“Monster Veggies” by J.R. Poulter

Leave a comment

 

Veggie Monster – teacher notes –

Activity – Class debate on “Advertising and Prime Time TV, Their Role in Demonising Vegetables” 

Activity – Make up an advertising campaign to popularise vegetables. Research TV advertisements and  prime time TV shows to see what sort of food is promoted and how. I can think of one popular TV soapie, which has its cast eating pizza and drinking beer in most episodes. What does this say to young viewers. 

Note what sort of advertisements come on between 4.00pm and 8.00pm, the time many children, families and young folk would be watching TV. How might you use your campaign to change this?

Activity – Make up recipes with vegetables as the main ingredients – they must be delicious enough that YOU would want to eat them! If there are any vegetarians in the class, ask them to be a consultative panel and to judge the result of the class cooking attempts to make veggies into taste tempting foods! 

Activity: Australians have ‘adopted’ vegetables from all over the world.

Create a world map and  paste labels bearing the names of common vegetables used in Australia on their countries of origin.

 Activity: Are there vegetables that are native to Australia? Study the  foods grown and gathered by various Aboriginal groups. If possible, invite a local indigenous leader to discuss with the class the native foods they used and how they prepared them.

“ThePicture” by J.R. Poulter

Leave a comment

“Musical Mayhem” by J.R. Poulter

Leave a comment

 

 

“Quayside, Winter,” by J. R. Poulter

Leave a comment

 

TEACHER NOTES

Winter in Australia is very variable.

Activity: Watch the weather report for mid winter and compare the weather report that night for Darwin and for Hobart.  

List five reasons for the big difference in temperatures.

 

Activity: How do you know winter has arrived?

List five things that tell you the season has changed.

 

Activity: What images in the poem suggest to you that the scene depicted in the poem is set in winter?

 

“Fussy Rainbow-Eaters” by Celia Berrell

Leave a comment

Fussy Rainbow-Eaters

 

Leaves choose mostly orange-red

then bands of blue

to violet.

 

Using light to make a meal

of carbohydrate’s

sweet appeal

 

their chloroplasts feed on the Sun.

But only parts of

light’s spectrum.

 

Leaves don’t use all sunshine’s beams.

It seems they rarely

eat their greens!

 

Celia Berrell

First published in Double Helix(October 2015)
Reproduced with permission of CSIRO
www.doublehelix.csiro.au

 

 

 

 

Our Class’s Hamster Horatio by Katherine Gallagher

Leave a comment

Sometimes it’s my turn

to take him to our house

for the weekend. We celebrate.

I give him the nicest titbits

And he spins and spins on his wheel.

 

When I take him out of his cage,

he wanders about my room.

He’s extremely curious

and sniffs at everything in his path.

But I watch him constantly

in case he zooms away.

 

Katherine Gallagher
(Published in A First Poetry Book, Macmillan Children’s Books, 2012, ed Gaby Morgan and Pie Corbett)

 

  

 

“Monkeys” by Jan Darling with Teacher Notes

Leave a comment

CURIOUS COLLECTIVES    NO. 12

 

 

  1. MONKEYS

 

 

I kept reading and counting and reading some more

Till I reached two hundred and sixty four

That’s the number of species in the world of the Monkey

That’s a BIG number – that’s really funky.

 

To complicate things a little bit more

(at this point my eyes began to get sore)

They’re divided again by where they are found

In the East or the West, up trees, on the ground.

 

Turns out it’s easier to go by the times

When we’re talking of Monkeys from different climes

The Old World Monkey has a different nose

And his tail’s less supportive when he’s on his toes.

 

They all live in Africa and all over Asia

Seventy eight species – enough to amaze ya.

The Old World Monkey has a narrower nose

And his tail’s less useful when dealing with foes.

 

But the New World Monkey’s *prehensile of tail

Adding grip, swing and style – through the trees he can sail;

His side-facing nostrils and a nose which is flatter

Let him breathe easy while sharing his chatter.

 

Where is his homeland – this Monkey-come-lately?

Is it Norway or Russia or somewhere less stately?

He hails from America, the land in the South

Where he lives his life happy, not just hand to mouth.

 

************************************

 

Who’s the tiniest Monkey on all of the Earth?

