BRING BACK
Book Logo Science icon.

Science

Materials:

Purple flower

Several pieces of paper, a crayon or piece of drawing charcoal, tape

Your Child Will Learn

How to observe and compare trees

tree-texture-collage

Tree Texture Collage

Here's What To Do

1

Head to an area with several trees (ideally different types of trees). Bring a few pieces of paper, tape, and something to make a rubbing (a crayon, piece of chalk, or piece of drawing charcoal).

2

Stop at the trunk of a tree. Feel the texture of the tree trunk. Hold the piece of paper on the tree bark, and encourage your child to make a rubbing of the texture. (If using a crayon, peel the paper wrapper off and use the side of the crayon instead of the tip.)

3

Collect any parts of the tree that have fallen (leaves, acorns, seeds, pinecones, twigs, flowers, etc.) and tape them to the paper. If you know what kind of tree it is, write the name of the tree on the paper.

4

Repeat with other nearby trees. Compare the different tree collages you've made.

Mother and child play together (animated).

Put PEER Into Action

P

Pause:

  • Close your eyes and listen to the sounds around you. Can you hear trees making noise? Birds or other animals?
E

Engage:

  • "We're going to make some tree collages! First, we're going to make a special kind of drawing to help us notice the texture of tree bark. Then we'll add some leaves and acorns to our collage."
  • "Do you see anything that looks the same between these 3 tree collages? Do you see anything that looks different?"
E

Encourage:

  • Encourage your child to touch the tree bark and describe if it's smooth or rough. Ask them to notice if the bark made a smooth rubbing or uneven rubbing on the paper.
  • Offer a comparison yourself and see if that encourages your child to make one of their own. Like: "I'm noticing that these two trees have leaves with smooth edges."
R

Reflect:

  • "You were such a great scientist making observations today! What nature would you like to observe next time?"

Not quite ready?

If your child has a difficult time making comparisons themselves, describe all the differences you see between the trees.

Ready for more?

Encourage your child to sort the tree texture collages by similarities. Can your child begin to group trees by deciduous/evergreen trees, or other categories?

Variable color muffin tins (animated)

As your child masters this skill...

They will build observation skills and the vocabulary to describe similarities and differences

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
How do you feel about this activity?
How much do you think your child enjoyed this activity?
How clear were the activity instructions?
Did you use the provided wording prompts to complete the activity?
Would you recommend this activity to another family?
If you are reading this activity in a language other than English, how would you rate the quality of the translation?