were the first to celebrate the Thanksgiving. They celebrated the first Thanksgiving Day at Plymouth, Massachusetts.
2 The Pilgrim leader, Governor William Bradford, had organized the first Thanksgiving feast in 1621. He invited the neighboring Wampanoag Indians to the feast.
3 The first Thanksgiving celebration lasted three days.
4 Mashed potatoes, pumpkin pies, popcorn, milk, corn on the cob, and cranberries were not foods present on the first Thanksgiving’s feast table.
5 Lobster, rabbit, chicken, fish, squashes, beans, chestnuts, hickory nuts, onions, leeks, dried fruits, maple syrup and honey, radishes, cabbage, carrots, eggs, and goat cheese are thought to have made up the first Thanksgiving feast.
6 The pilgrims didn’t use forks; they ate with spoons, knives, and their fingers.
7 Abraham Lincoln issued a ‘Thanksgiving Proclamation’ on October 3, 1863 and officially set aside the last Thursday of November as the national day for Thanksgiving.
8 The annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade tradition began in the 1920s.
9 Since 1947, the National Turkey Federation has presented a live turkey and two dressed turkeys to the President. The President does not eat the live turkey. He “pardons” it and allows it to live out its days on a historical farm.
10 In the United States, about 280 million turkeys are sold for the Thanksgiving celebrations.
TEN FaCtS AboUT CaRnIvAl IN RIo 10 FaCtS AboUT ThAnKsGIvING
2
Complete the double bubble map below using what you have learned about Carnival and Thanksgiving. REMEMBER – circles in the middle are for what makes them similar, and circles on the outsides are for what makes them different.
COmpARE aND CONtRaSt: DOUbLE CELEbRAtION bUbbLE
CaRnIvAl ThAnKsGIvING
NAME:
DATE:
3
Cut out each statement circle and paste it in the correct location on the Double Celebration Bubble Map to compare and contrast Carnival and Thanksgiving.
COmpARE aND CONtRaSt: DOUbLE CELEbRAtION bUbbLE
is a national holiday
people watch parades
first held in 1723
holiday in the U.S.A.
holiday in the spring
first held in 1621
holiday in Brazil
holiday in the fall
millions of people celebrate
4
Search horizontally, vertically and diagonally for the words in the word bank. When you have circled all of the words, use the letters that have not been circled in order to fill the blanks below and discover the answer to Blu’s riddle.
WORD SEARCh
RIDDLE: WhAt Do yoU GEt IF yoU cROSs a cEnTIpEDE aND a pARROT?
A R W R T O E S J W
H A B I T A T M E P
N I C O N A L A W E
E N D A N G E R E D
K F P A R R O T L R
C O L O R F U L I O
E R T F L I G H T K
F E A T H E R S A U
A S N I G E L E L L
K T T A I L B B I E
BEAK
FEATHERS
RIO
HABITAT
PARROT
TAIL
SMART
WING
FLIGHT
COLORFUL
BLU
TOES
RAINFOREST
JEWEL
ENDANGERED
NIGEL
NICO
PEDRO
WORD BANK
!
NAME:
DATE:
5
maCaW mAth mAnIa!
Use the number code box to solve Jewel’s riddle below.
RECOMMENDED FOR KINDERGARTEN
RIDDLE: WhIch sIDE OF a pARROT hAs thE pRETtIESt fEaThERS?
!
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
NAME:
DATE:
20 15 198 21 95 20 4 5
6
maCaW mAth mAnIa!
Find the sum or difference, then match the letters to the blanks below.
RECOMMENDED FOR GRADE 1
RIDDLE: WhIch sIDE OF a pARROT hAs thE pRETtIESt fEaThERS?
!
3 + 4 = 5 - 4 = 6 + 2 = 1 + 9 = 9 - 3 =
5 + 4 = 8 + 4 = 7 - 5 = 6 + 5 = 3 + 1 =
NAME:
DATE:
9 12 16 2 811 7 10 4
T S I D H
T O U E E
7
maCaW mAth mAnIa!
Find the sum or difference, then match the letters to the blanks below.
RECOMMENDED FOR GRADE 2
RIDDLE: WhIch sIDE OF a pARROT hAs thE pRETtIESt fEaThERS?