In West Amazon basin his mother gives birth

The Pygmy Marmoset looks neat on your hand

(Being kept as a pet is not everywhere banned).

 

He’s around 6 inches, that’s reeeaally small

And six ounces he weighs – head to toe that is all.

He’s covered with fur – gray, tawny or gold

He can live to fifteen – now that’s pretty old.

 

His tail beats his body – it’s LONGER than that

It’s strong and it’s muscly, with no useless fat.

He can leap in the air to fifteen feet

Fifteen feet! He’s six inches?  That’s really neat.

 

They talk to each other with chatter and trilling

In pitches so high your eardrum’s not willing

To listen to sound so hurtful to ears.

Listening too long can bring you to tears.

 

In families they live together for life

Facing each problem, solving their strife

The Troop (as they’re called) can number round nine

At night: they will rest; daily: hunt, hide and dine.

 

They eat leaves, bugs and plants and love to sip sap

They waste nothing when eating, not even a scrap.

Their heads they can swing from east right to west

One eighty degrees – with broad view they are blest.

 

From danger they hide, jumping branch over tree

Dashing and leaping to keep themselves free,

Forest plants offer cover, and their colour does blend

Into the background, the foliage their friend.

 

*************************************

 

So, friends of the Monkey…  what do youthink?

You’d like a Monkey who’s special – what about pink?

Take a look at the Mandrill, he’s clearly no frump

Blue and red on the face and a brightly hued rump.

 

The Mandrill’s from Old World and lives where it rains

In equatorial forests, not open plains;

There’s no Monkey as colourful in jungle or Zoo

As the world’s biggest Monkey – the Mandrill, that’s who!

 

His face is clean shaven, the better to show

His features in colours that brilliantly glow

He eats roots, fruits and insects, small animals, too

And the Mandrill most colourful is first in the queue.

 

They live all together in hundreds called Hordes

They’re generally happy, not crossing swords,

They groom each other as most **primates do

Whether living in the wild or at home in the Zoo.

 

How big does this biggest of all Monkeys grow?

Sixty kilo’s the biggest on record, we know.

The female grows half of the size of the male

He’s always more colourful, she tends toward pale.

 

********************************************

 

We’ve Monkeys from Old World and New World – that’s swell

We’ve done smallest and biggest and brightest as well

But there’s still something more of interest to know

About how people describe Monkey groups when on show.

 

In general you’ll hear more Collectives in use –

Remembering’s easy, their meanings are loose.

You’ll find Monkeys in Barrels, in Tribes and in Troops

In Missions and Cartloads – all terms for their Groups.

 

And most fun of all is to watch them at play

They’re very like us when they join in the fray

The Infants are cared for by all of the Troop

Aunts, uncles and cousins are kept in the loop.

 

 

 

Jan Darling

 

 

*prehensile: means capable of grasping.  Monkeys use their prehensile tails for balancing when on the ground and for grasping when tree-swinging.

 

**primates are an order of mammals which is distinguished by having hands and hand-like feet and forward-facing eyes.  They are often agile tree-dwellers.  Monkeys, apes, marmosets, lemurs, bushbabies and humans (not so agile when swinging through trees) all share these features

Teaching notes

 

Compare Imperial measures used in this verse to Metric.

6 inches =  15.2cms

6 ounces =170g

15 feet  = 4.57m

60 kilograms = 132lbs

The writer mixed Imperial with metric to simplify the verse.

 

How many species of Monkey are there?

 

How are the two groups of Monkeys generally defined?

 

On which continents do these groups live?

 

Which is the biggest Monkey in the world?

Is he Old World or New World?

 

Which is the smallest Monkey in the world?

Is he Old World or New World?

 

Which is the most colourful Monkey in the world?

 

Information not included in the verse:

The brilliant blue of the face and rump of the Mandrill is not due to pigmentation but results from the scattering of light by the array of collagen fibres in the dermis.  The exact shade is determined by the size and spacing of these fibres in different areas of the skin.

A similar condition causes polar bear fur to look white.  Polar fur actually has no pigmentation, its fibres are hollow and made of keratin with light scattering particles which create the white effect.  The polar bear’s skin is actually black!

 

How many terms for groups of Monkeys can you name?

