by Evelyn Porreca Vuko
In this lesson, students use their visualizing and interpreting skills to produce original writings and artwork. In Part One, they listen to an adaptation of William Clark's description of the sage grouse. As you read aloud, they form mental images that they translate into drawings of the bird.
In Part Two, Meriwether Lewis's observations of the black woodpecker, now called Lewis's woodpecker, might serve as inspiration for the students' descriptions of animals. Ideally, each student could choose an animal to write about on a field trip to a zoo or a museum of natural history. If this is not possible, pets or even pictures of animals will do. Students might even describe animals they have created out their own imaginations.
This bird is nearly the size of a turkey. The beak is thick and short. The top of the beak is bigger than the bottom. The nostrils are large. This bird is covered with feathers that are mostly dark brown with shades of red and yellow mixed in. The feathers are also speckled with black. Its wings are only dark brown. The tail is long and comes to a very sharp point. The legs of the bird are covered with feathers down to about half the distance between the knee and the foot. It has four pointed toes on each foot. The back toe is the shortest of all.
I do not think I exaggerate when I estimate the number of Buffaloe which could be compre[hend]ed at one view to amount to 3000. --MERIWETHER LEWIS |