!
13 + 34
45 - 14
56 + 22
16 + 42
29 - 13
38 + 41
67 - 35
22 + 55
13 + 11
15 - 5
NAME:
DATE:
32 79 3178 77 5824 47 16 10
T
O
S
T
H
U
I
E
D
E
8
maCaW mAth mAnIa!
Find the product, then match the letters to the blanks below.
RECOMMENDED FOR GRADE 3
RIDDLE: WhIch sIDE OF a pARROT hAs thE pRETtIESt fEaThERS?
!
5 x 6 = 4 x 7 = 3 x 6 = 9 x 3 = 10 x 7 =
8 x 7 = 4 x 4 = 9 x 6 = 8 x 3 = 7 x 6 =
NAME:
DATE:
30 16 2818 54 2724 56 42 70
T S H I E
T O U E D
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EaT LIKE a bIRD Lab
All animals need to eat to survive, and all animals have features (e.g., claws or a good sense of smell) that help them collect the food they need. Eat Like a Bird lets you explore how the shape of a bird’s beak influences the bird’s food-gathering ability. You will use your “beaks” to play a game in which you collect “food.” It’s feeding time!
ROUND 1:
NAME:
DATE:
FOODGROUP 1
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 2
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 3
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 4
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 5
BEAK TOOL:
MARBLES
LIMA BEANS
KIDNEY BEANS
PENNIES
PAPER CLIPS
PAPER BALLS
RUBBER BANDS
TOTAL AMOUNT OF FOOD:
10
EaT LIKE a bIRD Lab
ROUND 2:
NAME:
DATE:
FOODGROUP 1
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 2
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 3
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 4
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 5
BEAK TOOL:
MARBLES
LIMA BEANS
KIDNEY BEANS
PENNIES
PAPER CLIPS
PAPER BALLS
RUBBER BANDS
TOTAL AMOUNT OF FOOD:
11
EaT LIKE a bIRD Lab
ROUND 3:
NAME:
DATE:
FOODGROUP 1
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 2
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 3
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 4
BEAK TOOL:GROUP 5
BEAK TOOL:
MARBLES
LIMA BEANS
KIDNEY BEANS
PENNIES
PAPER CLIPS
PAPER BALLS
RUBBER BANDS
TOTAL AMOUNT OF FOOD:
12
All animals need to eat to survive, and all animals have features (e.g., claws or a good sense of smell) that help them collect the food they need. Eat Like a Bird lets students explore how the shape of a bird’s beak influences the bird’s food-gathering ability. Students will use their “beaks” to play a game in which they collect “food.” It’s feeding time!
Materials• Data Sheet
• Pencils (one per student)
• Cups (one per group)
• 10 tongue depressors
• Masking tape
• 3–5 of each of the following “beaks”: round toothpicks (flat toothpicks break too easily), spoons, forks, and spring-action wooden clothespins
• “Food” items (at least three of each item per student): marbles, dried lima beans, dried kidney beans, pennies, paperclips, paper wadded into grape-sized balls, and thin rubber bands
Prepare Ahead• Make tongs: crumple a strip of paper into a wad about the width of
a finger. Put the wad between two tongue depressors. Secure with a rubber band. Adjust so the tongs open when not in use.
• Use masking tape to make a circle 6–8 feet in diameter and a starting line 8–10 feet away.
• Set-up groups of 3-4 students.
Game RulesIn rounds 1 and 2, teams must use the beak assigned by the leader.
Students start behind the line. One member from each team runs into
TEAchER ShEET: EaT LIKE A bIRD Lab
the circle, picks up one piece of food, carries it back to the team, and puts it into the cup. The next person in line takes the beak and repeats the process.
No hands can touch the food, and only one piece of food should be picked up per turn.
Students who use their beaks inappropriately lose their turn.
Lead the Activity
1 Introduce the challenge. (5 minutes) Explain that in today’s challenge, students will gather “food” using
tools that are like birds’ beaks. Show them the five different “beaks,” (including the tongs you made).
Ask: • How might this beak help a bird gather food? (Spoons and
forks scoop. Toothpicks and forks poke and stab. Tongs and clothespins grab.)
• Which kinds of foods do you think would be the easiest to pick up with each of these beaks?
