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NATURE JOURNALING 
Grade Level: Grade 2 
Introductory Activity: LEAF MATCHING 
Description 
In this activity students will look closely at leaves to see the many variations in shape, size, margins, 
or veins. They will identify leaves of the same plant based on these leaf characteristics. 
Guiding Question 
How do scientists classify plants and determine that certain plants are related? 
Big Idea 
The leaves of each type of plant have similar characteristics. Scientists use these characteristics to 
identify plants in the wild. Leaves are one if the things that scientists observe. They will look at how 
the leaf is situated on the stem, as well as the leaf shape, margins, veins, color, thickness and much 
more. By observing leaves closely we can find a similar leaf from a group of leaves. 
Learning Objectives 
To observe leaves to find some of the qualities they have in common and that are different. 
Materials 
* Leaves of many different plants from the garden, school landscape or natural area. Two of each 
Procedure Total Time approximately 25 minutes. 
In the Classroom 
1. Discuss with students the concept of sorting things by things they have in common. Let them 
know this is how scientists classify plants and animals 
2. Fill a bowl or basket with leaves, two from each plant - so that there are just enough leaves so that 
each member of the class can take one. Pass around the basket and let each student take one. 
3. Ask them to look closely at their leave. Then as a group walk around the room until they find the 
person who has the matching leaf. from the same plant 
4. What criteria did they use to know that the leaves matched. (10 minutes) 
Wrap Up 
Take the students outdoors and as them to explore the garden or schoolyard to find the matching plant. 
(10 minutes) 
Assessing Student Knowledge: Ask students what leaf characteristics scientists might use to separate 
and classify the leaves of plants. (5 minutes) 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.
Part 2: THE NATURE JOURNAL 
Developed by Jean Bailey of the Cutler School, South Hamilton 
Overview 
We live in a world where children and adults rarely take time to connect with their natural world. Both 
children and adults find the experience calming, focusing and stimulating. Harvard biologist, E.O. 
Wilson, calls this innate inner connection “biophilia.” 
Keeping a nature journal offers an opportunity to experience wonder, discovery and authentic inquiry 
based science. It is a portal to view the natural world through the eyes of an artist, scientist, writer, 
and naturalist all at once. The process of creating a Nature journal offers opportunities for direct 
contact with nature, personal reflection, and practice of skills common to many disciplines: observing, 
recording, measuring, discerning essentials, pattern recognition, attention to detail, focused attention, 
and patience. 
A trip to a wildlife reserve or even a forest is not necessary. A vegetable garden, a yard, a tree, or even 
a small patch of weeds peeking through a crack in a pavement can reveal wonders to those who take 
the time to look. 
Basic Guidelines 
• Start with simple brief experiences to create a sense of wonder and establish appropriate habits. 
• Add content appropriate to your curriculum needs and students 
• Keep the experience open ended enough to allow students to explore and discover, but structured 
enough to help them focus. 
• The goal is to observe deeply and record what is observed with all senses (taste only when safe). 
• A nature journal can include drawings, labels, notes, poetry, and ideas for future study or ideas for 
creative writing. 
Introducing Nature Journals to yourself and your students 
- Collect and examine nature journals by artists, naturalists, scientists, poets, writers, etc. Ask your art 
teacher to share a sketchbook. (A list of possible resources and references is attached) 
- Examine, enjoy, compare and contrast the journals of artists, scientists and writers. Think about the 
purpose of each journal and how the purpose guides the form. 
- Make a list or ven diagram comparing how artists and scientists differ in their approach to nature. 
- Collect field guides and other resources for students to research their discoveries. Field guides with 
drawings are more useful that those with photos. A discussion of why this is true may provide some 
interesting insights about the decisions an artist must make in deciding what is important to include. 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.
- Keep collections of interesting specimens and magnifiers available in the classroom. 
- Consider team teaching a first lesson with your art teacher 
- Find out if there are writers, naturalists or scientists in your community who might be willing to 
share their journals. Nature journals can incorporate all of these points of view! 
Creating Nature Journals with Your Students 
Teacher preliminary preparation: 
- Check to see if students have bee sting allergies or other medical issues. 
