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Showing posts with label animal classification. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animal classification. Show all posts

Animal Habitat Diorama Games for Science Learning Centers: Free printable animal classification and taxonomy lesson plans

Children explore animal habitats in the Omschool

Hello my Omschooligans! Teacher Omi thinking today about ways to make all our activities more engaging and interactive. Over 40 years ago, I started teaching in a Montessori school and created these hands-on activities for preschool and elementary classroom learning centers. I'll share a series on ways to create preschool learning centers in classroom or homeschool settings. Today we focus on ways to explore animal habitats and biomes in preschool social studies and science learning centers. 

Social Studies/Science learning center connections

When studying different countries or cultures in social studies build in biology and zoology by showing in hands-on ways which animals and plants live in the locations you are studying. Cover classroom walls with educational maps, charts, diagrams and posters. Activity Village is a great resource for free printable world maps, coloring pages and lesson plans from around the world. Here are free printable animal habitat diorama coloring pages and charts. Here are more free printables. 

🌍 Free Printable Habitat Dioramas

  • 3D Triorama Templates: Teachers Pay Teachers offers a free 3D triorama set that includes printable backgrounds and animal cut-outs for Arctic, Forest, Savanna, Ocean, Desert, Pond, and Rainforest habitats.

  • Taiga Biome Project: Little Bins for Little Hands has a dedicated free printable for a Taiga (Boreal Forest) diorama, including trees and specific animals like moose and snowshoe hares.

  • Rainforest Shoebox Background: If you are using shoeboxes for your learning centers, this free rainforest background provides a four-piece printable (left, back, right, and ground) designed specifically to fit.

  • Animal Habitat Sorting: For younger "Omschooligans," this free sorting activity allows children to color and then cut-and-paste animals into their correct environments (Desert, Jungle, Ocean, Arctic).

🔍 Discovery Prompt: Habitat Match-Up

Look at the animals in this diorama. Can you find one that has fur? One that has scales? Why do you think that animal needs that covering to live in this habitat?

🌍 Recommended Free Printable Dioramas

These are excellent, ready-to-use downloads that fit the "hands-on" Montessori style you mentioned:

  • The 3D Triorama Set: This is a fantastic "all-in-one" freebie that includes templates for Arctic, Savanna, Ocean, and Rainforest biomes.

  • Taiga Biome Project: A beautiful, specific printable for the Boreal Forest that includes native animals like moose and snowy owls.

  • Shoebox Habitat Assignment: If you want your students to do a deeper dive, this freebie includes a research page and a rubric for a shoebox project.

  • Habitat Sorting Activity: Perfect for your younger learners, this cut-and-paste set helps them categorize animals by their environment.

Must Love Books! 

It goes without saying that all learning centers should have a bookshelf or basket of books appropriate whatever unit you're studying. DK--Dorling Kindersley makes excellent science reference books and field guides so use those in learning centers. 
📖 Omi's Book Research Challenge

Pick a book from our habitat basket. Can you find a picture of an animal that lives in the Tundra? Now check the Taxonomy Chart in the back of the book. Does that animal have fur or feathers?


📚 Recommended Animal Habitat Bibliography

DK Reference & Field Guides

Habitat & Biome Explorations

🧬 Animal Classification (KPCOFGS) Guide

To help your students visualize the hierarchy, you can use this simple breakdown:

  • Kingdom: The big group (e.g., Animals vs. Plants).

  • Phylum: Does it have a backbone? (Chordata).

  • Class: Is it a mammal, bird, fish, or reptile?

  • Order/Family: Narrowing down by specific traits (like "Carnivores").

  • Genus/Species: The "First and Last Name" of the animal (e.g., Panthera leo for a Lion).

  • Getty Images

Interactive games and hands-on activities for science learning centers. 
🦴 Class vs. Phylum: The Backbone Test

When playing the KPCOFGS game, remember the "Backbone Test":

  • Vertebrates: Mammals, Birds, Reptiles, Fish, and Amphibians are all in the Chordata Phylum.
  • Invertebrates: Insects have no backbone; they belong to the Arthropoda Phylum!

  • Stuffed Animal Sort: Assemble realistic stuffed animals from different animal habitats and biomes in the cultures or countries you're studying. Stuffed animals aren't scientifically correct, but they at least help children understand which creatures live in different animal habitats and regions.