• Which will be the hardest to pick up? (Record the predictions on a board or chart.)
2 Test predictions by playing Round 1. (10 minutes) Tell kids this game is a relay race. The goal is for each team to collect
as much food as possible—the number of collected items is what counts, not the size or type. Review the rules (see Game Rules above). Divide the group into teams of three or four. Give each team a cup, pencils, data sheets, and one kind of “beak”. Then sprinkle the “food” in the circle. Say, “Go,” and give teams five minutes to collect as much food as possible.
13
3 Discuss what happened. (10 minutes) After five minutes, have each team fill in the table on their data sheet.
Record each team’s data on the table.
Ask: • Which birds can survive on a wide variety of foods and which can
survive on only a few kinds? (Beaks with similar totals for many foods represent birds that can survive on a wide variety of foods. Beaks with high totals for only one or two kinds of food represent birds that can survive on only a few foods.)
• If a certain food became unavailable, how might that affect the different birds? (Birds that depend on a food that becomes unavailable would go hungry. Birds that eat many different kinds of food could still feed.)
4 Play Round 2. (10 minutes) Assign each team a new kind of beak. Inside the circle, redistribute the
food collected in round 1 and return the empty cups to the teams. Repeat steps 2 and 3.
5 Discuss what happened. (10 minutes) Draw students’ attention to the data on the group chart.
• In our game, if you wanted to make life easy for birds with tong-like beaks, which foods would you put in the circle? (Marbles)
• Which birds couldn’t live in a habitat with only marbles to eat? (Ones with toothpick-like beaks.)
• Habitats usually offer many different kinds of food. When fully stocked, would the “habitat” inside our circle be suitable for a wide variety of beak shapes or for only a few? Why? (A wide variety, since there are many kinds of food.)
TEAchER ShEET: EaT LIKE A bIRD Lab
6 Play Round 3. (10 minutes) Let kids apply what they learned. This time, let teams choose their
beak. Encourage them to look at the group data to decide which beak is most effective at gathering food. Then repeat steps 2 and 3.
7 Award points. (5 minutes) Time to rack up some points. Gather as a group. Review the activity’s
key ideas by asking the following questions. Each one is worth 50 points. Whenever you hear an acceptable answer, award 50 points to the entire group.
• Name three different beak shapes and how birds use them to collect food. (Pointy beaks spear food; spoon-shaped beaks scoop food; tong-like beaks grab food.)
• Name a beak we used today that belongs to a bird that eats only a few foods and one that belongs to a bird that eats many foods. (Toothpicks and clothespins belong to birds that eat a few foods. Spoons, forks, and tongs represent birds that eat many foods.)
• Name three animals other than birds and a feature that helps each one gather its food. (Answers will vary.)
• Why is it unlikely that a bird that drinks nectar from flowers would suddenly start eating fish? (It doesn’t have the right beak shape to eat fish, so it would eventually go hungry.)
• Science involves making predictions, testing them (which includes doing something, making observations, and drawing conclusions), and sharing your results. Give an example of how we did these steps today. (Answers will vary.)
14
maKE a paRRot maSk foR CaRnIvAl!
Supplies: • Paper plate
• Bag of feathers OR paper feathers using attached template
• Crayons, colored pencils or markers
• Scissors
• Glue
• Mask template
• Tongue depressor
Directions: 1 Color your mask template using your favorite bright colors.
2 Cut the template out carefully.
3 Glue the template to your paper plate. You may want to trim off the excess plate around your template.
4 Have an adult help you cut out the eye holes in your mask.
5 Glue feathers onto your mask to decorate.
6 Attach tongue depressor to the bottom of your mask to be used as a handle.
Now you’re ready to join the Carnival parade!
References (SEE NEXT PAGES FOR ACTUAL TEMPLATES)
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maKE a paRRot maSk foR CaRnIvAl!
MASK TEMPLATE
16
maKE a paRRot maSk foR CaRnIvAl!
FEATHER TEMPLATE
17
• Parrots are a broad order of more than 350 birds. Macaws, Amazons, lorikeets, lovebirds, cockatoos and many others are all considered parrots.
• Most parrots live in tropical areas.
• All parrots have curved beaks and all are zygodactyls, meaning they have four toes on each foot, two pointing forward and two projecting backward.
