Teacher s Notes. Level 3. Did you know? Pearson English Kids Readers. Teacher s Notes. Introducing the topic: Life cycles. Summary of the Reader

Similar documents
Photocopiable Resources

Teacher s Notes. Level 3. Did you know? Pearson English Kids Readers. Teacher s Notes. Summary of the story. Background information

ST NICHOLAS COLLEGE HALF YEARLY PRIMARY EXAMINATIONS. February YEAR 4 ENGLISH TIME: 1hr 15 min (Reading Comprehension, Language and Writing)

Plants and Animals. What do living organisms need to survive? What can you see in the photos in 1? Unscramble the letters. I can see a lot of

Teacher s Notes. Level 4. Did you know? Pearson English Kids Readers. Teacher s Notes. Summary of the story. Background information

Cat in a Box. Written and illustrated by Jo Williamson. 1 Introducing the book

Grade 3: Animal Lifecycles Presentation

Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills

Chinese New Year ACTIVITY 1: Animals (all levels) - WORKSHEET 1

Primary Activity #1. The Story of Noir, the Black-footed Ferret. Description: Procedure:

I will learn to talk about. groups of animals animal characteristics animal habitats. Unit Unit 7

Learn About Butterflies by Susan Jones Leeming

8A READ-ALOUD. How Turtle Cracked His Shell. Lesson Objectives. Language Arts Objectives. Core Vocabulary

C R H G E K. 1 Solve the puzzle. lion. parrot. crocodile. flamingo. snake. tortoise. horse. zebra. elephant. eagle duck. monkey. Classify the animals.

Meet the Larvae BROWARD COUNTY ELEMENTARY SCIENCE BENCHMARK PLAN. SC.F The student knows the basic needs of all living things FOR PERSONAL USE

Learn more at LESSON TITLE: BRINGING UP BIRDY GRADE LEVEL: 2-3. TIME ALLOTMENT: One to two 45-minute class periods OVERVIEW:

Life Cycles Learning Journal

Explorers 3. Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: The Ugly Duckling. Answer key 1b 2a 3a 4c 5a 6b 7b 8c 9a 10c

First Facts by Rebecca Johnson

Primary Activity #1. The Story of Noir, the Black-footed Ferret. Description: Procedure:

Amazing arthropods. Kindergarten-Second. Life Science TEKS. Life Science Vocabulary

Equipment and Room Requirements. Three large tables (or desks moved to create three stations) with adequate space for students to move around.

Adaptations of Insects

A Teacher s Guide to Fur, Feathers, and Scales Grades PreK 2

Half Yearly Examination for Primary Schools Year 5 ENGLISH (Listening Comprehension) Time: 30 minutes. Teacher s copy

ADAPTATION IN ANIMALS. 1. Which body feature of a frog MAINLY helps it to capture a flying insect? Ans

Written and Illustrated by John Himmelman

Emerging Adults BROWARD COUNTY ELEMENTARY SCIENCE BENCHMARK PLAN. SC.F The student describes how organisms change as they grow and mature.

Stony Point Elementary School

What is an. Amphibian?

Notes: Expository/Informational Text

Great Science Adventures

Sample file. Spring Robbins Creative Content, LLC.

Scarface Claw, Hold Tight! By Lynley Dodd

Animal Adaptations Woodland Animal Fact Sheet

Reducing the incidence of malaria

Science Test Revision

A Science 21 Reader. A Science 21 Reader. Written by Dr. Helen Pashley With photographs by Lori Adams

Just Frogs. Just Frogs is published by Bookpx, LLC. Copyright 2011 Bookpx, LLC. All photography Copyright 2011 Nature s Eyes, Inc

kids english book 2 international edition

Monarchs: Metamorphosis, Migration, Mimicry and More

Study Island. Generation Date: 04/01/2014 Generated By: Cheryl Shelton Title: GRADE 2 Science in the content areas

TIGER KEY RING GET INVOLVED:

The following document is part of a larger publication and is subject to the disclaimers and copyright of the full version from which it was

Characteristics of the Text Genre Realistic fi ction Text Structure

Good Dog Hank. Jackie French Illustrated by Nina Rycroft. Book Summary. Curriculum Areas and Key Learning Outcomes. Themes.


VA4PR.1. Create artworks based on personal experience and selected themes.

Unit 5 Lesson 5: Mouse Mess

13. As-tu un animal? Have you got a pet? As-tu un animal? soeurs? - a dog - a cat - a rabbit - a guinea pig - a bird - a hamster - a fish - a mouse

Enjoy the Countryside SAFELY

Let s learn about ANIMALS. Level : School:.

