Science
Ask your students what causes winter. (Accept their answers without judging.) Have one child pretend to be the sun and stand in the middle of the circle. Use a globe to demonstrate how the earth rotates around the sun. It takes 365 days or one year for the earth to go all around the sun. Demonstrate how the earth tilts on its axis away from the sun to cause winter. Why? What happens when the earth tilts toward the sun?
Brainstorm signs of winter. What happens to the temperature in winter? What happens to the plants? What happens to animals?
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
How do animals adapt in the winter? What animals hibernate?
What animals migrate? How do human beings adapt?
What animals migrate? How do human beings adapt?
Some habitats are very cold in the winter with ice and snow. Other habitats are warmer in the winter. Use a map of the United States and have children identify their state. Do they have ice and snow in the winter? Can they find a state where it’s warm and sunny in the winter? What do they think causes the difference?
Visit a weather site, such as weather.gov, to compare regional weather.
Nature Walk
Nature Walk
Go on a nature walk and look for signs of winter. Let each child take a digital photograph of a sign of winter. Put these together to make a class collage.
Trees
Trees
Explain that evergreen trees stay green all winter. Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the winter. Can they find evergreen and deciduous trees on the playground? Can they find them in their yard at home?
Make a Book
Make a Book
Staple two sheets of paper and let children use descriptive writing to make a book called “Winter Is…”
Creative Writing
Creative Writing
Invite children to write a story about “Old Man Winter.” I found this great writing paper free at www.teach-nology.com.