🎲 Animal Classification Bingo: Teacher Calling Cards

  • Cut these out and pull them from a jar, or call out the "clue" to see if children can identify the group!

    • Mammal: "I have hair or fur and feed my babies milk."

    • Bird: "I have feathers and lay eggs in a nest."

    • Reptile: "I have scaly skin and am cold-blooded."

    • Amphibian: "I spend part of my life in water and part on land."

    • Fish: "I use gills to breathe underwater and have fins."

    • Insect: "I have six legs and usually have wings."

  • Animal habitats bingo: Play this game by sorting stuffed animals according to taxonomy class . Make a bingo grid on the floor and label the top with the animal classification. Mammal, reptile, fish, insect, amphibian, bird. Bingo caller calls out an animal and children place it on the chart. You can print animal bingo cards too. 

    🐾 Animal Bingo! 🐾

    Place a marker on the animal group Omi calls out!

    Mammal Bird Reptile
    Fish FREE SPACE Amphibian
    Insect Mammal Bird

    Print this card for your Omschool Science Center!

  • VAKT play: Set out small plastic or resin animals for children to explore using visual, kinesthetic and tactile skills. The ideal kind will have simulated body coverings. Find a book the plays animals sounds and place it with the toy animals so children can connect animal sounds. There are some very realistic toy plastic animals available from local toy and craft stores. Place animals in the biology area where children can sort critters into animal habitats or play KPCOFGS--Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species--animal classification bingo games, by sorting these animals into their bingo cards. 

🌍 External Bingo Resources

If you prefer a full-page PDF with photos of real animals for your center, these are high-quality free options:

1. The Five Classes of Vertebrates

  • The most common groups people refer to belong to the Phylum Chordata (animals with backbones). Within this phylum, they are divided into these specific Classes:

    • Mammalia (Mammals)

    • Aves (Birds)

    • Reptilia (Reptiles)

    • Amphibia (Amphibians)

    • Agnatha/Chondrichthyes/Osteichthyes (The three classes of Fish)

2. The Exception: Insects

  • Insects are not in the same phylum as the others. They belong to the Phylum Arthropoda.

    • Insecta is the name of their Class.

🧬 Omi’s Taxonomy Challenge

Can you find the animal’s "address"? Choose a plastic animal from the center. Use our reference books to find out:

  • 📍 Class: Is it a Mammal, Bird, or Reptile?
  • 📍 Order: Does it eat meat (Carnivore) or plants (Herbivore)?
  • 📍 Species: What is its "Scientific Name"?

  • Taxonomy games: In preschool and ECSE (early childhood special education) learning centers, students can play animal taxonomy games that organize animals by body covering and how they give birth to identify class (mammal, fish, bird, insect, reptile, amphibian). 

  • 🧬 Animal Class Reference: Body Coverings & Birth

    Animal ClassBody CoveringHow They Give Birth
    MammalHair or FurLive birth (mostly)
    BirdFeathersHard-shelled Eggs
    ReptileDry ScalesLeathery Eggs
    AmphibianMoist, Slimy SkinSoft, Jelly-like Eggs (in water)
    FishWet ScalesSoft Eggs (usually in water)
    InsectHard Exoskeleton
  • Plant Species and Samples: Collect several plant species, either living or artificial, from different regions for students to explore in the science learning centers. Gather tree bark, seed pods, seeds and seed carriers, leaves and evergreen needles, mushrooms and other plant life. Sort plants by region, biome and animals habitats (woodland, desert, tundra, rain forest, deciduous forest, coastal wetlands, marsh). Students can place appropriate plants within animal classification groups and taxonomy categories. 
  • Rocks and minerals. Collect rocks, geological specimens, minerals and shells from the regions you study in biology and life science. Rock, mineral and shell specimens look best when viewed in water. Put them in an old dishpan in science learning centers or biology area. Provide brushes for the children to clean the samples and provide magnifying glasses for children to explore with. It isn't necessary for children to have expensive, high powered magnifying glasses; cheap, plastic ones are actually better as they get lost and knocked about in classroom use. 
  • Aquarium. Put an aquarium with specimens of plants or animals or animals body parts in science learning centers. Cruelty-free fur samples, exoskeletons, feathers, animals shells, bones, scales, shed snake skin; empty hives and nests, egg shells; many people collect these things and may share them. Identify items by plant biology, taxonomy and animal classification. 
  • Classroom pets: Different schools have different rules for keeping animals in the classroom. Most allow a fish tank or small rodent pet. A fresh and saltwater aquarium, as well as different species of birds, small mammals, fish, reptiles, insects and amphibians would be ideal for a science learning centers. Students create animal habitats for pets. Be sure to post animal classification or taxonomy charts for reference. 

