Big Idea: What helps
leaves make their own food?
Focus question: By observing the changes that take place to our
adopted tree during the fall season, what helps leaves make their own food?
Prediction:
·
If the season
turns to fall, the leaves on the tree will change color from green to yellow,
orange, and/or red because they get less sunlight.
·
If the season is
fall, the wind may blow hard and the leaves will start falling off the tree.
·
If fall turns to
winter, the leaves on the tree will turn brown because they get even less
sunlight.
·
If fall turns to
winter, the leaves will soon all fall off the trees because the leaves are not
getting enough food and cold weather.
·
If observe these
seasonal changes take place during fall, we will know that sunlight,
temperature, and weather help leaves make their own food.
Planning:
Materials: tree, journal, pencil
First, we adopted a tree at
the start of October to observe the effects of the seasonal change to the tree’s
leaves over four weeks. Next, we observed the tree and its surroundings using
our senses each week to determine what helps leaves make their own food. Last,
we compared the data we took about our tree over the course of four weeks to
come to a consensus about what helps leaves make their own food.
Data : Starting October-November: Observation of Adopted
Tree
Senses
|
Week 1
|
Week 2
|
Week 3
|
Week 4
|
Sight
|
Green
leaves
Sunlight
shining through tree
No
water source near tree
Large
tree trunk
Tree
blocked by large building from sun at one point of the day
|
Some
leaves have turned from green to yellow, red, and orange
A
couple of brown leaves
Some
leaves on the ground that have turned yellowish-brown
Sunlight
coming through tree-less than last time—
|
Can
see more bare parts of branches
Leaves
are still turning same colors on tree
More
brown leaves on tree
Lots
of leaves on the ground
Sunlight
bright and beaming through tree-shady in other area of tree
|
Leaves
have turned bright orange, red, and brown
Ground
is covered with brown leaves
Even
more bare parts of branches and some completely bare
Tree
and leaves look dry
Sunlight
beaming through tree and a lot more of the tree is shaded from sun
|
Sound
|
Cars
Sirens
People
|
Cars
passing
People
talking
|
Hear
the leaves rustling in the wind
Cars
People
|
Hear
the leaves rustling still
Cars
People
|
Touch
|
Breeze-slightly
cool
|
Cooler
air
|
Cold
air
Windy
|
Very
cold air
Windy
|
Smell
|
Fresh
air
|
No
smell
|
Earthy
smells
|
Earthy
smell
|
Claims and
evidence:
We claim that during fall,
the leaves begin to change color from green to red, yellow, orange, and brown
and eventually fall off the tree. We know this to be true because we observed
these changes take place over the course of four weeks during October. We claim
that during fall, the temperature gets cooler and has something to do with the
leaves source of food. We know this to be true because we felt the temperature
drop each week as the leaves changed colors each week. We claim that in the fall
it is windy and forces the leaves to fall off the tree. We also claim the
leaves fall off the tree easier because they are weaker and more brittle. We
claim this because the weather got colder and there was no rain. We know this
because over the four weeks the wind picked up, many leaves fell off the tree
to the ground, and the leaves changed color. We claim the leaves were changing
color because they were dying slowly. We believe this to be true because the
leaves would slowly change colors and eventually fall off the tree to the
ground. We claim that the days get shorter in the fall and that this has
something to do with the trees making their food. We believe this to be true because
each week at the same time we observed the sun beam brighter as a sunset and go
down earlier. We also know this to be true because the tree had significantly
more shade each week.
Conclusion:
We learned that the leaves
change color in the fall because they are dying as a result from not producing
enough food. We learned that the weather gets windier, the temperature gets
colder, and the days get shorter producing less sunlight in the fall. We
noticed each week that there was no rainfall. We believe this had something to
do with the leaves being weak and brittle and falling off the tree. In spring,
we know it rains a lot and the leaves do not fall off the trees then. Based on
our data from observing the seasonal changes of our adopted tree over four
weeks starting in October, we learned from these seasonal changes what helps
leaves make its own food. We conclude that water, sunlight, and warmer temperatures
help the leaves make its own food. We believe this to be true because during
the times we observed the tree having the alternative of these sources, the
leaves began to change colors and fall off the tree. These conclusions confirm
our hypothesis for what helps leaves make its own food.
Reflection/ Questions:
We
learned that the tree we adopted has leaves that need sunlight, water, and
warmer weather to produce its own food.
·
What type of tree
did we adopt?
·
Are all trees the
same regarding whether its leaves fall off during seasonal changes?
·
What helps
different leaves produce its own food or all the same?
Literacy
Connections:
Tree
finder: A manual for identification of
trees by their leaves (Eastern US) (Nature study guides) by Mary Theilgaard Watts
What tree
is that?: A guide to the more common
trees found in North America (Mom’s choice awards recipient) by Arbor Day Foundation
Why do
leaves change color (Let’s-read-and-find-out science, stage 2) by Betsy Maestro
Zero is
the leaves on the tree by Betsy Franco