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By: Kylie Rife Begin Learning Features  Back Button  Home Button  Forward Button.

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Presentation on theme: "By: Kylie Rife Begin Learning Features  Back Button  Home Button  Forward Button."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 By: Kylie Rife Begin

3 Learning Features  Back Button  Home Button  Forward Button

4 Welcome! Teacher s Student s

5 Students: Content Overview Animals Oceans Map Map Quiz Quiz

6 Teachers: Contents  Audience Audience  Learning Environment Learning Environment  Learning Objectives Learning Objectives  Overview Overview

7 Audience * Grade Level: 3-5 *Specifically for students in Indiana, or states without a surrounding ocean. *Students that have some prior knowledge about the ocean. *Income Level: Middle-Upper Class

8 Learning Environment  Class Subject: Science  Classroom Setting: Students will be in a science based computer lab.  Time Limit: They will be given an hour to go through all the slides, and create a presentation.  Since students will not be able to experience the ocean hands on, then they will be looking at maps, videos, and simulations to get a more in-depth view.

9 Objectives  Students will be able to locate where each of the four oceans are on a world map that is given to them by taking a quiz on this presentation.  Students will be able to precisely apprehend facts about certain animals that are presented in this lesson by taking a true or false quiz at the end of this lesson.  Student will be able to accurately answer questions when asked to give facts about certain ocean animals.

10  Throughout this lesson students will view the following: Locations of the 5 oceans Facts about each ocean Different species in the ocean Videos Quizzes

11  Throughout this lesson you will view the following: Locations of the 5 oceans Facts about each ocean Different species in the ocean Videos Quizzes

12 Ocean Animals  With over 72% of the Earth’s surface covered by salt water, the Earth’s oceans are home to 230,000 known species. And that’s with only 5% of the Earth’s oceans considered explored! Now that’s a lot of species!!!!! http://teacherexpress.scholastic.com/ocean-plants- animals-mini-bulletin-board-9780545177528

13 Bottlenose Dolphins  Location Location  Nasal sacs inside the dolphin's head are what make it possible for the dolphins to vocalize.  Blowholes on top of the dolphins’ head are what allow it to breathe. Since they are mammals, unlike most sea creatures, they have to come up to the surface for air every now and then.  Dolphins hunt they prey in groups. It is very rare to see them eat alone.  Dolphins will eat almost any kind of fish. Their diets also include squid and small crustaceans such as shrimps.  They swallow their food whole.

14 Bottlenose Dolphins Dolphins sleep with one eye open so they can look out for predators that can harm them. This means that they only use half of their brains while they are sleeping! http://true-wildlife.blogspot.com/2011/02/bottlenose- dolphin.html

15 Bottlenose Dolphins

16 Click Here To View Some of The Sounds The Dolphin Makes!

17 Sea Horses  Location Location  There are at least 25 different species of sea horses..  Sea horses eat tiny organism off of plants that they latch onto. They eat these by sucking them through their long tube-like snouts.  Sea horses can move their eyes independently from one another, so that they can also keep a look out for their predators.

18 Sea Horses Fun Fact: Female sea horses lay their eggs on the male’s abdomen where there’s a pouch called a “brood pouch.” This is where the eggs continue to grow until they hatch. Therefore, the male is the one that takes “mother’s” it’s young, and gives birth to them.

19 Sea Horses

20 Great White Sharks  Location Location  The Great white shark is the largest shark in the ocean.  When great white sharks are still young they eat fish (including other sharks) and rays. As they grow, the shark's favorite prey becomes sea mammals, especially sea lions and seals.  Great white sharks always sneak up on their prey. They see it as a game in a sense.  As soon as a baby shark is born, it swims away from it’s mother. Baby sharks are on their own right from the start because their mother may see them only as prey.

21 Great White Sharks Fun Fact: After eating a sea lion or a seal, the great white shark can live up to a month or two without eating again. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science- news/6494792/Great-white-sharks-hang-out-together.html

22 Great White Sharks

23 Loggerhead Sea Turtles  Location Location  Loggerhead turtles are the most abundant of all the marine turtle species in U.S. waters.  Their food sources are jellyfish, conchs, crabs, and even fish, but they will eat seaweed occasionally.  Predators: Sharks, seas, ghost crabs (when the turtles are still young), and killer whales.  Loggerhead sea turtles are born from eggs. Female loggerhead turtles will lay hundreds of eggs at one time, and most of them will hatch and be born successfully. Click here to watch the baby sea turtles be born! Click here to watch the baby sea turtles be born!

24 Loggerhead Sea Turtles FUN FACT : Turtles can live on every continent except Antarctica! http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/am/v2/n 3/sea-turtles

25 Loggerhead Sea Turtles

26 Loggerhead Baby Sea Turtles

27 Jellyfish  Location Location  Jellyfish have tentacles that sting and kill their prey before they eat them.  Jellyfish sting even when they are dead.  Jellyfish are invertebrates, which means they do not have a backbone.  Predators: Sea turtles, and some sharks.

