Suncoast Credit Union

To engage students in learning about food chains and food webs by letting them dissect owl pellets.

< Back to Search Grants

 

That Owl Ate What???

grant photo
School:
Golden Terrace Elementary 
Subject:
Science 
Teacher:
Mattea Marks 
Students Impacted:
175 
Grade:
Date:
August 14, 2017

Investor

Thank you to the following investor for funding this grant.

 

Perna-Rose Foundation fo Hope - $151.00

Share

Please share this page to help in fulfilling this grant.

Facebook Twitter email

Impact to My Classroom

# of Students Impacted: 150

Every 4th grade student was able to participate in this amazing activity. They got to dissect the owl pellets in groups of 3 and learn about food chains through learning what an owl eats. They were able to use their detective skills to try and figure out what kind of animals the skulls that they found came from. This was a very successful lesson for all the students and we hope to be able to do it again next year! 

grant photo

grant photo

 

grant photo

grant photo

 

grant photo

grant photo

 

Original Grant Overview

Goal

To engage students in learning about food chains and food webs by letting them dissect owl pellets. 

 

What will be done with my students

Students will do a three day unit on food chains and food webs to culminate by dissecting "mystery pellets." After students learn about food chains in the classroom, they will get to dissect the owl pellet with their lab group. Then they use a bone identification chart to identify what their owl ate. This unit will also incorporate math when the students graph how many of each prey animal they find and literacy with two books about owls that students will read and discuss.  

 

Benefits to my students

This activity covers two of the 4th grade science benchmarks: 1. Explain that animals, including humans, cannot make their own food and that when animals eat plants or other animals, the energy stored in the food source is passed to them. 2. Trace the flow of energy from the Sun as it is transferred along the food chain through the producers to the consumers.

Students get the hands-on experience of dissecting the owl pellets and seeing what the owl ate instead of just reading about it. This is how science really comes to life for them! 

 

Budget Narrative

60 owl pellets which would be enough for about 1 per group of 3 students.  

 

Items

# Item Cost
1 Large Owl Pellets $135.00
2 Shipping $16.00
  Total: $151.00

Share

Please share this page to help in fulfilling this grant.

Facebook Twitter email

 

Special Thanks to Our Presenting Partners

Suncoast Credit Union