Day 15: Culminating Activity (Part 2)
Culminating Project
OVERVIEW
Today, the science teams celebrate their work on the life cycles of animals with a poster session for the other science teams, the teacher, and invited guests. The teams have become experts in the specific animals they researched, and they have designed and completed science investigations of their own. Now, as young scientists, they will share the results of their work with the other science teams and invited guests with a scientific poster session.
If teams are not ready to present, some time may be allowed for completion at the teacher’s discretion. The teacher may decide what time of the day the poster session will take place. We encourage the inviting parents or colleagues to attend.
SAFETY
We discourage using the butterfly growth habitats during the presentation if they contain chrysalises. Movements may disturb them or cause them to fall.
MATERIALS
Each team needs:
- 2 completed life cycle posters
- Butterfly Investigation Journals
- team Inquiry Chart
SETUP
- Before the class, decide where the posters will be displayed. The two posters for each team should be displayed side by side. (Ideally, the posters for all teams should be placed together, if space allows.)
- Allow space for team members to stand next to their posters when presenting.
- The presenting team will stand in front of the class as the posters are explained; the teams should also be prepared to answer any questions.
- Decide on the order the teams will present in and write this on the whiteboard for reference.
PROCEDURE
- Welcome learners and visitors to the poster session. Explain that scientists often share their work across the scientific community through posters or through oral presentations before a live audience.
- Announce that today is the day teams will share their projects with each other! Point to the whiteboard and read the order of the presentations.
- Ask, Does each team have team members assigned to talk about their posters?
- Remind learners that they will have only 5 minutes to present. This includes time for questions and answers.
- Add that, as an audience, all learners must practice good manners and respect. It is important that everyone has a chance to be heard, so members of the audience will need to sit quietly, with their eyes on those presenting (This includes staying quiet during their own team presentation).
- Allow the class 5–10 minutes to prepare as you check in with each team to make sure that they have what they need.
PRESENTATIONS
- When all teams are ready, ask everyone to have a seat, with teams sitting together.
- Here is suggested wording that the teacher can begin with:
Welcome to (teacher’s name) science poster session. Today, science teams that have been researching and investigating the life cycles of animals will share what they have learned with their fellow scientists. I’d like to welcome the first team that will be presenting.
- At the end of each presentation, allow 1–2 short questions from the class, any observers, or you, the teacher, about the team’s investigation. For example, you may ask, How do the life cycles of your two animals compare? Do the animals go through the same type of changes in their life cycle? What was the most interesting thing you learned about the life cycles of animals? Allow the team members time to answer.
- When all investigations have been presented, congratulate the science teams for the work they have done. Remind them that as they worked on their research and science investigations, they were doing the work of scientists. Add how they have shown that they can work together as a team, with team members helping each other to get things done.
- Allow time for learners to share or reflect on their investigative experiences and on their presentations. Did they feel like real scientists as they worked?