Students explore the system scientists use to organise all living things, discovering that classification reflects evolutionary relationships as well as physical similarities.
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Teach: kingdom, taxonomy, classify, species, vertebrate, invertebrate, nucleus, organism. A simple sorting table — five columns for the five kingdoms — organises the lesson visually.
Focus on three kingdoms — animals, plants, fungi — before introducing bacteria and protists.
Can students correctly classify eight familiar organisms into kingdoms? Can they give the key feature that distinguishes one kingdom from another?
No resources needed. Use organisms visible in the school environment. Draw the classification table in soil.
Students often place fungi with plants because they do not move. Fungi do not photosynthesise — they break down dead matter by absorbing it. This is fundamentally different from how plants feed.
Classification systems reflect our understanding of evolution and relationships between organisms. Modern DNA analysis has transformed our understanding of how living things are related.
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