- Let some one in the office know where you will be. 
- Check the area you have chosen for poison ivy, hornet nests, or other potential hazards. 
- Take a few minutes to peacefully experience the area alone. See what you find interesting, inspiring 
or puzzling. This is the core at true scientific inquiry, will help you model a sense of discovery for 
you students as well as to predict useful resources for further study. AND…this just may be the 
most restorative part of your day! 
Useful materials to Assemble: 
For students: (For loose materials that are easily lost, tape an envelope to the back of each clipboard 
or create ziplock “kits” for small groups and appoint one student in the group accountable for the 
group’s supplies.) 
- Clipboards 
- Journal pages fit the size to your need 
- Pencils, sharpened with erasers 
- magnifying glasses, on cords to be worn around the neck 
For Teachers: Create a tote bag with 
- Extra sharpened pencils and/or hand pencil sharpeners 
- Cell phone or walky talky to for office contact in case of emergency, if you are distant from the 
classroom 
- Camera 
- Pruning shears or a strong pair of scissors to take specimens 
- Ziplock baggies for specimens 
- Measuring tape or rulers if you are making measurements 
- Reference materials, such as field guides or charts, if that is the focus of the experience. 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.
Classroom Resources and References: 
- Keeping a Nature Journal and other books by Claire Walker Leslie 
- The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady by Edith Holden 
- In and Out of the Garden by Sara Midda 
- Newcomb’s Wildflower Guide by Laurence Newcomb 
- Tree Identification Book by Symonds 
- Shrub Identification Book by Symonds 
- Peterson’s First Guides (field guides) 
- Golden Guides Series (field guides) 
- Private Eye Materials 
- Grass Sandals, The Travels of Basho by Dawnine Spivak (a picture book about a 15th century 
Japanese poet.) 
- Last Child Left in the Woods: Saving our Children From Nature Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv 
- Erica Sonder’s Portable Herbarim (on line) 
• Ground Rules for “Outside Classroom:” 
The transition from indoor classroom to outdoor classroom (vs. recess) is a challenge for some 
children. Discuss these and other items you find necessary, each time before going outside. You 
will need to remind and enforce the ground rules at first but, they will eventually become habits and 
children will come to monitor and remind themselves and others. Here are some to start with and adapt 
to your needs. 
- Stay within the ‘invisible walls’ of the outdoor classroom area. (The teacher will show you where 
they are.) 
- Once you are in your study area spot stay there 
- Quiet bodies and quiet voices 
- Be careful not to damage nature - plants or insects 
- Take specimens for further study, only with permission and with care. Any specimen should be 
small and taken with out causing damage. 
A Basic Pattern for an Outdoor Nature Journal Experience: 
Adapt this to your students and curriculum. You will want to focus your first experiences on 
learning how to observe and record and on savoring the experience. Once you have established the 
routines add more curriculum content. 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.
Before you go outside: 
1. Review ground rules to respect nature and each other. 
2. Review outdoor classroom expectations 
3. Discuss the focus for today’s experience e.g.: general exploration, looking for insects on plants, 
revisiting a previous study site, collecting a specimen etc.) 
4. If you have a specific focus such as descriptive words or plant anatomy, this may be a good time to 
review or brainstorm a word bank. 
5. Prepare materials for going outside. ( Attach papers to clipboards or get out sketch journals, 
distribute pencils, place magnifying glasses on cords around the neck. Write name , date, time, 
weather info and other important data on the page.) 
Outside: 
1. Gather in one central meeting area 
2. Establish the boundaries of the study area, the “outdoor classroom walls.” Everyone should be 
within sight of the teacher. 
3. Allow students a few minutes to explore the area then identify and settle in their study area. 
4. 10 to 15 minutes is usually a good amount of time in the beginning. You may want students to 
observe and record in more than one area. As they make their transition, they should avoid 
distracting others. Occasionally someone will find something very exciting and it will be irresistible 
for everyone to see (possibly record) and discuss. Seize the moment! This is real discovery! It may 
be inspiration for later research. 
