Students learn rocky lesson
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Andrew Edwards
Peering through magnifiers and sharing observations, fourth-graders
at Huntington Seacliff Elementary School took a closer look at the
world of rocks and minerals on Jan. 22.
Splitting off into pairs, children in Kristen Burda’s class
examined a set of 12 rocks, including glassy black obsidian, red
sandstone and bright white marble. Without being told the names of
the various rocks, Burda’s students took notes on each sample’s
color, appearance, texture and hardness.
Samples included “rocks that we never see,” 9-year-old Jeffrey
Kang said.
The lesson was part of a lengthy six- to eight-week lesson that
requires the class to think like scientists as they try to figure out
how to classify and identify different kinds of rocks.
The unit is designed to teach students “inquiry thinking, where
they discover on their own,” Burda said.
As the class learns more and more about rocks, the discoveries
will be placed on a large bulletin board with a picture of a volcano
rising from the Earth’s crust.
The students, equipped with rulers and magnifiers, quickly set to
work as soon as they had a set of rocks to investigate. For some in
the class, taking a good look at rocks to find out what makes each
kind different was a new experience.
“I’ve never really looked at rocks this closely,” 9-year-old
Catherine Wippler said.
In some of the samples, students observed small details, like
glittering flecks of mica or fossilized sea shells that most might
not notice without taking a careful look.
“Some of them had little crystals and some looked like they had
fossils,” 9-year-old Meera Midha said.
In the limestone samples, children found tiny shells that many
years ago belonged to small sea creatures. Rocks like these, the
class learned, are called “fossiliferous” by scientists.
The class also took notes on how each rock felt compared to
others. A piece of gneiss is “rough and sandy,” 9-year-old Luke
Lindsay said.
“You can, like, rub it off,” Luke said.
Before putting away their rocks and science tools to take a math
test, students were able to differentiate between rocks.
“I found out that there’s lots of colors in rocks and none of them
are like each other,” 9-year-old Griffin Camps said.
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