• Parrots are often brightly colored.
• Parrots are believed to be one of the most intelligent bird species.
• Some species are known for imitating human voices.
• Most parrots eat fruit, flowers, buds, nuts, seeds, and some small creatures such as insects.
• Many parrots are kept as pets, especially macaws, Amazon parrots, cockatiels, parakeets, and cockatoos.
• Some parrot species can live for over 80 years.
• The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) bans the sale of any wild-caught species, yet the parrots’ popularity continues to drive illegal trade.
• Some parrot species, such as Spix’s Macaws, the bird Blu’s character is based on, are highly endangered.
FUN paRRot FaCtS
18
Based on what you have learned about parrots from your reading, decide whether each statement is a Parrot-Fact (+) or Parrot-Fiction (-).
______1. There are more than 350 types of parrots.
______2. Most parrots live in cold climates.
______3. Zygodactyl means having four toes, two forward and two backward.
______4. All parrots can talk.
______5. Parrots have long, thin beaks like hummingbirds.
______6. Parrots are omnivores (they eat plants and animals).
______7. Parrots are never brightly colored.
______8. Some species of parrots are endangered.
______9. Parrots are very intelligent.
_____10. Parrots are never kept as pets.
paRRot-FaCt OR paRRot-FICtION?NAME:
DATE:
19
In our story, Blu is a parrot who has never learned to fly. In the end, he saves the day by facing his fears, spreading his wings, and flying for the very first time.
Your task is to write and illustrate Your own “First Time Tale” describing a moment in your life when you did something for the first time. Examples: riding a bike, swimming, jumping off the diving board, doing a cartwheel, etc.
Be sure to describe how you felt before, during and after your first time experience. Illustrate your story in the space provided.
TELl a “FIRsT TImE TaLE”NAME:
DATE:
20
TELl a “FIRsT TImE TaLE”NAME:
DATE:
21
AnSWER KEy
Word Search Riddle Answer: A Walkie-Talkie
Compare and Contrast: Double Celebration Bubble:
CARNIVAL BOTH THANKSGIVING
holiday in Brazil is a national holiday holiday in the U.S.A
holiday in the spring people watch parades holiday in the fall
first held in 1723 millions of people celebrate first held in 1621
Macaw Math Mania – Kindergarten Answer to riddle: The Outside
Macaw Math Mania – Grade 1
3 + 4 = 7 5 - 4 = 1 6 + 2 = 8 1 + 9 = 10 9 - 3 = 6
5 + 4 = 9 8 + 4 = 12 7 - 5 = 2 6 + 5 = 11 3 + 1 = 4
Answer to riddle: The Outside
Macaw Math Mania – Grade 2
13 + 34
47
45 - 14
31
56 + 22
78
16 + 42
58
29 - 13
16
38 + 41
79
67 - 35
32
22 + 55
77
13 + 11
24
15 - 5 10
Answer to riddle: The Outside
22
AnSWER KEy
Macaw Math Mania – Grade 3
5 x 6 = 30 4 x 7 = 28 3 x 6 = 18 9 x 3 = 27 10 x 7 = 70
8 x 7 = 56 4 x 4 = 16 9 x 6 = 54 8 x 3 = 24 7 x 6 = 42
Answer to riddle: The Outside
Eat Like a Bird LabAnswers are embedded in the Teacher Sheets (page 12-13).
Parrot Fact or Parrot Fiction
1. Fact (+) 6. Fact (+)
2. Fiction (-) 7. Fiction (-)
3. Fact (+) 8. Fact (+)
4. Fiction (-) 9. Fact (+)
5. Fiction (-) 10. Fiction (-)
SOURCESPage 1: 10 facts about Carnival in Rio: Adapted from: http://culturetown.org/10-interesting-facts-about-the-rio-de-janeiro-carnival/ 10 facts about Thanksgiving: Adapted from: http://www.whsv.com/seasonal/misc/33852054.html Page 13: Teacher sheet: eat like a bird lab: Adapted from: http://pbskids.org/fetch/parentsteachers/activities/pdf/FETCH_EatLikeABird_Notes.pdf
Page 17: Fun parrot facts: Adapted from: http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birds/parrot/