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Where do fallen leaves go?
Web of Life Unit | Lesson 3 of 7

Where do fallen leaves go?

Web of Life Unit | Lesson 3 of 7
Lesson narration:
Scroll for prep

DISCUSS (1 of 2):

Where do you think all the leaves go?

DISCUSS (2 of 2):

What could you do to find out?

DISCUSS:

What do you think is happening in the photo below?

Where do you think the stuff growing on the fruit comes from? rotting lemons

DISCUSS:

Imagine you were going camping for two weeks without a refrigerator and you wanted to bring some sliced oranges.

What might you do to keep the oranges from decomposing?

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soil


1 of 12

covers the Earth's surface; made of tiny rocks and material from dead plants and animals
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fungus


2 of 12

a living thing that is a decomposer and has spores, such as a mold or mushroom
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mushroom


3 of 12

a type of fungus that usually has a stalk and cap
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mold


4 of 12

a type of fungus that often decomposes food
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spore


5 of 12

a part of a fungus that contains the offspring, similar to the seed of a plant

decompose


6 of 12

the process of breaking down dead living things
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decomposer


7 of 12

a living thing that can break down dead living things
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compost


8 of 12

decayed plant material that can be used as fertilizer
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predict


9 of 12

to guess what will happen based on things you know
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experiment


10 of 12

a test used to discover new information about a question
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control


11 of 12

something in an experiment that you do not change
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variable


12 of 12

something that you can change in an experiment in order to test an idea
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Exploration
leaves by Albert Bridge , used under CC BY-SA
walking on log-leaves by unsplash
leaf decomposition by Josh Williams
fungus mycelium by Kris H. Light
second log flip by Sergei A. Polozov
growing mycelium by franchise films
mushroom time lapse by OddScience
mushroom time lapse 2 by franchise films
fungi mycelium on wood by chanus
hands dug into work by 13Imagery
decomposition by StopWaste
Russula by Jerzy Opioła , used under CC BY-SA
cinnabar-red chanterelle by Jake Stookey
red capped mushrooms by Gemini78
yellow & white capped mushrooms by Kurt Bauschardt , used under CC BY-SA
mushroom by Mary Smiley , used under CC BY-SA
white mushroom by arhendrix
orange mushrooms by Mushroom Observer , used under CC BY-SA
Cordyceps_locustiphila_Henn by Mushroom Observer , used under CC BY-SA
mycelium growing more by Jerzy Opioła , used under CC BY-SA
trees broken up by shore by skeeze , used under Public Domain
man hiking by Poprotskiy Alexey
mushrooms growing outside complex by Vasile Cotovanu , used under CC BY-SA
forest floor by Alessandro Colle
pinic table lunch by adriaticfoto
moldy bread by Taborsky
moldy strawberries by rsooll
mycelium on potato by Telia
mycelium in orange substance by Irina Kozorog
moldy orange by Irina Mos
mushroom cap by Aleksey Gnilenkov
casual living room by Wonderlane
berry decomposition by webiocosm
compost bin by Evan Lorne
inside of compost bin by BMJ
woman inside grocery store by Adam Melnyk
moldy tomatoes by Comrade Foot
inside of fridge by thodonal88
camping- tent by Milaniphotography
Activity
black electric heater by ronstik
hands by photka
pencil by JohannPoufPouf
hands up by Rawpixel.com
Other
leaves on cement by Kichigin
walking through leaves by Suzanne Tucker
kid playing in leaves by Chris Nolan , used under CC BY
wintery road by David Merrigan , used under CC BY
spring/green road by artens
bag of leaves by MiVa
Unit: leaf by LilKar
Unit: leaf 2 by Etakundoy

Featured Reviews

“My students are so excited to grow their mold terrariums! A great way to engage kids and connect to NGSS”
“Loved the real video footage of objects decomposing. We are doing mold terrariums and all 4 classes have different variables. They love comparing what is happening in each terrarium and reasoning why they are molding faster or slower than each other based on their variables.”
“My students loved seeing mold grow on the food. They were so excited everyday to look and see if there was more mold. I really liked the the introduction to this lesson, it was very informative and my students learned so much in those few minutes about mold and mushrooms.”
“It was very interesting to the student as well as to me. I actually never really knew what happened to the leaves in such detail. Thank you for great lesson!”
“Students LOVED watching the videos and then designing their own experiment. They were very engaged!”
“The students were thrilled when they saw the first signs of mold on some of the oranges. This lesson was easy for the students to follow.”
“AMAZING. The students LOVED the exploration and were truly amazed by mushrooms and mold. It was a very well planned mystery. ”
“The hands on experience of growing mold. I love the idea of incorporating scientific method with variable changes into the curriculum. My students are excited to watch their experiments over the next week. ”
“The students are loving the mold investigation. It is a high interest activity and gets them actively involved while learning the scientific method.”
“My students were fascinated by the fact that mold spores are everywhere around us, and they love seeing things rot! This lesson was quite simple to set up get engaging, and for the next 12 days, I used the first 5 min of class as a engaging way to start to day to have students check on their group's mold levels and record them. ”
“The kids loved this lesson. I thought the videos were amazing. The fact that mold looks like a mushroom under a microscope was fascinating for all of us!!!”
“My students were sooo impressed with the mushroom facts and the experiment that they keep talking about it all they long and to their parents when they got home! ”
“The kids loved the activity and were totally engaged with all parts of the lesson!!”
“Seeing the difference in each terrarium.”
“Every teacher should use this lesson even if they don't do the mold terrarium. Perfect explanation of decomposers.”
“They thought it was crazy that mold is actually mushrooms and were stoked to be able to do an experiment with it!”
“Kids loved it! We are currently growing a mold terrarium. The time lapse videos were a real hit! They were engaged and using the science vocabulary by the end of the video.”
“the way the narrator spoke - just great language, explained so clearly and concisely and so relatable for the kids (jumping into the leaves etc). ”
“The question about where do leaves go was great! Kids never really thought about what happens in a forest setting. The time-lapsed video grossed them out (of course) but they loved it!”
“We are still observing the growth of mold (Day 7) and the girls are grossed out and loving it.”
“This was such a great lesson. My kids loved the 12 days of observing mold and learning the connection between mold and mushrooms.”
“It's hard to choose. The video was a great visual reinforcement of what I had already covered with my class. But the mold lab was simple and engaging and a perfect activity for the last weeks of school!”
“Awesome!!! Kids loved the time lapsed videos”
“The kids loved the mold terrariums!”
“The students understood that all living organism eat plants.”
“Long term learning, coupled with exploration, inferencing and hypothesizing. A great opportunity to discuss independent and dependent variables”
“it was great my students loved it they were in joy and all of my students ran up and hugged me and said thank you.”
“I learned some new information and really enjoy the discussions the students were having about where they thought the leaves go. Students were very engaged in the activities. I really love the organization of each mystery!”
“I love the visuals of decomposition! Instantly clarifying!”
Lesson narration:

Grade 5

Ecosystems & The Food Web

Decomposers & Matter Cycle

5-LS2-1

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students discover the role fungi play in decomposing dead materials and in creating soil. In the activity, Mold Terrarium, students plan and conduct an investigation to discover the factors affecting decomposition. Students fill Ziploc bags with different types of foods and change environmental conditions to study how different variables affect mold growth. They then observe mold growth over a period of two weeks.
Preview activity

Exploration

20 mins

Grade 5

Ecosystems & The Food Web

Decomposers & Matter Cycle

5-LS2-1

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Ecosystems Lesson 3: Where do fallen leaves go?

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