01 Muscles and Bones
👩🏫 Teacher’s Guide
Objective
Students will explain how muscles and bones work together to produce movement and distinguish voluntary from involuntary muscles.
Vocabulary
muscle, tendon, contract, release, voluntary muscle, involuntary muscle, cartilage, rigid
Teaching Notes
- Start with a quick demo or model to visualize the concept.
- Pre-teach key vocabulary with gestures or sketches.
- Prompt students to predict, observe, and explain in full sentences.
- Check for understanding using either/or and short-answer prompts.
🧒 Student Worksheet
Concept and Helping Material
Definition. Muscles pull on bones to move the body. One muscle of a pair contracts while the other releases.
Helping ideas and samples:
- Try a quick sort, draw-and-label, or compare-and-contrast.
- Name one place you see this idea at home or at school.
- Safety: follow teacher directions and handle materials carefully.
Vocabulary and Definition
- — soft tissue that contracts to create movement
- — strong band that connects muscle to bone
- — to shorten and tighten
- — to relax and lengthen
- — a muscle you can control (e.g., biceps)
- — a muscle that works automatically (e.g., heart)
- — firm, flexible tissue found in joints, ears, and nose
- — hard and not easily bent
Words to Learn
, , , , , , ,
Sentences to Fill In
1. Muscles are connected to bones by .
2. When a muscle , it gets shorter and thicker.
3. The heart is an muscle.
4. Bones are , so muscles can pull on them.
5. A pair of muscles work together: when one contracts, the other .
Hands-On Experiment or Activities
What You Need: simple classroom items.
What You Do: Make a model arm using two cardboard tubes, rubber bands, and paper clips. Attach bands as 'biceps' and 'triceps' to see one shorten while the other lengthens.
Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?
Reflection
- How do muscles and bones cooperate to move your elbow?
- Where in daily life do you notice voluntary and involuntary muscles at work?