Is It Natural or Transformed?

Objects can be classified as natural or designed/processed.
© Sandra van Der Steen.
- Grades:
- K-2
- Length: 45 Minutes
Overview
Students examine, compare, discuss, and classify materials as either "natural" or "transformed" (changed or processed by humans).
This activity is from the Resources and the Environment Teacher's Guide. Although it is most appropriate for use with students in grades K–2, the lesson is easily adaptable for other grade levels.
- Teacher
Background - Objectives and Standards
- Materials and
Setup - Procedure and
Extensions - Handouts and
Downloads
Teacher Background
Resources are the materials people and other organisms obtain from the environment. Resources provide for the needs and wants of a population (group of the same kind of organism). All plants and animals depend on the resources in their environments to live, grow, and reproduce.
A variety of resources are used by people without much modification. Some resources that are used in their natural state include air for breathing (although it often is filtered in buildings), fresh fruits and vegetables for eating, and some spring water for drinking. People transform other resources to solve problems. Changed resources include cut timber and manufactured bricks for homes, cooked or prepared foods derived from raw goods, and water made drinkable by processing surface water. “Processed” means that something has been prepared or converted by a special treatment.
Related Content
-
Resources and the Environment
Teacher Guide
Young students explore how living things—including humans—use resources found naturally in their environments or modify resources to meet their needs. (11 activities).
-
Tillena Lou's Big Adventure
Reading
Tillena Lou becomes lost while while exploring away from her home, then she gets an unexpected ride into the world of people. What surprises await the tiny turtle?
Funding
Science Education Partnership Award, NIH

Filling the Gaps: K-6 Science/Health Education
Grant Number: 5R25RR013454