5. Give students a warning when only a few minutes remain before ending. Allow at least 15 minutes 
for debriefing and moving inside. 
6. Re-gather at the meeting area. 
7. While gathering encourage students to share their findings and experiences. 
Debrief: (inside or outside) some possible guiding questions: 
- What was your favorite/ most interesting observation? 
- What did you discover that you never noticed before? 
- What do you wonder about? 
- What did you learn? 
- What was hard? 
- Is there anything we should investigate in later observations? 
- Is there anything we need to look up or research to find out more? 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.
Inside: 
- This may be a time to use resources to add labels, tidbits of social history, folklore, or other info.. 
- This may be a time for making identifications using field guides or other resources, etc.. 
- This may be a time to prepare and attach small specimens (The scotch or packaging tape works well 
for small specimens. Small envelopes or folded waxed paper work also. Some plant material may 
be pressed and added later or rubbings may be taken from leaves.) 
- This may be a time to add personal reflections and connections or those reflections could be a 
homework assignment. 
- If you use clipboards, papers are detached only inside (to avoid papers “accidentally” blowing 
away). 
- Put away materials and supplies. 
- Make a note of anything that needs follow up. 
Putting it All Together: 
You will want to join each student’s pages to form a journal. It is interesting to use them as reference 
for change. Establish a storage system. Some possibilities: 
- Loose pages in a pocket portfolio or a binder 
- Loose pages in a large envelope to be bound later 
- Make all entries on large index cards to file or hole punch and bind together 
- Make all entries on a small handmade book 
- Hole punch the edges of a series of envelopes to store pages and later bind together 
- Use a commercial sketchbook, a spiral binding and a hard back cover eliminate the need to use a 
clipboard and loose pages. 
Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks to consider as you design lessons: 
Science: Earth Science Strand, Life Science Strand, Physical Science Strand, Technology/Engineering 
Strand 
Arts: Visual Arts Standards, Connections Strand 
English Language Arts: Discussion Standards; Questioning, Listening and Contributing Standards; 
Vocabulary and Concept Development Standards; Understanding Text Standards; Nonfiction 
Standards, Style and Language Standards; Research Standards 
Math: Measurement, Geometry Standards 
Please visit the Massachusetts Agriculture in the Classroom website at www.aginclassroom.org 
to tell us how you used this Nature Journaling Garden-Based Lesson 
Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts 
Department of Agricultural Resources.

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Grade 2 School Garden Lesson Plan - Leaf Lesson; Leaf Matching ~ Massachusetts

  • 1. NATURE JOURNALING Grade Level: Grade 2 Introductory Activity: LEAF MATCHING Description In this activity students will look closely at leaves to see the many variations in shape, size, margins, or veins. They will identify leaves of the same plant based on these leaf characteristics. Guiding Question How do scientists classify plants and determine that certain plants are related? Big Idea The leaves of each type of plant have similar characteristics. Scientists use these characteristics to identify plants in the wild. Leaves are one if the things that scientists observe. They will look at how the leaf is situated on the stem, as well as the leaf shape, margins, veins, color, thickness and much more. By observing leaves closely we can find a similar leaf from a group of leaves. Learning Objectives To observe leaves to find some of the qualities they have in common and that are different. Materials * Leaves of many different plants from the garden, school landscape or natural area. Two of each Procedure Total Time approximately 25 minutes. In the Classroom 1. Discuss with students the concept of sorting things by things they have in common. Let them know this is how scientists classify plants and animals 2. Fill a bowl or basket with leaves, two from each plant - so that there are just enough leaves so that each member of the class can take one. Pass around the basket and let each student take one. 3. Ask them to look closely at their leave. Then as a group walk around the room until they find the person who has the matching leaf. from the same plant 4. What criteria did they use to know that the leaves matched. (10 minutes) Wrap Up Take the students outdoors and as them to explore the garden or schoolyard to find the matching plant. (10 minutes) Assessing Student Knowledge: Ask students what leaf characteristics scientists might use to separate and classify the leaves of plants. (5 minutes) Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.