FIRST TERM READING REVISION PAPER ENGLISH LANGUAGE GRADE 3

Integrated Themes for 4-8 Year Olds

Dinosaurs. Lesson 1 Amazing dinosaurs. 1 Talk about it What do you know about dinosaurs?

Night Life Pre-Visit Packet

INTRODUCTION. and a hat, a hot pot, a cat hops, a cat in a hat, a fat cat. and Pat are fat, Jat is a big cat, Pat is a little bat.

0:45. year. Use 2B or HB pencil only. Time available for students to complete test: 45 minutes

EASTER ACTIVITY BOOK COLOURING IN EASTER CUPCAKES WORD FIND BACKYARD BINOCULARS MAZE STRING ART JOIN THE DOTS DIY TERRARIUM

Time available for students to complete test: 50 minutes

What is your minibeast?

LEARNING OBJECTIVES. Watch and understand a video about a wildlife organization. Watch and listen

Eggstravaganza School Pack

Annie and the Wild Animals Extension Activities

FOOD WEB FOREST MUNCHERS

THE ARTICLE. New mammal species found

- Story writing - Descriptions - Animals in their environment - Developing observation skills

English Language Arts. Grade 3 English Language Arts Practice Test

Print Partner Pack. Read for the Record 2012

CONNECTION TO LITERATURE

Teaching Activities. for

UNIT 7: Dogs at a glance

Components: Reader with DIGI MATERIAL cross-platform application (ios, Android, Windows, MacOSX) CLIL READERS. Level headwords.

How Animals Live. Chapter 2 Review

KS1 Baby Animals. Marwell Wildlife Colden Common Winchester Hampshire SO21 1JH

What do we do when the butterfly larvae arrive? How can we tell how much the larvae have grown?

Differentiated Activities for Teaching Key

Don t Bug Me. I m Exploring!

Passageways. Series. Anthology 1. Reading Success Series. 15 Nonfiction Selections. CURRICULUM ASSOCIATES, Inc.

DATE: The Komodo Dragon

Included in this book: Cross-curricular thematic units found in this book:

Oral Reading Fluency Recording Form

Sam and the Bag Spelling Words Vocabulary Words. The Hat Spelling Words Vocabulary Words. Tap Map Mad A The. Cap. Mad. Up Go

Teacher Edition. Lizard s Tail. alphakids. Written by Mark Gagiero Illustrated by Kelvin Hucker

Go, Dog. Go! PLAYGUIDE. The Story Dogs, dogs, everywhere! Big ones, little ones, at work and at play. The CATCO

Copyright 2016 Edmentum - All rights reserved.

Effects of Natural Selection

Poison Dart Frogs by Guy Belleranti

The Troll the play Based on the children s book: The Troll by Julia Donaldson

AN2.3 Curriculum: Animal Growth and Change (grade 2)

Sample Pages Vol. 1. Music, Movement, Signing and More for Children Ages 0-5. TEACHER GUIDE Vol. 1: It s Baby Signing Time

Animal Behavior OBJECTIVES PREPARATION SCHEDULE VOCABULARY BACKGROUND INFORMATION MATERIALS. For the class. The students.

Have you ever Met a Morphosis?

Iowa 4-H After School Program Pets, Lesson Plan Eight, 60-minute sessions

Teacher s Guide. All About Baby Animals series

Curriculum connections: Science: grade 2 Life Science Animal Growth and Change Art: grades 1-4 Patterns, Animal Portraits

Beautiful Birds Premium Worksheets For Toddlers For 2-3 year olds

Body Parts and Products (Sessions I and II) BROWARD COUNTY ELEMENTARY SCIENCE BENCHMARK PLAN

Hibernation F I M LEVELED READER M. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Animals and Their Environments II

Transcription:

