Kindergarten Grade  Project 4 weeks

Butterfly Life Cycle Adventure

Christopher B
Updated
Content Expertise
Critical Thinking & Problem Solving
Effective Communication
Self Directed Learning
1-pager

Purpose

Children investigate how butterflies change and what they need to grow and stay alive by observing outdoor habitats, meeting a park naturalist, and noticing food, water, and shelter in their community. Over four weeks, they build understanding through hands-on observation, partner talk, life cycle movement, picture sorting, and weekly butterfly journals that capture learning and teamwork. Their work leads to individual butterfly home dioramas that they revise with peer feedback and share with families at an outdoor celebration. This project helps kindergarteners practice science thinking, communication, and reflection through meaningful work connected to the living world around them.

Learning goals

Students observe and describe the butterfly life cycle by acting out egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, and butterfly stages and connecting each stage to what butterflies need to grow and stay alive. They identify habitat needs by sorting and explaining examples of food, water, and shelter found during outdoor observations and a walk with a park naturalist. Students build and revise a butterfly home diorama that includes living things and natural features butterflies need, using partner feedback to improve their model. They communicate learning through drawings, dictation, discussion, and family sharing, while reflecting each week on what they learned and how they worked with classmates.

Competencies
  • Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.
  • 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.
  • Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
  • 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 butterfly picture journals with drawings and dictated observations from weekly habitat walks, partner talks, and Friday reflections. Throughout the project, they will build and revise individual butterfly home dioramas from craft materials that include food, water, and shelter, using peer feedback to improve each model. They will also prepare simple life cycle acting pieces and picture card sorts to show what butterflies need to grow and stay alive. By the end, students will share their finished habitat displays, journal pages, and oral explanations at an outdoor “Garden of Growing Butterflies” celebration with families.

Launch

Begin with a Wing Watch Picnic at an outdoor sit spot where children quietly observe butterflies or pictures/videos of local butterflies, then turn and tell a partner what they notice about where the butterflies go. Invite a park naturalist to guide a short habitat walk to point out flowers, leaves, puddles, and shady spaces, helping students notice food, water, and shelter in a real setting. Back in class, gather students to act out fluttering, landing, drinking, and resting as they wonder together, “What do butterflies need to grow and stay alive?” End by introducing the challenge: each child will build a butterfly home diorama to share at the Garden of Growing Butterflies celebration.

Exhibition

Host a “Garden of Growing Butterflies” outdoor celebration where children display their butterfly home dioramas and explain how each habitat includes food, water, and shelter. Students can also share butterfly picture journals, show life cycle actions, and talk families through sorted picture cards to explain what butterflies need to grow and stay alive. Invite the park naturalist and families to visit each display, ask questions, and notice how children revised their models over time. Create a simple walking path with signs, student drawings, and labeled plants or flowers so the exhibit connects classroom learning to real butterfly habitats.