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Nature Net’s Pre- and Post-Field Trip Materials

Subject: Natural History

Level: Elementary School

 

Introduction

What is natural history? Natural history is a broad term, involving the interest in and study of various aspects of the natural sciences (botany, zoology, geology), historical geography (history, geography), and anthropology (human development and history within an ecological framework). Examples of natural history range from scientific studies of plant and animal communities to the natural processes affecting the environment and life on earth and human culture and interaction with the environment. Other examples deal with the natural environment on a more artistic level, involving mankind's views and comments on the surrounding world.

 

Vocabulary

Biology: The science of life in all its manifestations and the science of the origin, structure, reproduction, growth, and development of living organisms.

Botany: The study of plants and plant communities; it is one of the two main divisions of biology.

Zoology: The study of the animal kingdom, with respect to the behavior of individual animals, species, or both; one of the main divisions of biology.

Geography: The science that describes the surface of the earth, and its associated physical and biological characteristics.

History: The branch of knowledge concerned with past events, especially those involved in human affairs.

 

Advanced Vocabulary

Ecology: The scientific study of the relations of living things to one another, and to their environment.

Culture: The social adaptations developed by humans to deal with the physical environment. Culture is transmitted as learned behavior between individuals and groups within a human community.

 

Concepts

-Natural history is a broad topic including many facets of scientific inquiry, as well as sociocultural comment on scientific inquiry and the natural environment.

-Many early natural history writers simply observed things in the environment around them, and commented on the relationships they observed. Often, these early observations led to later experimentation and theoretical critique.

-Natural history essays also serve to foster appreciation of the natural world.

Post-Visit Activities

After your visit to some of the Nature Net sites, you can explore natural history further by reading natural history essays from the library, and discuss them in class.

Suggested Readings and Websites

For Teachers:

Sharing Nature with Children. Cornell, Joseph. Sharing Nature Series, Volume One. Dawn Publications, Nevada City, California. 1998.

A Sand County Almanac. Leopold, Aldo. Ballantine Books, New York. 1966.

For Students:

Save the Earth: An action handbook for kids. Miles, Betty. Knopf, 1991.