🎨 Omschool Pro-Tip: Layering Learning

"When building dioramas, encourage students to add 'texture' using the items we collected: real tree bark for the forest floor, or sand and small rocks for the desert center. It turns a flat printable into a true sensory experience!"


Cage-free Zoo Animal habitat lesson plans with free printable animal activities


I've been a teacher for 40 years and today I was going to share preschool lesson plans to make a zoo animal circus train from my early days. And I realized that lesson plans that feature animals behind bars are not really ethically, environmentally or animal friendly. Piggyback on this, a discussion with my oldest homeschooling daughter (second gen homeschool <3) how she was rethinking what she was teaching, taking kids to on zoo field trips, with animals locked in tiny, non-habitat appropriate cages. This includes aquariums and marine zoos, especially. If we learned anything from the film "Blackfish" about Tilikum the "killer" orca whale, it was the damaging effects cages have on animals. So here are cage-free zoo animal habitat and animal classification lesson plans with free printable activities. 

Visit animal friendly zoos. Happily, many zoos are redoing structures to move away from tiny cages to wide, open more habitat appropriate spaces. The Detroit Zoo and Toronto Zoo are examples. John Ball Zoo in Grand Rapids, Mich., still has cages but new structures are more open. And even if you don't want to visit the zoo, check their website for free printable animal lesson plans. JBZ and the Detroit Zoo and probably all zoos have lesson plans and printables on animal classification, animal body coverings, adaptation, habitats and more. 

Research petting zoos. Maybe they've improved over the years, but we've had some unpleasant experiences at petting zoos. Tired, uncomfortable and even neglected animals forced to interact with mobs of people who aren't always respectful of the animals is a recipe for disaster. Pun intended, "vet" petting zoos before visiting. This includes any zoo day camps or zoo school experiences. 

Visit animal sanctuaries, nature centers, wildlife preserves and animal hospitals. Blandford Nature Center in Grand Rapids, Mich., is a good example. Yes, animals are in cages, but that is for their protection. All have been injured, maimed or in some way damaged by interaction with humans. Our youngest daughter was sensitized, then incensed seeing a bobcat that had been taken captive for a wildlife circus and declawed. He is literally helpless. It's a sad but relevant object lesson on why animals should be protected, not endangered. Blandford has a beautiful wildlife preserve, nature center and animal hospital that rehabs injured animals for reintegration to the wild.  Visit any nature center or wildlife preserve near you. Most all will have free printable animal lesson plans and activities to further study. 

Make animal habitat dioramas. Use my lesson plans to make animal habitat dioramas and here are free printable animal habitat diorama cut and paste coloring pages. Teach biodiversity, animal classification, body coverings, animal tracking and more! Make animal activities VAKT and special education friendly, by adding "touch and feel" elements to habitats. Use straw, fabric, fake fur, bumpy and textured surfaces to simulate animal body coverings and nest or dwelling materials. More on that later! 




Free Printable animal kingdoms coloring pages for science lesson plans

Why not kick off the school year with a unit on animals? Special needs and preschool kids will love it and you'll teach valuable science lessons too. Here are free printable animal coloring pages to help. 
Visit Real Life at Home for free printable St. Francis lesson plans in a packet. Print games, coloring pages, activities and worksheets of saints. Learn connections to Pope Francis, who is a Franciscan and has taken his name from Francis of Assisi. Print a liturgical calendar of Catholic saints, including Saint Francis, free from Catholic playground. For free printable animal coloring pages, visit Coloring Book Fun. National Geographic Kids has realistic animal coloring pages from A-Z to print. This link opens on the animals A-I page but click the link at the bottom for coloring pages of animals from J-Z.

For more detailed, educational animal coloring page printables, don't miss Edupics. There are over 1,600 animal coloring pages: some are even suitable for middle school and high school biology and science lessons! Hello Kids has hundreds of free printable animal coloring pages. Some are easier and geared for preschool or special needs students. Some are more challenging. Coloring.ws, from children's learning printables giant DL-TK has free printable coloring pages of animals from A-Z.Print every animal kingdom and phylum: insects, fish, birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians.