Level 3 Suitable for: young learners who have completed up to 150 hours of study in English Type of English: British Headwords: 600 Key words: Subject words: Key grammar: 15 (see pages 2 and 7 of these ) 14 (see pages 2 and 8 of these ) present simple, present continuous, can, adjectives Summary of the Reader This Level 3 title looks at the life cycles of butterflies and frogs; a popular CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) subject area, covered by most schools as part of the science curriculum. These animals undergo a dramatic metamorphosis from caterpillar to butterfly and from tadpole to frog, and they are common animals that children can see around them in their local environments. This makes them ideal subjects for study. This Reader looks first at the butterfly life cycle in which there are four main stages: egg, caterpillar, chrysalis and butterfly. Then it progresses to the frog life cycle which has also been divided into four main stages: egg, tadpole, tadpole with legs (froglet) and frog. For learners of English, the subject area may already be familiar in the students first language and this will help in understanding the text. The text has been designed to recycle key language structures and vocabulary through the four stages of each life cycle. Introducing the topic: Life cycles Refer to the activities on pages 23 and 24 of the Reader and familiarise yourself with them beforehand. Before reading, do Activities 1 and 2 on page 23. Activity 1, page 23: Show the cover of the book and ask the students to tell you what they can see. Read out the title and ask for ideas about the subject of the book. This could take place in L1 if preferred. Activity 2, page 23: Introduce some key vocabulary by finding pictures that correspond to key words. Write the words on the board and work through the pronunciation, noting where the stress falls by underlining that part of each word. Did you know? Some butterflies can live for 12 months (for example, migrating Monarch butterflies). Some butterflies only live for a few days (for example, Small Blue butterflies). Red-eyed tree frogs are very small. The adult frogs are only 2 4 centimetres long. 1 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

Key words (see page 7 of these for the Key words in context) Subject words (see page 8 of these for the Subject words in context) adult (n) mate (n) back leg (n. phr) life cycle (n) amazing (adj) pattern (n) caterpillar (n) nocturnal (adj) breathe (v) scientist (n) chrysalis (n) pond (n) bright (adj) slide (v) froglet (n) rainy season (n) emerge (v) stage (n) front leg (n. phr) snake (n) drop (v) stick (v) hibernate (v), hibernation (n) tadpole (n) lay (v) study (v) insect (n) wing (n) look like (v) Curriculum links Natural science Online video footage: Go online to watch video footage of the life cycle stages. Interesting websites include the following: National Geographic Kids TM http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/ kids/animals-pets-kids/bugs-kids/butterflies-kids. html This three-minute video has a wide variety of butterfly life cycle footage, although the commentary is aimed at native English speakers. Teachers Domain http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/tdc02. sci.life.cyc.metamorph/ This video of almost five minutes shows the life cycle of a frog, a dragonfly and a butterfly. After watching, have the students draw the life stages of one of the animals and display their work on the wall. Remind the students that the Red-eyed tree frog is nocturnal. Discuss with students which other animals are nocturnal (foxes, bats, owls, badgers, hedgehogs, mice). They could choose an animal and find out about them: where they live, what they eat, where they sleep, any other interesting facts. They could each make a booklet displaying facts and pictures. Literacy Poem with actions: Read the following poem with the class and then put actions to the words for everybody to join in. Explain the meaning of the words tadpole, pail (a bucket), wiggly (moving from side to side with small quick movements), sprout (to grow) and hop. Tadpole, tadpole Swimming in my pail Big round head And wiggly tail Some day soon Four legs will sprout And then, small frog, You ll hop right out! Anonymous Art and design Students choose the Monarch butterfly or the Redeyed tree frog from the Reader (or other kinds of butterflies or frogs) and draw and colour it. Create a colourful display on the classroom wall. Students could also make a display showing the life cycle of a frog. The pond could be made out of large paper plates covered in foil or painted blue / green. The frog and tadpoles at various stages could be modelled from air drying clay and the eggs made out of bubble wrap with black dots of paint in the middle. Vegetation could be made out of green tissue paper. 2 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

Geography Remind the students that the Red-eyed tree frog lives in the rainforest. Use a map to talk about and name the different rainforests in the world. Get the students to work in groups and find out about other animals that live in the rainforest. Students could find out in which rainforest they live, what they eat, how they sleep, how they take care of their young. They could make posters with pictures and text, which can be displayed in the classroom. Notes on the photocopiable activities Page 14: After-Reading activities, Activity 4 Board game instructions Put children into small groups no larger than four per group. Hand out one board game sheet per group and have them cut out the counters. Players place their counters on the START square. A coin is flipped and players take it in turns to move two spaces for heads and one space for tails. When players land on a square they must read out and answer the question. If they get it wrong they go back to START. The first player to land on the FINISH square is the winner. 3 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