 

Go to YouTube for spectacular pictures of Mandrills and Pygmy Marmosets.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • There are currently 264 known monkey
  • Monkeyscan be divided into two groups, Old World monkeysthat live in Africa and Asia, and New World monkeys that live in South America.
  • A baboon is an example of an Old World monkey, while a marmoset is an example of a New World monkey.
  • Apes are not monkeys.

 

  • Some monkeys live on the ground, while others live in trees.
  • Different monkey species eat a variety of foods, such as fruit, insects, flowers, leaves and reptiles.
  • Most monkeys have tails.
  • Groups of monkeys are known as a ‘tribe’, ‘troop’ or ‘mission’.
  • The Pygmy Marmoset is the smallest type of monkey, with adults weighing between 120 and 140 grams.
  • The Mandrill is the largest type of monkey, with adult males weighing up to 35 kg.
  • Capuchin monkeys are believed to be one of the smartest New World monkey species. They have the ability to use tools, learn new skills and show various signs of self-awareness.
  • Spider monkeys get their name because of their long arms, legs and tail.
  • The monkey is the 9th animal that appears on the Chinese zodiac, appearing as the zodiac sign in 2016.
  • The noses of New World monkeysare flatter than the narrow noses of the Old World monkeys, and have side-facing nostrils. New World monkeys are the onlymonkeys with prehensile tails—in comparison with the shorter, non-grasping tails of the anthropoids of the Old World.

NW have 12 premolars instead of 8.

Mostly arboreal, NW more likely to form pair bonds

 

“Europa’s” Secrets by Celia Berrell

Leave a comment

Europa’s Secrets by Celia Berrell

 

There’s hope Europa has a sea

where living things could really be

because this moon of Jupiter

has lots of solid ice water.

 

The pictures of Europa show

a crusty surface white as snow

with many lines and ridges mixed

like ice sheets that have cracked and fixed.

 

As Jupiter’s great gravity

distorts Europa’s cavity

that energy and friction heats

and melts some water underneath.

 

We think this frozen water layer

could make a sea that’s hiding there.

So just below that crusty shell

it’s possible some microbes dwell.

 

Or what if it turns out to hold

some animals both weird and bold

that roam Europa’s chilly sea.

True aliens to you and me!

 

First published in Scientriffic (March 2011)

Reproduced with permission of CSIRO

www.doublehelix.csiro.au 

Discovering life exists in places beyond Earth – like Jupiter’s icy moon Europa – could be a reality in our lifetime.  Thinking about it makes my imagination run wild!  What will these creatures be like?

Teacher Notes by Jeanie Axton

Heres an interesting article from the NASA website

https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/moons/jupiter-moons/europa/in-depth/

As far as poetry goes this topic stimulates the creative imagination of us all. Ask students to brain storm possibilities and then come up with a list of describing words that could be used to match their ideas. An acrostic could be an easy form of poetry to start with on this topic and then move on to other ways of presenting ideas in poetry. Have Fun.

“Once Upon a Time” by J.R. Poulter

Leave a comment

Once Upon a Time    by J.R.Poulter

Once upon a long ago

In the distant mists of time

There was a prince who had to make

A poesy all in rhyme.

 

He had to weave a wondrous tale

For his intended bride,

That swept the legends of the land

The myths from far and wide

 

Into one vast saga,

A tome to end all tomes!

He set out to collect the tales,

It took him far from home.

 

The prince crossed many deserts,

He climbed  too many hills,

He walked through sun and snow and sleet.

He suffered many ills!

 

At last, he had his great big book!

At last, he’d wed his bride!

But as he neared the castle,

He heard a mournful sigh…

 

What stood there was a ruin,

Wind moaned through empty halls.

Of all the pomp and pageantry,

Nothing was left at all…

 

Amidst a drape of spider webs

Within the central court,

He found a tomb whose statuary

Had been most marvelous wrought.

 

There was his bride, robed as a queen,

Her king was by her side.

A scroll lay open on her lap

Of fictions, fables, lies…

 

The prince stood still, 

As turned to stone.

The ancient beams

Above him groaned.

 

A crack, a scream,

He was no more.

The Tome of Tales 

Lay on the floor.

 

The wind tore at the pages,

Tossing them far away.

All that was left, the marble tomb

And what it had to say,

 

JR Poulter

“Winter Wind” by J.R. Poulter

Leave a comment