  • 2. Part 2: THE NATURE JOURNAL Developed by Jean Bailey of the Cutler School, South Hamilton Overview We live in a world where children and adults rarely take time to connect with their natural world. Both children and adults find the experience calming, focusing and stimulating. Harvard biologist, E.O. Wilson, calls this innate inner connection “biophilia.” Keeping a nature journal offers an opportunity to experience wonder, discovery and authentic inquiry based science. It is a portal to view the natural world through the eyes of an artist, scientist, writer, and naturalist all at once. The process of creating a Nature journal offers opportunities for direct contact with nature, personal reflection, and practice of skills common to many disciplines: observing, recording, measuring, discerning essentials, pattern recognition, attention to detail, focused attention, and patience. A trip to a wildlife reserve or even a forest is not necessary. A vegetable garden, a yard, a tree, or even a small patch of weeds peeking through a crack in a pavement can reveal wonders to those who take the time to look. Basic Guidelines • Start with simple brief experiences to create a sense of wonder and establish appropriate habits. • Add content appropriate to your curriculum needs and students • Keep the experience open ended enough to allow students to explore and discover, but structured enough to help them focus. • The goal is to observe deeply and record what is observed with all senses (taste only when safe). • A nature journal can include drawings, labels, notes, poetry, and ideas for future study or ideas for creative writing. Introducing Nature Journals to yourself and your students - Collect and examine nature journals by artists, naturalists, scientists, poets, writers, etc. Ask your art teacher to share a sketchbook. (A list of possible resources and references is attached) - Examine, enjoy, compare and contrast the journals of artists, scientists and writers. Think about the purpose of each journal and how the purpose guides the form. - Make a list or ven diagram comparing how artists and scientists differ in their approach to nature. - Collect field guides and other resources for students to research their discoveries. Field guides with drawings are more useful that those with photos. A discussion of why this is true may provide some interesting insights about the decisions an artist must make in deciding what is important to include. Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.
  • 3. - Keep collections of interesting specimens and magnifiers available in the classroom. - Consider team teaching a first lesson with your art teacher - Find out if there are writers, naturalists or scientists in your community who might be willing to share their journals. Nature journals can incorporate all of these points of view! Creating Nature Journals with Your Students Teacher preliminary preparation: - Check to see if students have bee sting allergies or other medical issues. - Let some one in the office know where you will be. - Check the area you have chosen for poison ivy, hornet nests, or other potential hazards. - Take a few minutes to peacefully experience the area alone. See what you find interesting, inspiring or puzzling. This is the core at true scientific inquiry, will help you model a sense of discovery for you students as well as to predict useful resources for further study. AND…this just may be the most restorative part of your day! Useful materials to Assemble: For students: (For loose materials that are easily lost, tape an envelope to the back of each clipboard or create ziplock “kits” for small groups and appoint one student in the group accountable for the group’s supplies.) - Clipboards - Journal pages fit the size to your need - Pencils, sharpened with erasers - magnifying glasses, on cords to be worn around the neck For Teachers: Create a tote bag with - Extra sharpened pencils and/or hand pencil sharpeners - Cell phone or walky talky to for office contact in case of emergency, if you are distant from the classroom - Camera - Pruning shears or a strong pair of scissors to take specimens - Ziplock baggies for specimens - Measuring tape or rulers if you are making measurements - Reference materials, such as field guides or charts, if that is the focus of the experience. Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.
