Overview: Natural history, habitat, threats, and conservation |
Lessons 1 - 3: Panther Scavenger Hunt |
Students learn their way around the web site and learn some interesting facts about the Florida panther's natural history, habitat, threats, and conservation. Along the way they get exposed to some neat features of Florida Panther Net. Available in three versions: upper elementary, middle, and high. Select the appropriate link to download lesson plan: |
Lesson 4: Become an Expert |
Students choose a topic or an animal from one of the handbook indexes and prepare presentations on their discoveries, using an overhead computer projector or standing up at their desks. Download Lesson 4   
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Lesson 5: Movie Reviewer |
Students view a wide assortment of natural video/audio information independently or as a class, then summarize what they learned in one or two paragraphs. Ranges from a song by Dale Crider to the caterwauling of a panther to video of wildlife crossings. Download Lesson 5   
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Lesson 6: Panther Trivia Pursuit |
Students create their own Panther Trivia Pursuit game by collecting interesting facts about panthers and the plants and animals that share their habitat. Students write facts and corresponding questions on index cards and create a game by putting the whole class's cards together. Could include developing a board game. Download Lesson 6  
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Lesson 7: How to Catch a Cat Guide |
Students choose a topic or an animal from one of the handbook indexes and prepare presentations on their discoveries, using an overhead computer projector or standing up at their desks. Download Lesson 7
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| Animal Characteristics and Behavior |
Lesson 8: Animal Games |
Students choose from the on-line activities Who Am I?, Coloring Book, Scramble Puzzles, or the off-line activities Animal Sign Concentration or Who Am I? to learn about the animals sharing the Florida panther's habitat. Download Lesson 8  
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Lesson 9: Model a Print |
Students make a model of panther track or track of another animal that shares the panther's habitat. Download Lesson 9  
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Lesson 10: Kitty Tunes |
Students listen to the cat calls, then write a rap or a song that contains the hiss, purr and/or caterwauling of a Florida panther. Could recognize or award prizes for most original story, best presentations, most realistic imitation of calls, etc. Download Lesson 10  
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Lesson 11: How do you know a panther was here? |
Students research all of the signs panthers leave and make a poster that includes some three-dimensional objects and describes details of scat, scratches, scrapes, and tracks. Download Lesson 11
 
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Lesson 12: Solve the case! |
Students learn about panther habits and the habits of other species that share the habitat of the Florida panther, as they solve the cases to earn their "Panther Detective" certificates. The off-line board game may be printed out by the instructor and used instead. Download Lesson 12   
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Lesson 13: Animal Masks |
Students learn what foods the panther prefers and make face masks depicting one or more of the animals on paper plates or with paper mache. They can use these masks to play Oh Panther!. Download Lesson 13  
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Lesson 14: What makes a cat a cat? |
Students videotape a cat and dog to explore the similarities and differences between these different mammals and their behaviors. Could also be used for comparison between a cat and a wide range of other animals, such as a goldfish, gerbil, lizard, etc. Download Lesson 14   
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Lesson 15: A Cat's Life |
Students make a timeline of a panther's life, starting with birth and including the major milestones until death (opening eyes, nursing, leaving mother, mating, having young, etc.). Timeline may be written and decorated with artwork, or oral, with each stage explained by separate students as they go down the line. Download Lesson 15  
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| Habitat and Ecosystem Balance |
| Lesson 16: Habitat Art |
Students apply their creative skills to create a representation of one or more natural community types used by the Florida panther. They may choose to draw, paint, assemble a collage, decorate a shoe box, or create some other visual model, depending on available art supplies. Download Lesson 16  
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| Lesson 17: Home on the Range |
Students use a scaled map to show ranges for the number and type of Florida panthers that they determine a 5-county area in their part of the state would support, if space were the only consideration. Download Lesson 17  
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| Lesson 18: Whose Range is it? |
Students examine the actual ranges of radio-collared panthers and discuss how and why the ranges of males and females differ. Download Lesson 18  
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| Lesson 19: Oh Panther! |
Get ready to run! Students use masks of panthers, deer, hogs, and raccoons to play a game about the balance of prey and predators in an ecosystem. Adapted from Project Wild's Oh Deer!. Download Lesson 19  
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| Lesson 20: Graph a Panther's Diet |
Students convert a pie chart of what the panther eats to a bar graph. Download Lesson 20  
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| Lesson 21: Panther Food Web |
Students construct a food web for the panther, using words, drawings or print out photos and data gathered on the panther. Download Lesson 21  
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| Lesson 22: Panther Tales |
Students write a short story, poem, or local news report based upon a fictional account of their finding panther sign or meeting a panther in the wild. How would they feel? What would they do? What would the panther do? Download Lesson 22   
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Panther Management and Related Issues
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| Lesson 23: Can you find a solution? |
This interdisciplinary activity is designed as a mediation rather than a debate. Unlike debates, which have winners and losers, the goal of mediation is win-win, with all sides being satisfied with the outcome. This activity helps students to understand the complexity of endangered species issues and to develop higher level thinking skills (analysis, synthesis, and evaluation) required for the FCAT. Download Lesson 23  
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| Lesson 24: My View's Write! |
Students research some of the controversial issues pertaining to panthers and panther wildlife management, plus background information from the handbook. Students decide what they think about one of these issues, then write a persuasive letter. Download Lesson 24  
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| Lesson 25: Act I: Panther Exam |
First students watch the computer slide show of how biologists track a panther to complete a medical exam. Then they divide into groups to either act out their own versions of panther capture and vet exams. Students may expand the story to allow all students to play a part. Could expand to a full-costumed production, be videotaped, etc. Download Lesson 25  
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