28 Jellyfish Fun Fact: Jellyfish have been around for more than 650 years!! That means they have outdated dinosaurs and sharks! Amazing huh?! http://guestofaguest.com/tag/jellyfish/

29 Jellyfish

30 Clown Fish  Location Location  Clown fish are also known as “Anemonefish.”  Clown fish live in Anemones. Anemones have tentacles that sting, but the clownfish are not harmed by them. It sounds crazy, but it’s magnificent! They can live within the anemones because clownfish have a layer of mucus on their skin that make them immune to the anemone's stings.  Some people might ask, why do clownfish live among the anemones? Then they found out a fascinating answer! It’s to protect themselves from their predators! They do this because they know they won’t be harmed when they are in the anemones. Their predators know that it stings, and they wouldn’t dare try to enter.  Predators- Sharks and stingrays.

31 Clown Fish FUN FACT: When clownfish hatch, they are all male. Under certain conditions, a male will change into a female. However, if it becomes female, it cannot change back. http://wildlifeanimalz.blogspot.com/2012/02/clown- fish-info-and-new-photos-images.html

32 Clown Fish

33 Watch This Video To See How Clownfish Live Within Their Habitat!

34 Now that you’ve seen different creatures in the ocean, you can draw your favorite one right here! Click on the pen below to start drawing!

35 World Map: The Oceans

36  The oceans cover 71% of the Earth's surface and contain 97% of the Earth's water. Less than 1% is fresh water, and 2-3% is contained in glaciers and ice caps.

37 Pacific Ocean  The Pacific Ocean is by far the LARGEST ocean in the world! It has an area of 60,060,700 square miles.  It's located between the Southern Ocean, Asia, Australia, and the Western Hemisphere.

38 Atlantic Ocean  The Atlantic Ocean is the world's second largest ocean. It has an area of about 29,637,900 square miles.  It is located between Africa, Europe, the Southern Ocean and the Western Hemisphere.  This Ocean has an effect on the world’s weather conditions and there are numerous hurricanes that develop in the coast of Cape Verde and move towards the Caribbean Sea.

39 Indian Ocean  The Indian ocean is the world's third largest ocean. It has an area of about 26,469,900 square miles.  It is located between Africa, the Southern Ocean, Asia and Australia.  This Ocean is known for its monsoonal weather conditions that dominate Southeast Asia.

40 Arctic Ocean  The Arctic Ocean is the world's smallest ocean. It has an area of 5,427,000 square miles.  It extends between Europe, Asia and North America and most of its waters are north of the Arctic Circle.  Throughout the year the Arctic Ocean is covered by a polar icepack that is around ten feed and three meters thick. Whenever the Earth’s climate changes the ice packs tend to melt.

41 Map Quiz: Can you click on the number that represents the Indian ocean? 1 2 3 4 1

42 Congratulations! You Got it Right! http://pearlsofprofundity.wordpress.com/2013/01/2 6/emulsification-andor-to-emulsify

43 Sorry! Nice Try! Try again! http://pwhatley.wordpress.com/2008/06/26/a nd-still-it-keeps-coming-vp-somebody-stop- me-before-i-order-again/sadface/

44 Now it’s time to reflect! ! What have you learned today? Be sure to go back through and take some notes!

45 Are You Ready? Quiz Time! TrueTrue or False False Clownfish live in Coral? TrueTrue or False False Male seahorses give birth to their babies. TrueTrue or False False The Atlantic Ocean is the world’s LARGEST ocean. TrueTrue or False False After a big meal, great white sharks can last up to two months without eating again. TrueTrue or False False The Indian ocean is located East of Africa.

46 Congratulations! You Got it Right! http://pearlsofprofundity.wordpress.com/2013/ 01/26/emulsification-andor-to-emulsify

47 Sorry! Nice Try! Try again! http://pwhatley.wordpress.com/2008/06/2 6/and-still-it-keeps-coming-vp-somebody- stop-me-before-i-order-again/sadface/

48 You Did It! Congratula tions! You’re an Oceaneer!!! http://www.dreamstime.com/stock-photography-blank- certificate-image962092

49 References "Geography of the World's Oceans." About.com Geography. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Oct. 2013. "Short Facts." Short Facts RSS. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2013. "Tsunami - How a Tsunami Happens." Tsunami - How a Tsunami Happens. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2013 "Ten Amazing Facts About Ocean Animals." All That Is Interesting. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "Did You Know...?" Little Known Facts About The Ocean. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "Loggerhead Sea Turtle." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "Underwater DVD Films Kingdom of the Clown Fish in the Philippines." YouTube. YouTube, 29 Aug. 2010. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. "Anemonefish." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. "Vacation Nightmare: Jellyfish." Vacation Nightmare: Jellyfish. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Nov. 2013. "Jellyfish." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Nov. 2013. "Great White Sharks." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "HORSE NATION." HORSE NATION RSS. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "Seahorses." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Nov. 2013. "Crazy Laughing Dolphin!" YouTube. YouTube, 14 Jan. 2012. Web. 14 Nov. 2013. "Bottlenose Dolphins." National Geographic. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Nov. 2013.


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