Class Activities (After Reading) Here are some activities to do with your class after reading Butterflies and Frogs. 1. Fact quiz Once the students have read the book, you can give them a fact quiz to check understanding of language and concepts. Place the students in pairs or groups. Read each section aloud to the class and ask the questions after the relevant pages have been read. The pair or group with the most correct answers wins. If available, have the teams press buzzers or ring bells to answer the questions. Page 3 What does Hannah do? (She s a scientist and she studies animals.) Where does the butterfly live? (across Europe) Pages 4 5 What do the circles on the butterfly s wings look like to a mouse? (a bird s head) How long can a Peacock butterfly live for? (about 11 months) How can it live so long? (It hibernates / sleeps during winter.) Pages 6 7 What do the eggs look like? (They are small and green.) How long are the caterpillars in the eggs? (about ten days) What do the hungry caterpillars eat? (the leaves around them) Pages 8 9 Who can eat the caterpillars? (birds) What happens in the third stage of the life cycle? (The caterpillar grows a chrysalis round its body.) Why don t animals eat the chrysalis? (Animals can t see the chrysalis because it looks like a leaf.) Pages 10 11 For how long is the caterpillar in the chrysalis? (about two weeks) What comes out of the chrysalis when it opens? (a butterfly) Why can t it fly? (because its wings are wet) What does the butterfly do before it hibernates? (It flies from flower to flower and eats a lot.) Pages 12 13 Where does the Red-eyed tree frog live? (in the rainforests of Central and South America) What helps it to jump and climb? (it s feet, because they can stick to the leaves) What colour are its feet? (orange / red) Pages 14 15 Why are the Red-eyed tree frog s colours important? (it s green body looks like a leaf; it s red eyes can scare bigger animals) How do the eggs stay on the leaf? (They stick on the leaf.) Pages 16 17 Which animals want to eat the eggs? (snakes and big insects) What comes out of the eggs when they open? (tadpoles) How do the tadpoles get into the water? (They slide down the leaf and drop into the water below.) What do the tadpoles look like? (They have tails and look more like fish than frogs.) Pages 18 19 How does the tadpole change its body in the third stage of the life cycle? (It grows back legs and front legs, and the tails gets smaller.) What colour is the froglet? (brown) Pages 20 21 What makes it possible for the froglet to climb? (Its front and back legs get stronger.) What does the frog eat? (insects) 2. Paper plate frogs Materials: paper plate; green and red paper; green paint; scissors; glue; glitter and craft eyes (optional) Before the session, make a paper plate frog as an example for the students. 4 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

Paint a paper plate front and back with green paint. Add some gold glitter to the paint for a slimy effect. Once dry, fold the plate in half. Draw an outline of four frog s legs and two big bulging eyes on green construction paper and a long tongue on red paper. Then cut them out. Stick the legs and the tongue to the folded inside of the plate. Stick the bulgy eyes to the top of the plate where it has been folded at the top. Stick on googly craft eyes (if available) or cut out and stick on little round circles of white paper and add black dots. When the plate is opened a little and closed, it looks like the frog s mouth. Write a fact about frogs on a piece of white paper and stick the paper inside the frog. Example facts: A frog doesn t close its eyes when it sleeps. A frog can breathe through its skin. I m a I ve got I can I live / sleep / eat In the first / second / third stage of my life 4. Butterfly life cycle collage Materials: Large pieces of white construction paper (one for each student); pens; glue. For the butterfly: pieces of tissue paper (or coffee filters, if available); clothes pegs; pipe cleaners; paint in a variety of bright colours; sequins (optional). For the butterfly eggs: cotton wool; leaves or green construction paper; scissors. For the caterpillars: cardboard egg boxes; paint; pipe cleaners; wool or string (optional); leaves. For the chrysalis: cotton wool; twigs. Talk with the students about the stages of the life cycle of a butterfly. Encourage the students to refer to pages 6 11 of the book. Elicit what happens at each stage of the lifecycle. As you do this, draw a simple diagram with arrows showing the life cycle of a butterfly on the whiteboard. butterfly Give out all the materials to the students. Show your students your paper plate frog and explain to them how to make it. Ask the students to find out something about frogs to write and stick inside their frog. They could do this for homework. They can find out, for example, how frogs breathe, how they sleep, how they eat, how they see, where they live, etc. Display the frogs in the classroom. 3. I am a tadpole / caterpillar Have students imagine themselves from the perspective of a tadpole or a caterpillar and write a story called I am a tadpole or I am a caterpillar. Write the following structures on the board for students to use: chrysalis Butterfly Life Cycle caterpillar eggs Explain to the students that they are going to make a butterfly life cycle collage. Give each student the construction paper and the other materials. The students will make a butterfly, some eggs on a leaf, a caterpillar and a chrysalis, and then stick them on the paper to show the butterfly life cycle. 5 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