  • 4. Classroom Resources and References: - Keeping a Nature Journal and other books by Claire Walker Leslie - The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady by Edith Holden - In and Out of the Garden by Sara Midda - Newcomb’s Wildflower Guide by Laurence Newcomb - Tree Identification Book by Symonds - Shrub Identification Book by Symonds - Peterson’s First Guides (field guides) - Golden Guides Series (field guides) - Private Eye Materials - Grass Sandals, The Travels of Basho by Dawnine Spivak (a picture book about a 15th century Japanese poet.) - Last Child Left in the Woods: Saving our Children From Nature Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv - Erica Sonder’s Portable Herbarim (on line) • Ground Rules for “Outside Classroom:” The transition from indoor classroom to outdoor classroom (vs. recess) is a challenge for some children. Discuss these and other items you find necessary, each time before going outside. You will need to remind and enforce the ground rules at first but, they will eventually become habits and children will come to monitor and remind themselves and others. Here are some to start with and adapt to your needs. - Stay within the ‘invisible walls’ of the outdoor classroom area. (The teacher will show you where they are.) - Once you are in your study area spot stay there - Quiet bodies and quiet voices - Be careful not to damage nature - plants or insects - Take specimens for further study, only with permission and with care. Any specimen should be small and taken with out causing damage. A Basic Pattern for an Outdoor Nature Journal Experience: Adapt this to your students and curriculum. You will want to focus your first experiences on learning how to observe and record and on savoring the experience. Once you have established the routines add more curriculum content. Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.
  • 5. Before you go outside: 1. Review ground rules to respect nature and each other. 2. Review outdoor classroom expectations 3. Discuss the focus for today’s experience e.g.: general exploration, looking for insects on plants, revisiting a previous study site, collecting a specimen etc.) 4. If you have a specific focus such as descriptive words or plant anatomy, this may be a good time to review or brainstorm a word bank. 5. Prepare materials for going outside. ( Attach papers to clipboards or get out sketch journals, distribute pencils, place magnifying glasses on cords around the neck. Write name , date, time, weather info and other important data on the page.) Outside: 1. Gather in one central meeting area 2. Establish the boundaries of the study area, the “outdoor classroom walls.” Everyone should be within sight of the teacher. 3. Allow students a few minutes to explore the area then identify and settle in their study area. 4. 10 to 15 minutes is usually a good amount of time in the beginning. You may want students to observe and record in more than one area. As they make their transition, they should avoid distracting others. Occasionally someone will find something very exciting and it will be irresistible for everyone to see (possibly record) and discuss. Seize the moment! This is real discovery! It may be inspiration for later research. 5. Give students a warning when only a few minutes remain before ending. Allow at least 15 minutes for debriefing and moving inside. 6. Re-gather at the meeting area. 7. While gathering encourage students to share their findings and experiences. Debrief: (inside or outside) some possible guiding questions: - What was your favorite/ most interesting observation? - What did you discover that you never noticed before? - What do you wonder about? - What did you learn? - What was hard? - Is there anything we should investigate in later observations? - Is there anything we need to look up or research to find out more? Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.
  • 6. Inside: - This may be a time to use resources to add labels, tidbits of social history, folklore, or other info.. - This may be a time for making identifications using field guides or other resources, etc.. - This may be a time to prepare and attach small specimens (The scotch or packaging tape works well for small specimens. Small envelopes or folded waxed paper work also. Some plant material may be pressed and added later or rubbings may be taken from leaves.) - This may be a time to add personal reflections and connections or those reflections could be a homework assignment. - If you use clipboards, papers are detached only inside (to avoid papers “accidentally” blowing away). - Put away materials and supplies. - Make a note of anything that needs follow up. Putting it All Together: You will want to join each student’s pages to form a journal. It is interesting to use them as reference for change. Establish a storage system. Some possibilities: - Loose pages in a pocket portfolio or a binder - Loose pages in a large envelope to be bound later - Make all entries on large index cards to file or hole punch and bind together - Make all entries on a small handmade book - Hole punch the edges of a series of envelopes to store pages and later bind together - Use a commercial sketchbook, a spiral binding and a hard back cover eliminate the need to use a clipboard and loose pages. Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks to consider as you design lessons: Science: Earth Science Strand, Life Science Strand, Physical Science Strand, Technology/Engineering Strand Arts: Visual Arts Standards, Connections Strand English Language Arts: Discussion Standards; Questioning, Listening and Contributing Standards; Vocabulary and Concept Development Standards; Understanding Text Standards; Nonfiction Standards, Style and Language Standards; Research Standards Math: Measurement, Geometry Standards Please visit the Massachusetts Agriculture in the Classroom website at www.aginclassroom.org to tell us how you used this Nature Journaling Garden-Based Lesson Lesson supported by a Specialty Crops Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources.