Children look at a collection of objects and decide which are alive and which are not, beginning to think about what makes something living.
Tap a step to mark it as done.
Teach: living, non-living, grow, move, eat, reproduce, alive. The four criteria can be shown with simple gestures for each.
Reduce to two criteria (grow and move) for children who find four too many to remember.
Can children correctly sort familiar objects into living and non-living? Can they give a reason for their decision?
Use objects found immediately outside the classroom — soil, stones, leaves, insects, twigs. No prepared materials needed.
Children often say fire or clouds are alive because they move and change. The reproduce criterion is the most useful — fire does not have offspring.
The living/non-living distinction is foundational for biology. The edge cases — seeds, viruses, fire — show that even fundamental scientific categories can be genuinely complex.
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