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Greenhouse for Seeds "Sprout" House | Germination Journal

Rated 4.83 out of 5, based on 131 reviews
4.8 (131 ratings)
;
Grade Levels
PreK - 2nd, Homeschool
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
3 pages
$2.50
$2.50
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What educators are saying

The kids loved making the Spout Houses and watching their seeds grow. Such a creative way to display them.
My students loved this! Although they're big year 8s, we're studying a gardening subject and they loved making sprout houses and watching them grow on the window pane. We used this to talk about the germination process. Thank you!
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Description

Want an engaging way to get your students curious about how plants grow? This "spout" house is a great way to germinate seeds in your class window!

Inside you will find:

1 Sprout House Printable

1 (1/2 pages for easy printing) Germination Journal Cover

1 (1/2 pages for easy printing) Germination Journal Pages

See Preview

You can find this in my Plants Unit for K-1

and in my YEARLONG SCIENCE BUNDLE FOR K-1

Need Digital Plant Plans? Try Growing Plants Google Slides

Add your student's Name to the top line. Color the house. Cut the middle area out. Tape a plastic bag with a wet paper towel and seeds inside the bag behind the house, but keep the seeds facing some sunlight. Hang in a window or outside. Have students observe what happens each day to the seeds.

*Keep as much air out of the bag as possible or it tends to get moldy.

Make copies of the journal pages for students to collect data.

CHECK out YEARLONG BUNDLES to save $?

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MEGA READING BUNDLE for K-2 FIVE Yearlong Programs SAVE $$$$$$$$

YEARLONG Writing Prompts Monthly Journals BUNDLE

Word Family Practice Worksheets BUNDLE

KINDERGARTEN Survival PACK

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Total Pages
3 pages
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
30 minutes
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
NGSSK-ESS2-2
Construct an argument supported by evidence for how plants and animals (including humans) can change the environment to meet their needs. Examples of plants and animals changing their environment could include a squirrel digs in the ground to hide its food and tree roots can break concrete.

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