All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.

Articles and blog posts that examine general teaching topics and school activities.

26 08, 2014

Discover Special Dinosaur Workshops in Schools

By |2024-05-02T10:52:48+01:00August 26th, 2014|General Teaching|Comments Off on Discover Special Dinosaur Workshops in Schools

Official Launch of the Everything Dinosaur Schools Website

Today, marks the official launch of the Everything Dinosaur teaching and schools website.  The idea behind this new site is to provide support, help and resources to educationalists including those who teach at home.  The website will offer lots of articles, features and teaching tips.  In addition, free downloadable resources including lesson plans will be available.

Everything Dinosaur

The Official Launch of the Everything Dinosaur Teaching Website

Dinosaur themed workshops in schools.

Dinosaur workshops in schools, Everything Dinosaur offers dinosaur and fossil workshops in schools.  Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Support Teaching Teams

With the company’s dinosaur and fossil themed teaching activities including dinosaur workshops already very popular, this new site will provide further assistance to learning support providers.  A spokesperson for the teaching team at Everything Dinosaur stated:

“This new site represents a major investment for the company in terms of resources and staff time.  However, we feel it is an investment worth making if we can continue to help inspire, motivate and educate the next generation of scientists.”

To view Everything Dinosaur’s extensive range of prehistoric animal themed models and toys: Prehistoric Animal Models and Toys.

6 08, 2014

Back to School with Some Free Learning Support

By |2024-05-02T12:09:42+01:00August 6th, 2014|General Teaching, Key Stage 1/2|Comments Off on Back to School with Some Free Learning Support

Getting Ready for the Challenges of the New Autumn Term

There may be a few weeks left of the summer holiday, but many teachers and teaching assistants are already busy preparing for the start of the autumn term.  In many cases (English schools), there is the challenge of the new curriculum to look forward to, however, we at Everything Dinosaur are doing our best to help.

Back to School

Soon be Time to Go Back to School

Back to school with Everything Dinosaur.

Everything Dinosaur stocks an amazing range of dinosaur themed back to school items.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

We also appreciate that for those who choose to educate their children at home, the summer break is far from a break with teaching work continuing.  For our team members too, the last month or so has seen us working hard on a number of new lesson plans in support of the rocks and fossils element of the new curriculum in England for Year 3.  These lesson plans and teaching resources are available as free downloads, in addition our team members are happy to be contacted so that individual enquiries can be dealt with.

For dinosaur themed school resources such as school kits and stationery: Dinosaur Themed Back to School Items.

Everything Dinosaur Providing Learning Support

Learning support providers are in the process of writing and organising their teaching workloads for the coming school year.  There are some very exciting changes to the curriculum, for example, in England, in the science section, the emphasis is on a more rigorous teaching programme with a focus on “scientific working”.

Back to school themed dinosaur school resources available from Everything Dinosaur.

1 08, 2014

Dinosaurs and Fossils as Teaching Topics

By |2023-03-14T15:05:18+00:00August 1st, 2014|General Teaching|Comments Off on Dinosaurs and Fossils as Teaching Topics

Fossils and Dinosaurs Inspire the Next Generation of Young Scientists

Teachers, home educators and other learning support providers often find that a child’s fascination with fossils and dinosaurs can help them with their studies at school.  With the teaching profession now handling a more creative curriculum, many members of the teaching fraternity are using children’s love of all things dinosaur to help encourage them to participate in science based learning and to explore concepts such as observation, investigation and experimentation.

Dinosaur Themed Teaching activities

Everything Dinosaur team members have described this as “like using Triceratops as a Trojan Horse”.  Pupils can learn key scientific skills and explore concepts using a range of activities enabling plenty of differentiation in the classroom.  A new dinosaur species is named every thirty days or so and something in the region of 1,250 genera in the Dinosauria have already been described.  These ancient reptiles certainly have a high media profile and a child’s interest in fossils and dinosaurs can help teaching practitioners to develop inspiring lesson plans.