To make the butterfly, students pinch the tissue paper (or coffee filter) in the middle and place the clothes peg in the centre. The clothes peg looks like the body of the butterfly and the tissue paper looks like wings. The students paint the wings. The paint is absorbed and spreads through the paper. The antennae is made with the pipe cleaner, bent into shape and held in place by the clothes peg. The butterfly can be decorated with sequins. shape it into oval shape. The chrysalis can then be attached to a twig with glue. Get the students to arrange the butterfly, eggs, caterpillar and chrysalis on their paper in a large circle and glue them in place. They should draw arrows between each part of the life cycle and write a summary of each stage of the life cycle (as on the whiteboard). Remind them to write the title. Ask volunteer students to show their collage to the class and explain parts of the life cycle. The collages can be displayed in the classroom. (Alternatively, colourful butterflies can be made by dipping hands in paint and making handprints on paper for the butterfly wings. The butterflies can be decorated and cut out.) To make the eggs, the students take very small pieces of cotton wool and roll them up into balls the size of a fingernail. The students stick these onto a leaf collected from outside. Or, they could cut a leaf shape out of green construction paper. To make the caterpillar, a row of egg cup sections are cut out of a cardboard egg box, to make the body and head of the caterpillar. (If single egg cup sections are cut out, they can be threaded together with string or wool.) This can be painted and decorated. The students draw or stick two eyes on the front and push a pipe cleaner through the front section above the eyes to make the antennae. The caterpillar can be placed on a leaf. To make the chrysalis, the students take a handful of cotton wool, roll it in their hands and 6 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com

Key words adult...slowly this small froglet changes from brown to the bright colours of the adult frog. (p. 20) amazing...i want to show you two animals with amazing life cycles. (p. 3) breathe...it doesn t breathe under water now. (p. 19) bright...it has a bright green body. (p. 13) emerge...in the spring, the Peacock butterfly emerges from hibernation. (p. 6) drop...the tadpoles slide down the leaf and drop into the water below. (p. 17) lay...then it finds a leaf above a pond and lays its eggs. (p. 15) look like...the circles look like eyes. (p. 4) mate...first, the butterfly finds a mate. (p. 6) pattern...the pattern on its wings is beautiful, but it s also important. (p. 4) scientist...my name is Hannah and I m a scientist. (p. 3) slide...the tadpoles slide down the leaf and drop into the water below. (p. 17) stage...this is the first stage of its life cycle. (p. 6) stick...its feet can stick to the leaves. (p. 13) study...i study animals. (p. 3) 7 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Subject words back leg... First it grows back legs. (p. 18) caterpillar... The caterpillars are hungry, and they eat the leaves around them. (p. 7) chrysalis... It grows a chrysalis around its body. (p. 9) froglet... A froglet is a very young frog. (p. 19) front leg... Then it grows front legs. (p. 18) hibernate /... It finds a tree, and it hibernates through the cold winter months. (p. 5) hibernation insect... The tadpoles live in the water and they eat very small insects. (p. 17) life cycle... This is the second stage of the life cycle. (p. 7) nocturnal... The Red-eyed tree frog is nocturnal. (p. 13) pond... Then it finds a leaf above a pond and lays its eggs. (p. 15) rainy season... In the rainy season, the frog finds a mate. (p. 15) snake... Snakes and big insects want to eat the eggs. (p. 16) tadpole... The tadpole is growing and changing. (p. 18) wing... It can t fly because its wings are wet. (p. 10) 8 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

