Open Court Reading Unit Openers

City Wildlife Unit Opener Questions

Here’s another idea incorporating charades (for kinesthetic learners), visualizing, and higher level thinking questions.

by Stephanie Penniman

Snail Investigation

Possible questions to draw from the children or have them consider during the investigation:

• How do wild animals survive in the city?
• What do they eat? Who eats them?
• How do they find shelter or protection?
• Where do they get water?
• How do they raise they young?
• What tracks or evidence do they leave?
• Where can you find wildlife in the city?
• Can plants also be wildlife?
• How do plants, animals, and insects help each other survive?
• How do changes in the environment affect them?
• What happens to plant and animal wildlife with the change of seasons?
• What kind of wildlife can you find in a vacant lot?
• What are the effects of pollution on these wild animals?
• How do other environmental changes affect wildlife? What lessons can we learn?
• How have animals adapted—even in environments that seem hostile?
• What responsibility do people have to protect wildlife?
• Why are some wildlife species considered to be pests and others are not?
• Why have some wildlife pests survived in the city despite human attempts teradicate them?

Play Charades

In groups, each child takes his turn to pantomime a city-dwelling wild animal.
• How does it move?
• What does it do?
• What does it eat?

Imagine a City Lot

Students close their eyes and imagine that they are in a vacant city lot.
• “Look around” the lot.
• What did you “see” in the lot? (Old tire? Broken bricks?)
• What wildlife might make a home in or near that object?
• Why would it make a good home for this particular living thing?

Draw a “point of view” from an ant or other living thing in your empty lot.