Are you ready for some Seed Projects in STEM? I have some great ideas, but first…
When I was a little girl my Popaw had a farm and every spring he plowed his fields with a wooden plow pulled by a mule. One summer he planted so many watermelon plants that he later had to have neighboring farmers come and help gather them with pickup trucks. That was the same summer he told me not to swallow watermelon seeds.
“Young’un if you swallow these little seeds a watermelon plant will grow in your belly.”
I believed him and I would rake those seeds out of my slice of melon and leave a pile on the picnic table. I found out later that he would save those seeds and plant them the next spring. Sweet memories!
We have several seed projects that we love so much and some unusual ideas about them that we learned. (More about my Popaw later.) Right now, let’s talk about seeds!
Let’s get started with a few unusual things about seeds! Here are the first few items which all have to do with seed dispersal.
- Seeds stick to some animals and later drop off.
- Some seed pods explode.
- Sometimes the wind carries seeds away.
Seed Dispersal turned out to be a learning event.
We read a little about seed dispersal first and the story about how velcro was invented is part of this. You have to admit that is unusual! But, true! A man walking his dog found that certain seeds would stick to the dog’s fur more than others and the hook and loop closure system was born. Some of our groups had to make a seed dispersal model of how seeds attach to animals.
In the photo above you can see the “dog” made by one team. They covered him with “fur” and then attached the seeds. This is exactly what happened with the invention of velcro!
Explosion Dispersal
Then there is the exploding part! We watched a video of seeds that pop open in a violent explosion that scatters the seeds all over. Kids loved the video and couldn’t wait to make something explode. Thank goodness I had some balloons. In the photo, you can see kids trying to pop the balloon to get their seeds to scatter. The balloon represents the exploding seed pod.
Gravity Dispersal
In both of these trees students created seeds that would drop to the ground. On the left, the tree was shaken to drop the seeds- which is exactly what happens in nature (when the wind blows). On the right the team added strings to the seeds and pulled the strings to release the seeds.
More Unusual Seed Facts
- Getting seeds inside a bird feeder is harder than you think.
- So is getting the seeds out of the birdfeeder.
And, yes we made bird feeders!
Birdfeeders
My fifth graders had a blast designing and building these bird feeders. I had an array of cardboard boxes and empty bottles and they chose what they needed based on their design. They put it all together with hot glue and tape and then it was time to decorate. We had so many creative bird feeders with perches for the birds to sit on and little spouts to use when pouring in the seeds.
What we encountered that became a problem to solve was this,
“How do we get the seeds into the feeder part?”
In the photo to the left, the bottle didn’t hold a lot of seeds because of the placement of the hole.
More opportunities for problem-solving. Groups had to redesign to find ways to get the seeds in and ways for the birds to get them out!
Third grade also had some unusual things occur!
- A flower has an ovary and that’s where you will find the seeds.
- Flowers and their parts come in all shapes and sizes!
3-D Flowers
Third graders were learning about the parts of a flower in their regular classroom so we just extended that study in the lab. We talked about what each of the parts of the flower does and even dissected a real flower. Next, we created our own flower models. These had to have all the parts represented by the materials I made available and then the parts had to be labeled.
Learning all the parts was fun and then I heard this…
“What is the oh-vair-ee?”
Ah, the ovary. So, we stopped to watch a Magic School Bus video which explains it perfectly and then we went back to creating our flower models.
As you can see from the photos the flowers were amazing and different and all sizes and shapes. And that is exactly the way they are in nature, too. Which makes flowers very unusual!
Speaking of unusual I had a Popaw like no other. That summer that he planted a whole field of watermelons we would go out to visit. And, when I say out- I mean out-in-the-country, away from the city because that’s where his farm was. When we pulled into the driveway he would come running outside with a butcher knife and a handful of forks. He would cut open a giant watermelon and we would sit under the shade trees and eat until we were ready to pop. He’d throw the rinds over his fence to his pigs and then tell us a story or two. Good old days!
Click on any of the images to see more about these fun Seed Dispersal Projects!
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