Earth is Home

Originally Written for First Grade

Investigate the concepts of diversity and cycles while studying the differences among organisms. Themes include: plant life, soil, weather, and garden creatures.

$2.00 per Unit - PDF Download

Life Lab Science was written to align with previous national science standards. We have grouped the following units in their original grade level band. These suggested grade levels may or may not align with your current grade level content.

Each unit download includes a letter to parents to prepare for the unit, a song, multiple lessons, and appendices/lab pages in English and Spanish.

 

 

Sensing Our World (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students practice using their senses to explore the world around them. 

Science Explorations: Students gain an awareness of the garden as a living laboratory. 

Process Skills: Students explore different ways of cooperating with one another through working together in the garden, sharing ideas, and listening.

In this unit, students explore life, Earth, and Physical science concepts through lessons that focus on using the senses to learn about objects and the environment. 

Life Science: Humans, like animals, use their senses to learn about the world around them. 

Earth Science: The garden is a place where plants and animals live. 

Physical Science: Objects in the garden have properties that can be observed.

 

Investigating Seeds (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students explore the diversity of seeds and the ways seeds change. 

Science Explorations: Students gain an awareness of the growth process and explore some of the characteristics of living things. 

Process Skills: Students practice observation skills and are introduced to the process of making predictions and categorizing information.

In this unit, students explore Life, Earth, and Physical science concepts through lessons that focus on the characteristics of seeds. 

Life Science: A seed is the part of a plant from which a new plant grows. There are many kinds of seeds and they all share the characteristics of living things. 

Earth Science: Seeds require water to germinate. 

Physical Science: Seeds have physical properties that can be observed and described.

 

Exploring Soil (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students observe that different kinds of plants and ani­mals live in the soil, and explore the diversity of living and nonliving things found there. 

Science Exploration: Students begin to identify living objects as plants and animals. 

Process Skills: Students observe and compare objects

The activities in this unit develop a variety of Life, Earth, and Physical science concepts related to soil and the living things found in the soil. 

Life Science: Many living things are found in garden soil. 

Earth Science: Soil is made up of many things. Soil is an example of something nonliving. 

Physical Science: Soil has properties that can be observed and described.

 

Observing Earth’s Cycles (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students explore changes and patterns of change, includ­ing cycles, that take place daily and seasonally. 

Science Explorations: Students investigate changes in shadows, day and night, the moon, and living things. 

Process Skills: By recording and comparing their observations, students begin to describe patterns of change.

This unit develops a variety of concepts related to cycles and change. 

Life Science: Living things change. 

Earth Science: There is a cycle of day and night, as well as a moon cycle. 

Physical Science: We can measure changes. 

Science, Technology, and Society: Natural patterns of change affect the way we live.

 

Investigating Weather (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students develop their understanding of various weather phenomena and the effects of these phenomena on living and nonliving things. 

Science Explorations: Students observe both changes in weather and changes caused by various weather phenomena. 

Process Skills: Students practice observing weather over time and record their observations

Process Skills: Students develop cooperative skills by participat­ing in activities and working together to grow a garden.

The activities in this unit develop a variety of concepts related to weather. 

Life Science: Living things respond to changes in the weather. 

Earth Science: Wind, precipitation, and temperature are weather conditions. 

Physical Science: Changes in direction, temperature, and volume can be measured. 

Science, Technology, and Society: Weather is an important part of our daily lives. It affects what we wear and what we do.

 
 

Exploring Plant Life (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students explore the diversity of plants and the stages of the plant life cycle. 

Science Explorations: Students identify similarities in the struc­tures and life cycles of seed-bearing plants. 

Process Skills: Students apply observation skills to identifying patterns, making comparisons, and predicting outcomes.

In this unit, students explore Life, Earth, and Physical science concepts through activities that focus on the structure and life cycle of plants. 

Life Science: Different kinds of plants have structural similarities that can be observed. All seed-bearing plants share a similar life cycle. 

Earth Science: The Earth, its atmosphere, and the sun provide resources for plants to grow and change. 

Physical Science: Change can be measured.

 

Exploring Animal Life (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students recognize that there are many kinds of animals on Earth, and that animals have a life cycle just as other living things do. 

Science Explorations: Students identify animals as living things with common characteristics. These include ways of moving (walk­ing, flying, swimming}, ways of sensing the world (seeing, hearing, smelling), and ways of eating (plant-eating or animal-eating). 

Process Skills: Students observe patterns of change, and compare and sort objects according to similarities and differences.

In this unit, students explore a variety of concepts that focus on the characteristics of animals. 

Life Science: Animals are living things with a life cycle that includes growth, reproduction, and death. 

Earth Science: Animals depend on resources to live. 

Physical Science: Animals have properties that can be described.

 

Investigating Garden Homes (Originally Written For First grade)

Theme: Students explore the different kinds of living things that make their homes in the garden. 

Science Explorations: Students investigate the ways in which animals' homes provide them with shelter, food, and safety. 

Process Skills: Students apply the observations they have made throughout the year.

In this unit, students explore a variety of activities that focus on developing sensory awareness and on growing plants. 

Life Science: Plants have different growing requirements. Work in the garden causes changes that can be described. 

Earth Science: Soil can be wet or dry. Tools can be used to dig in soil. Water can wash away soil. 

Physical Science: Water has physical properties that can be de­scribed. 

Science, Technology, and Society: People can grow food. They can eat it raw or cooked. Different tools are used for different jobs.