We obtained another
Amaryllis bulb and cut the bulb in half to find out if the bulb
contained seeds. The following dialogue
stemmed from this experience:
“I wonder why the flowers
that grow in your house they have seeds and Amaryllises have bulbs?” G.B.
“Maybe to make smaller
plants you use seeds and to make taller plants you use bulbs.” E.H.
“That is a great
hypothesis! Is there any way we can find
out if E.H. is correct?” Mrs. Ralph
“The Amaryllis white
didn’t make a tall flower at all, it just made a tiny flower.” B.S.
“I think to make it grow
bigger is to give it more water everyday.” E.H.
“Veins hold water and then
it goes into the bulb and then it takes it all the way up to the top of the
flower and then at the top the flower blooms!” E.S.
“Also, I think the
instruction meant that if we put the Amaryllis in water they don’t grow that
tall, I think that that’s what the instructions meant that if you put an
Amaryllis in water it won’t grow that high because they didn’t get a lot of
energy in water like from the soil.” B.S.
“I think it’s skin, it has
little tiny bumps on it.” N.S.
“Why do you think they have bumps?” Mrs. Ralph
“Cause there’s little tiny
seeds inside the skin part.” N.S.
“I am wondering what makes
the seed grow?” A.P.
“I am wondering if inside
the seed, how does the seed make different kinds of flowers or fruits?” A.P.
“I think cause maybe the
roots maybe help make it grow.” E.E.
“Maybe when the bulb sucks
water up, the lines are the strainers so all the water would go through but
stuff like if there’s dirty stuff in the water the dirty stuff would get
stuck.” B.S.
“So like a purifier you
mean? Can you tell me which lines you’re
talking about? Mrs. Ralph
“The lines, like those
lines across. The water goes down the
lines and all the yucky parts stay right above the lines, it’s like a strainer.”
B.S.
“I think those skinny
lines make the plant help grow.” I.R.
“I think these are skin
and they have little bumps.” O.S.
“I think when you put the
dirt already the seeds go away.” W.E. (referring to the dirt that was in with
the Amaryllis bulb)
“Maybe the green part is
maybe the skin.” E.E.
“Can you show me which
green part you mean? You think it’s the
skin? And what do you think is does for
the bulb plant?” Mrs. Ralph
“Maybe it helps is grow.”
E.E.
“Maybe the little tiny
white things in the dirt there’s seeds, there’s little tiny ones.” M.P.
“Where do you think the
seeds are?” Mrs. Ralph
“In the dirt.” M.P.
“So does that mean that
the seeds would be in the bulb plant or appear outside the bulb plant?” Mrs.
Ralph
“Outside.” M.P.
“How do you think they got
there?” Mrs. Ralph
“Because when you took it
out you shaked it and some seeds fell out.” M.P.
“We can make people out of
bulb plants.” W.E.
“We can try that!” Mrs.
Ralph
In the days that followed,
students started to give us seeds from the fruits and vegetables in their
lunches, as well as bringing more seeds and pits from home, all in the hopes of
planting them to see what would happen.
Today, we had our planting
extravaganza! We planted seeds, pits,
and parts of the Amaryllis bulb we dissected to see if it too would grow!
I wonder what we’ll see in
the next little while…
Join us on our current
inquiry as we continue to explore what seeds are? Where do seeds come from? Is a bulb a seed? What about a pit? How do plants grow?
I LOVE this! I could really use a touch of spring in my room right now! This is something so real that they can explore and I never would have thought to do this in February until I read this post! What a great exploration! I may have to put some bulbs out for them to notice! Thank you for the inspiration!
ReplyDeleteThank you Darla. We started out planting Amaryllis and Hyacinth bulbs, and just left them out for them to observe. Their fascination with bulbs just took off!
ReplyDelete