Students use research, reading, writing, design, and collaboration to create a Canva science storybook that teaches a 5th grade science idea to younger readers in a clear, accurate, and useful way. The work centers on the questions, “How can we use what we learn about a science topic to teach others to care for their world?” and “How can we explain a science idea clearly enough for younger readers to understand it and use it in the real world?” Through studying mentor texts, testing ideas with peers and younger students, revising with a simple rubric, and sharing at a read-aloud event, students practice using evidence, visuals, and kid-friendly language to communicate science meaningfully. The experience builds content knowledge, communication, problem solving, collaboration, and reflection through a real product made for an authentic audience.
Learning goals
Students will read reliable science texts and sample picture books to identify main ideas, key vocabulary, evidence, and the text features that help younger readers understand complex ideas. They will explain a 5th grade science topic in accurate, kid-friendly language by creating a Canva storybook with clear page sequencing, strong visuals, and at least one real-world example or design solution. Students will revise their writing and illustrations using peer, teacher, self-check, and younger-reader feedback to improve scientific accuracy, clarity, and audience engagement. They will also strengthen collaboration, reflection, and presentation skills by sharing decisions, setting goals from rubric check-ins, and presenting their finished books at a read-aloud event.
Standards
[Next Generation Science Standards] 3-5.AF.8.1 - Read and comprehend grade-appropriate complex texts and/or other reliable media to summarize and obtain scientific and technical ideas and describe how they are supported by evidence.
[Next Generation Science Standards] 3-5.AF.8.5 - Communicate scientific and/or technical information orally and/or in written formats, including various forms of media as well as tables, diagrams, and charts.
[Next Generation Science Standards] 3-5.AF.8.4 - Obtain and combine information from books and/or other reliable media to explain phenomena or solutions to a design problem.
Competencies
Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.
Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
Critical Thinking & Problem Solving - Students consider a variety of innovative approaches to address and understand complex questions that are authentic and important to their communities.
Collaboration - Students co-design projects with peers, exercise shared-decision making, strengthen relational agency, resolve conflict, and assume leadership roles.
Self Directed Learning - Students use teacher and peer feedback and self-reflection to monitor and direct their own learning while building self knowledge both in and out of the classroom.
Products
Students will create a class anchor chart from the launch that names features of strong science picture books, then develop planning notes that identify each page’s main idea, key vocabulary, evidence, and real-world example. During the project, they will produce Canva draft pages, peer feedback notes, and a mid-project self-check rubric with one revision goal focused on science accuracy, clarity, or teamwork. The final product will be a digital interactive science storybook in Canva with simple page-by-page explanations, clear visuals, and a closing author’s note that explains the science idea, cites evidence from reliable sources, and describes revisions made from peer or younger-reader feedback. Students will also prepare their book for the Young Authors Read-Aloud Cafe by creating a brief read-aloud plan for presenting and answering audience questions.
Launch
Open with a “Book Bistro Brainstorm” where students rotate through tables of children’s science books and sample Canva pages, noticing which pages explain ideas clearly, use strong visuals, and include evidence. Have teams sort pages into categories such as “easy to understand,” “needs stronger science,” and “great pictures but unclear meaning,” then build a shared class anchor chart of what makes a science story work for younger readers. Close by introducing the guiding questions about teaching others to care for their world and explaining science clearly for young readers, then invite students to choose a science topic they may want to turn into a digital storybook.
Exhibition
Host a Young Authors Read-Aloud Cafe where students share their Canva science storybooks with invited younger students, families, and staff in a cozy reading space. Each student reads selected pages aloud, explains the science idea in kid-friendly language, and points to the evidence included in the final author’s note. Younger readers can leave simple feedback about what they learned and which pages were easiest to understand. End with a gallery walk so guests can view all books and students can reflect on one academic skill and one socio-emotional skill they strengthened.