Triceratops as a “Trojan Horse”

Turning Triceratops into a Trojan Horse

Dinosaurs help school pupils. Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Providing Teaching Examples

Let’s look at some typical examples, with an emphasis on pupils studying the national curriculum at Key Stage 2 (England and Wales).  The difficult to comprehend concept of “deep time” can be illustrated using a simple timeline.  Children can plot on the timeline the dates when certain types of prehistoric animal lived.  This timeline idea can be developed to incorporate when dinosaurs lived relative to the people the children may have already studied such as the Ancient Egyptians and the Romans.

By plotting a to-scale time line showing the age of reptiles, students, under the supervision of the teaching team can construct a linear diagram that demonstrates when certain dinosaurs lived and relates this time to the time of Ancient Rome, the Greeks and such like.  With a time scale of approximately 1 centimetre representing 1 million years the children can place events in the correct order, an objective outlined within the national  curriculum teaching objectives and aims.  Pupils can gain an appreciation of which dinosaurs lived in which geological period and what other prehistoric animals were around at the same time.

Additional resources, many of which are available free from Everything Dinosaur,  can then be employed to help the children to learn more about individual animals such as Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops.  This leads onto further extension activities such as independent learning about that dinosaur, poster creation, creative writing, story telling and so forth.

A Handy Tip

My tip when making a timeline with school children is to use a scale of one million years equates to one centimetre and to plot the timeline over a period of 250 million years to the present day.  This gives teachers a timeline of some 2.5 metres in length, easily big enough to fit nicely on a classroom wall and it makes a great display.

Displaying the Work – Essential Reinforcement for Young Learners

Foundation Stage Dinosaur Display photographed by Everything Dinosaur.

The Foundation Stage “wonder wall” full of dinosaur facts and information (Carlton Primary School). Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Working with EYFS

Dinosaurs lend themselves to working with reception/foundation children.  When consulting on Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS),  it is important to help children understand the nature of materials and the world around them.  The EYFS framework has recently been revised with new teaching standards incorporated for early years providers.  This teaching framework helps to prepare reception/foundation children for school and ensures that children develop the key skills required to help them make good progress.

Many teachers are making “Dinosaurs” the first, major topic that the children encounter.  Dinosaur models and fossils can help them to explore the properties of different materials and even dinosaur toys can help them learn about different parts of the human body.  Basic selection and counting games can be encouraged such as selecting all the models of prehistoric creatures that have four legs,  count the number of red ones and so forth.  The children are effectively learning through creative play.

Plastic, Colourful Dinosaurs are Ideal for Sorting and Selecting Challenges

Triceratops head and a dinosaur model.

Egg-laying dinosaurs.  A Triceratops dinosaur head.  Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Introducing Mathematical and Scientific Concepts

For children at the upper Key Stage 2, cusp of Key Stage 3, a maths lesson can be made more challenging and fun by utilising a dinosaur track with dinosaur footprints.  The pupils can familiarise themselves with accurate measuring, use of scale and from this comparisons can be made with their own feet and hands.  Such simple, yet imaginative props can really enliven a maths lesson and help to get across important concepts and ideas.

At one school, a member of the Senior Leadership Team was asked to step in and conduct a hour long maths class with a group of  year 7 children (Key Stage 3 age 11-12 years).  He consulted one of Everything Dinosaur’s dinosaur experts and borrowed some footprint drawings and laid out a series of dinosaur tracks in the school hall.  The class was split into groups and the students challenged to use rulers and tape measures to  work out as much information about the prehistoric animal that left the tracks as possible.

Stimulating Lesson Plans

The lesson plan included a section on using scale drawings and calculating the average (the mean).  It was a very memorable and rewarding lesson that helped the students get to grips with simple scientific ideas such as plotting, mapping and using basic equations.

To read a recent blog post about Everything Dinosaur team members visiting a school: Everything Dinosaur Visits Anfield Primary School.

Helping to Inspire the Next Generation of Scientists

A teaching team can use children’s interest in prehistoric animals to help them learn about the world around them.  A dinosaur themed term topic or a series of activities as part of a science week permits teachers to develop imaginative and engaging lessons.  Importantly, it also means that such plans will permit plenty of differentiation and extension as well as dove-tailing into the different needs of pupils and learning styles.

To view the range of educational, prehistoric animal themed toys and games available from Everything Dinosaur including models of iconic fossil animals: Dinosaur Toys and Games and Models.

25 07, 2014

Were all the Dinosaurs Feathered? A Great Question!

