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Pre-K through Grade 2
Grade 3 through Grade 6
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Grade Levels Grades 1 and 2
Estimated Teaching Time
75 minutes
Interdisciplinary Connections
- Following a scientific procedure (Science)
- Drawing the human body (Art)
- Organizing and presenting findings (Social Skills)
Objectives
Children will:
- Learn that there are different kinds of skin on different parts of
the body.
- Become familiar with the functions of the skin.
What Children Do
Children will investigate how their skin is different on different parts
of their bodies using magnifying glasses, skin prints and sensitivity
testing. They will then present their findings on torso tracings.
Materials Required
- Washable ink pens (dark, water based, fairly new felt-tips), one
per child
- Washable stamp pads, if available, one per every four to six children
- Fine paintbrush, one per child
- Large piece of butcher paper or chart pad paper, one per child
- Large piece of butcher paper or chart pad paper for class demonstration
- Magnifying glass or jewelers’ loupe, one per every two children
- Soap, water and paper towels (for clean up)
Advanced Preparation
None
Suggested Sequence
- Explain to the class that the skin is one of the largest organs
of the body. Wrap a large sheet of chart or butcher paper around
one child, opening it to demonstrate roughly how much skin surface
that child has.
- Discuss the functions of the skin. [Protects body from dirt,
germs and strong sunlight. Helps regulate the body's temperature.
Helps protect organs and bones from injury.] Explain that
some parts of the skin, such as that on the tongue or the mucus
membranes, have specialized functions.
- Have each child draw a large outline of a human torso on chart
paper.
- Instruct children to feel their own skin, noting how it feels
different in different places. They should record their observations
on their torso chart, using words like rough, smooth, very smooth,
moist, hairy and not hairy.
- Have children test parts of their exposed skin with a fine paintbrush,
noting on their torso charts the most and least sensitive areas.
- Have them use a magnifying glass to examine their palms and
the underside of their forearms, noting and discussing the similarities
and differences in the two areas.
- Children should make prints from two such contrasting areas.
They can use washable ink pens to color a bit of skin (or touch
the skin onto the washable stamp pad) then print it onto white
paper. Good places to make prints include the fingertip, the forearm
and the elbow. Allow them to examine their prints with a magnifying
glass.
- Ask the class to cut out their skin prints and glue them to
the appropriate places on their torso chart.
Check for Understanding
- Ask the following questions:
- Why are different parts of our skin so different? Why, for example,
is the skin in your mouth slippery and wet?
- Why is the elbow not too sensitive while the lips and face are very
sensitive?
- Why does the elbow have more “folds” than the forearm?
Extensions
- Have children compare fingerprints and see if they can distinguish
one child’s print from another’s.
- Ask children what they think fingerprints are for. Why do we have
them? [They uniquely identify each person in the world since no
two prints are the same. They also create more surface area than flat
skin, making hands more sensitive to heat, protecting us from burns.]
- Are they a good place for germs to live? Why?
Words to Share
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