Audubon Adventures

Plants and birds

Getting Started with
Plants Are for the Birds

  1. Read the Background for Teachers essay. It contains more in-depth information that will help you answer questions and guide students’ exploration.
  2. Familiarize yourself with the For Kids content for “Plants Are for the Birds!”
  3. Review the classroom- and field-based hands-on activities in Teacher-Led Activities and choose the ones suited to your curricular needs and classroom circumstances.
  4. Introduce the topic with a discussion. Here are some suggested discussion starters:
    • What kinds of things do wild birds eat? Do all wild birds eat the same kinds of food?
    • Why do you wild birds need trees and other plants?
    • What is a caterpillar? What do caterpillars change into as they grow? What do caterpillars eat?
    • What is a weed?
    • What do you think it means to say that a plant is “native”? What is a “nonnative” plant? Why do you think it’s important to have plenty of native plants in a habitat?
    • What can people do to provide healthy habitat for wild birds?
  5. Review these vocabulary words or have students define them as they discover them in context in the “Plants Are for the Birds!” student magazine:
    aphid
    beneficial
    bird of prey
    caterpillar
    characteristic
    cycle
    desert
    ecosystem
    evolved
    field guide
    food chain
    habitat
    insect
    invasive
    native
    nonnative
    pest
    predator
    prey
    roost
    species
    survive
    thrive
    waterfowl
    weed
    wetland
    wildlife

    Definitions for all vocabulary words can be found in the online Naturalist’s Glossary.
  6. With the whole class or in small groups, review the Audubon Adventures student magazine, “Plants Are for the Birds!”, and other student content that you’ve incorporated into your teaching or that students have explored on their own.
  7. Do the hands-on activities you’ve selected, and follow up with review and discussion.
  8. Download the Assessment questions and answer key to use as a tool for evaluating students’ learning with “Plants Are for the Birds!”
  9. Extend learning with print, online, and video resources found in the Naturalist’s Bibliography.

Photo: Sean Graesser.