By |2024-05-02T12:19:33+01:00July 25th, 2014|General Teaching, Key Stage 3/4|Comments Off on Were all the Dinosaurs Feathered? A Great Question!

Fossil Discovery in Siberia Challenges Palaeontologists

Scientists have announced the discovery of a new species of dinosaur in Siberia, a one-metre long Jurassic dinosaur that had feathers as well as scales.  The dinosaur has been named Kulindadromeus (K. zabaikalicus), the genus name is pronounced, Cul-lin-dah-dro-me us, the species or trivial name is pronounced zah-bay-cal-lik-us.  This little dinosaur, most probably a biped, has been named after the Kulinda valley in Siberia and the Greek word “dromeus”, which means runner.  The trivial (species) name honours the Zabaikal krai region of Siberia in which the Kulinda valley is located.

Kulindadromeus Dinosaur

An Illustration of the New Feathered Dinosaur

Kulindadromeus Illustrated

Feathered dinosaur down amongst the horsetails.

Picture credit: Andrey Atuchin

Feathered Dinosaurs

Feathered dinosaurs have been discovered before, but until now most of the feathered dinosaur discoveries related to a specific group of saurischian dinosaurs, (lizard-hipped), known as the theropods.  Kulindadromeus is relatively basal to a group of bird-hipped dinosaurs known as the ornithischians.  This discovery suggests that feathers in dinosaurs evolved relatively early in their history and that many different members of the Dinosauria were probably covered in feathers.

To read more about this fossil discovery: Did all the Dinosaurs have Feathers?

Extension Ideas and Activities

Key Stage 2

  • Look up articles on feathered dinosaurs, from which parts of the world have these fossil discoveries come from?
  • What evidence have scientists found in fossils to suggest that some dinosaurs were feathered?
  • What reasons can the class come up with for the evolution of feathers in dinosaurs?

Key Stage 3/4

  • Just two years after Darwin’s “Origin of Species” was published a virtually complete fossil of the “First Bird” Archaeopteryx was found in Germany.  How did this fossil discovery support Darwin’s theory of natural selection?
  • Look up pictures of Archaeopteryx and fossils of this Late Jurassic creature, what similarities to modern birds can be seen, what are the differences?
  • Why might this fossil be described as “transitional”?
  • Why are there few examples of transitional fossils preserved in the fossil record?  Can the theory of natural selection explain this?

For models of feathered dinosaurs, mostly theropod dinosaurs take a look at the huge selection of models and figures available at Everything Dinosaur: Everything Dinosaur Models and Figures.

24 06, 2014

Site in Denmark Awarded UNESCO World Heritage Status

By |2023-03-13T20:16:05+00:00June 24th, 2014|General Teaching, Key Stage 1/2, Key Stage 3/4|Comments Off on Site in Denmark Awarded UNESCO World Heritage Status

Stevns Klint K/T Boundary Site Awarded UNESCO World Heritage Status

The members of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee have awarded World Heritage status to the nine-mile-long cliffs at Stevns Klint (Danish island of Sjaelland).  These awards reflect the cultural or national heritage of such locations and do much to help preserve such sites.  The chalk and limestone cliffs at Stevns Klint record the K-T boundary, the time in Earth’s history when the dinosaurs and about seventy percent of all terrestrial life on Earth became extinct.

Stevns Klint Cliffs

This site has huge significance to palaeontologists and geologists, as the cliffs have preserved an exceptional fossil record showing a complete succession of fauna and micro-fauna that maps the Cretaceous extinction event and charts the recovery of life on our planet.

Tertiary aged limestone strata overlies much softer, older Cretaceous chalk deposits and clearly visible to the naked eye, is an ash layer which contains substantial amounts of the rare Earth element iridium.  The ash layer is believed to represent deposits from the Chicxulub impact event which took place in the vicinity of the Yucatan peninsula (Mexico) around sixty-six million years ago.

Titus the T. rex Skull and Jaws

The non-avian dinosaurs went extinct around 66 million years ago.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Congratulations to All Involved

We at Everything Dinosaur, congratulate all those people who have been involved in this award, the cliffs at Stevns Klint now join other world famous locations such as Dorset’s “Jurassic Coast” and the Great Barrier Reef of Australia as UNESCO World Heritage sites.