Free Printable Animal Habitat Activities


For hands-on science lesson plans, you can't beat dioramas. Students explore concepts interactively, making 3-D scenes. Shoebox dioramas (scenes set up inside boxes tilted on their sides) are a good medium. Dioramas help students visualize content. Diorama activities work very well for literature, social studies, animal habitats and life science lesson plans. Use animal habitats dioramas in life science lesson plans to help students understand how creatures interact with their environment.
Animal habitat dioramas can be made with found objects and recyclables. Or here are free printable animal habitats dioramas. Use free printable animal habitat or biomes dioramas for biology and other science lesson plans. Students color, cut and paste and assemble dioramas. Printable dioramas give the added benefit of high success and low failure. Special needs and easily frustrated students can create great looking projects and feel proud of their work.
The American Museum of Natural History has free printable animal habitats dioramas for different biomes. Click each Ology site for different science lesson plans. Look for "make it" and "coloring pages" links. From there, print backgrounds and creatures. Check out printable games and puzzles and lesson plans, too. Crayola has free printable dioramas that are simple enough for preschool lesson plans. Here are free printable animal habitat dioramas of the ocean. Exploring nature hasfree printable animal habitats coloring pages. Students can color and cut out and arrange in 3D shoebox dioramas. Or that could be the backdrop and they could glue plastic animals and plants in the shoebox base.

First Palette, a great teacher/homeschool website, has free printable habitats dioramas: Habitats or biomes include coral reef, African savanna, polar biomes, rainforest and paleolithic dinosaur habitats. Free printable animal coloring pages are available at First Palette too. There are insects, mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians in different biomes. Have kids color and place in the proper environment. This teaches sorting, classifying and symbiotic relationships. Have kids explore KPCOFGS--kingdom, phyllum, class, order, family, genus and species--concepts too. Perfect for K-8 science, preschool, homeschool, Montessori and special education.

Free Printable Animal Classification Lesson Plans, Taxonomy Lessons

Parents, are you homeschooling your kids are thinking about it? Then you'll want to avail yourself of the many free printable lesson plans and worksheets online. Maybe you're needing resources for science homework help? Here are free printable animal classification charts, worksheets and taxonomy charts and diagrams to use for lesson plans. Animal classification or taxonomy, is a system of organizing creatures according to a hierarchy. It originated in Carolus Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. Creatures are organized by Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (abbreviated KPCOFGS in science classes). Here are free printable animal classification lesson plans and activities.

Animal classification or taxonomy, is a system of organizing creatures according to a hierarchy. It originated with Carolus Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. Creatures are organized by Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (abbreviated KPCOFGS in science classes). Here are free printable animal classification lessons and activities.

http://printablekidsworksheets.com/9-science-worksheets/26-animal-worksheets has free printable animal science worksheets.

http://tetuteacher.weebly.com/uploads/1/3/3/6/13362371/classification_worksheets.pdf has a free printable animal classification booklet. 

http://www.eslprintables.com/vocabulary_worksheets/the_animals/animal_classification/ has a page of colorful free printable animal taxonomy lesson plans featuring the KPCOFGS system. 

http://www.tlsbooks.com/classifying6.html has several free printable animal classification worksheets. Click around for other animal science lesson plans to print. 

https://www.havefunteaching.com/worksheets/science-worksheets/animal-worksheets/animals-worksheet-classification offers some printable science worksheets on taxonomy. 

http://printableworksheets.rokkada.com/?dq=Classification%20Of%20Animals%20Of%20Grade%206 This blog has a collection of free printable animal classification worksheets culled from around the web. 

Students learn how animal body coverings determine what animal group the species belongs to. Students learn about animal habitats, biomes, how animals adapt to their environment, how they live, eat, stay warm and reproduce. Students will explore endothermic (warm-blooded) and ectothermic (cold-blooded) animals.

I don't make any money when you click any of these links. Activities include lessons plans, resources, games, coloring pages, activities, writing response lessons, puzzles, worksheets, vocabulary lists, word sorts and diagrams. Use for life science, biology, environmental science or zoology lesson. 

http://www.examiner.com/article/free-printable-animal-classification-worksheets-taxonomy-charts-and-diagrams