Children distinguish endangered and extinct species, investigate why populations decline, and consider the effects of species loss on ecosystems. Animal games, art, role play, discussion, reuse projects, and a clean-up drive connect conservation concepts with actions children can take.
What children learn
- Distinguish species with abundant populations from endangered and extinct species.
- Identify habitat loss, climate change, poaching, and hunting as causes of endangerment.
- Understand that each species contributes to its ecosystem and that extinction can disrupt food chains.
- Identify conservation actions including habitat protection, waste reduction, recycling, saving energy, and planting trees.
- Recognise that individual actions such as keeping shared spaces clean can support conservation.
Key activities
- Exploring Endangered Species through animal pictures, videos, and a blindfolded identification game
- Making a fork-print panda artwork
- Matching endangered animals to causes and enacting a hunting dramatic-play scenario
- Discussing ecosystem effects and designing patterned rhino artwork
- Reusing rolled newspaper to create a collaborative polar-bear collage
- Completing a school-ground Clean-up Drive with gloves, brooms, and collection bags
You’ll need
animal pictures and videos, animal figurines or puppets, blindfold, paper and chart paper, crayons and markers, paint, scissors and glue, animal costumes and props, newspapers, brooms, gloves and large bags
Structure: 5 days; each day: Thought of the Day, Tuning-in Time, Warm-up, Social Studies/Science, Creative Learning, English, Maths