Visit Everything Dinosaur’s website to view dinosaur toys, models and prehistoric plush: Everything Dinosaur.

Extension Ideas

Key Stage 2

  • Explore ideas of how and why rock can be deposited in layers, more capable learners can explore what the terms igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rocks mean
  • What does the ash layer represent?  Why is this series of sedimentary rocks important in terms of helping to explain the extinction of the dinosaurs?

Key Stage 3

  • Look up information on the fossil assemblage that is present at this site, why is this sequence of fossils important?  What does it tell us about recovery after an extinction event?
  • Discuss with the class the links that such sites have with the theory of natural selection/evolution.  Changing climates and other impact events can lead to some organisms gaining an advantage.

Useful link that explores the Stevns Klint strata in more detail: Important Geological Site Awarded World Heritage Status.

17 04, 2014

Dinosaurs in Themed Teaching Activities

By |2023-03-12T09:04:08+00:00April 17th, 2014|General Teaching|Comments Off on Dinosaurs in Themed Teaching Activities

Dinosaurs  in Themed Teaching Activities (UK only)

Dinosaur workshops provided by trained teachers and palaeontologists.  Bring a dinosaur to school with a dinosaur workshop run by the experienced staff at Everything Dinosaur.  With tailored lesson plans, structured to meet the needs of students and national curriculum science objectives get dinosaurs into school to help inspire the next generation of young palaeontologists.

Dinosaur Themed Teaching Activities

Staffed by qualified teachers, and real dinosaur experts all with DBS/CRB clearance, Everything Dinosaur offers a range of dinosaur themed teaching activities, dinosaur workshops, dinosaurs in school and out- reach visits in support of science teaching in the United Kingdom.   Providing dinosaur themed teaching sessions from Foundation through to Key Stage 4 and beyond Everything Dinosaur’s dedicated teaching team supply prehistoric animal themed teaching materials and advice in support of national curriculum criteria and provide help for after-school clubs, home educators and teachers.

Note

With the global pandemic (COVID-19), Everything Dinosaur had to reluctantly withdraw its dinosaur themed school workshops and school visits.

However, Everything Dinosaur still continues to offer a huge range of dinosaur toys and prehistoric animal figures from its extremely popular website: Visit Everything Dinosaur’s Website.

7 03, 2014

Students at Springbrook School Study Amazing Dinosaurs

By |2024-05-02T09:43:53+01:00March 7th, 2014|General Teaching|Comments Off on Students at Springbrook School Study Amazing Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs Help with Writing and Phonics

Class 5 at Springbrook Primary School in Lancashire were visited by Everything Dinosaur as the children had been studying dinosaurs and fossils with their teacher Miss Foxcroft.  We looked at how big some dinosaurs were and examined the rib bones from a dinosaur and compared them to our own ribs.  Kyle, Abu and Ethan helped make a cast of a dinosaur fossil which could be put on display in the classroom along with all the other fact sheets, posters and examples of creative writing that the children had produced.

Dinosaurs Help Schoolchildren

Luke and Liam enjoyed learning all about Tyrannosaurus rex and the keen dinosaur fans had even made a model of this famous Late Cretaceous dinosaur.

T. rex at Springbrook Primary School

T. rex model.

Tyrannosaurus rex dinosaur model.

Picture credit: Springbrook Primary/Everything Dinosaur

A spokesperson for the school stated:

“Class 5 are learning all about dinosaurs this term and they are very excited by this.  The children are working hard to develop their reading skills and they are making great progress with their phonics.”

Dinosaur Posters Helping with Phonics

Dinosaur posters spotted in school.

Colourful dinosaurs lurking behind a tree.

Picture credit: Springbrook Primary/Everything Dinosaur

Everything Dinosaur

A spokesperson from Everything Dinosaur explained:

“Springbrook School is a Special School for pupils with social, emotional and behavioural needs.  It was a pleasure seeing how enthusiastically the children got involved with the dinosaur themed workshop.”

To view the range of educational, dinosaur themed toys and gifts including replicas of iconic fossil animals available from Everything Dinosaur: Dinosaur Gifts, Games and Toys.

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