While-Reading activities Activity 1 (pages 3 7) Write T (True) or F (False). 1 The Peacock butterfly lives across Africa. 2 The circles on a Peacock butterfly s wings look like eyes. 3 The Peacock butterfly can live for 13 months. 4 It hibernates in the summer months. 5 It finds a mate in spring. 6 It lays its small green eggs inside a flower. 7 Black caterpillars come out of the eggs after about fifteen days. Activity 2 (pages 8 11) Order the sentences. 1 A butterfly emerges from the chrysalis. 2 A chrysalis grows around the caterpillar s body. 3 The butterfly hibernates in the autumn. 4 Caterpillars grow bigger and birds sometimes eat them. 5 The butterfly eats a lot in the summer. 6 The caterpillar changes into a butterfly inside the chrysalis. 7 The butterfly can t fly because its wings are wet. 9 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Activity 3 (pages 12 15) Write the words in the sentences. scare rainy rain forest stage stick nocturnal 1 The Red-eyed tree frog lives in the. 2 It is and it sleeps on a green leaf. 3 The tree frog s feet can to leaves. 4 The tree frog s red eyes can bigger animals in the forest. 5 It finds a mate in the season. 6 In the first of the tree frog s life cycle, it lays eggs on a leaf. Activity 4 (pages 16 18) Order the words in the sentences. 1 frog s / eat / Snakes / eggs. / many 2 eggs. / emerge / Tadpoles / the / from 3 look / fish. / like / tadpoles / The 4 the / live / water. / The tadpoles / in 5 grows / First, the / back / tadpole / legs. 6 tadpole s tail / smaller / The / gets / and / smaller. 10 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Activity 5 (pages 19 22) Match the two parts of the sentences. 1 The tadpole changes a from brown to bright colours. 2 The froglet breathes b small insects. 3 The froglet s legs get c in the life cycle of a frog. 4 The froglet s colour changes d out of the water. 5 The Red-eyed tree frog catches e stronger and it can climb. 6 There are four stages f to a small froglet. 11 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

stagedangeroushibernatenocturnalslideseasonemergeclimbbreatheforestmatepatternadultchangefourth After-Reading activities Activity 1 Find fifteen words from the story. Activity 2 Write the correct words under the sentences. 1 It hibernates in the winter months. a 2 They slide down the leaf and drop in the water. b 3 They eat the leaves around them. c 4 It looks like a leaf. d 5 It moves from the water to the plants around the water. e 12 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Activity 3 Look at the pictures and write the words in the crossword. 1 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 7 13 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Activity 4 Play the board game in groups of four. Take a counter and place it on the START square. Flip a coin. Take it in turns to move your counter two spaces for heads and one space for tails. When you land on a square, read out and answer the question. If you get it wrong go back to START. The first player to land on the FINISH square is the winner. 12 Does a tadpole s tail get bigger and bigger? 11 Go back to square 7! 6 Go back to the start! FINISH 10 How does a butterfly move around? 7 What does a tadpole eat? 9 Can a tadpole breathe under the water? 8 What comes out of a chrysalis? 5 What does a caterpillar eat? START 4 What comes out of a frog s egg? 1 Where does a butterfly lay her eggs? 3 What comes out of a butterfly s egg? 2 What are the four stages of a frog s life cycle? 14 PHOTOCOPIABLE Text copyright Pearson Education.

Answer Key In the back of the Reader Before You Read 1 A butterfly on a flower and a frog on a twig. 2 a caterpillar, pp. 7, 8, 9 b chrysalis, pp. 9, 10 c tadpole, p. 17 d insect, pp. 16, 21 e froglet, pp. 18, 20 After You Read 1 a Yes b Yes c No d No e Yes 2 Stage 1 = b Stage 2 = d Stage 3 = a Stage 4 = c 3 Stage 1 = c Stage 2 = d Stage 3 = a Stage 4 = b In these While-Reading activities Activity 1 1 F 2 T 3 F 4 F 5 T 6 F 7 F Activity 2 The correct order is: 4, 2, 6, 1, 7, 5, 3 Activity 3 1 rain forest 2 nocturnal 3 stick 4 scare 5 rainy 6 stage Activity 4 1 Snakes eat many frog eggs. 2 Tadpoles emerge from the eggs. 3 The tadpoles look like fish. 4 The tadpoles live in the water. 5 First, the tadpole grows back legs. 6 The tadpole s tail gets smaller and smaller. Activity 5 1 f 2 d 3 e 4 a 5 b 6 c After-Reading activities Activity 1 stage dangerous hibernate nocturnal slide season emerge climb breathe forest mate pattern adult change fourth Activity 2 1 e butterfly 2 b tadpoles 3 c caterpillars 4 a frog 5 d froglet Activity 3 1 b u 3 t 1 c a t e r p i l l a r t d 2 l e a f 3 p o n d r o 4 f r o g l l 2 5 e g g 6 c h r y s a l i s c i 7 f l o w e r n t i s t Activity 4 1 on a leaf / some leaves 2 Four stages: egg, tadpole, froglet, frog 3 a caterpillar 4 a tadpole 5 leaves 6 7 small insects 8 a butterfly 9 Yes, it can. 10 It flies. 11 12 No, it gets smaller and smaller. 15 www.pearsonenglishkidsreaders.com