More Information
Popcorn Chain printable

SUBJECT
Science, Biology and Life Science, Animals, Plants

GRADE
Pre-K-2

AGE
4-8

Source
The Magic School Bus: Science Fun Activities
Lessons designed to help you use Scholastic's The Magic School Bus as a supplement to your curriculum. The activities provided build on children's interest in The Magic School Bus and offer lots of opportunities to engage them in hands-on learning. Remember what Ms. Frizzle says, "Get out there and explore!"

The Magic School Bus Gets Eaten

Field Trip Notes
Arnold and Keesha forget their homework - to bring in two beach things that go together -- so they improvise. He has a shoe filled with pond scum he stepped in on the way to school. She has a tuna sandwich for her lunch. Ms. Frizzle thinks it's a brilliant combination. On the class field trip to the ocean, Arnold and Keesha search for the connection between scum and tuna. The bus and class shrink, travel through the food chain - and get eaten by a tuna fish! From inside the tuna's stomach, Keesha makes the connection. Scum is a kind of algae and algae and tuna are part of the same food chain. Now, if they can just get out of that fish!

Ms. Frizzle's Ideas for the Day

Popcorn Chain

Going Hands-On

The Magic School Bus kids really get into the food chain: They're swallowed by a tuna fish. With this activity, your kids get to eat while they act as links in the food chain. The popcorn bags stand for food energy that is passed along the links in a food chain from the sun, to plants, to plant-eaters, to meat-eaters.

What You Need

  • Copies of POPCORN CHAIN page
  • Scissors
  • Markers
  • Yarn
  • Tape
  • 12 baggies of popcorn

Talk About It

An Ocean Food Chain, by Keesha

Ask children: What is a food chain? What are some examples of plants and animals that are links in a food chain? What might happen in a food chain if one link is harmed by polluntion?

What To Do

  1. Choose roles for children: 1 sun, 12 plants, 6 plant-eaters, and 3 meat-eaters.
  2. Kids color and cut out their symbols and tape them to yarn to make necklaces.
  3. Have children spread out around the room, or go outside if possible.
  4. The sun holds all 12 bags of popcorn. She gives one bag to each plant.
  5. The plants eat half of the popcorn to have energy for growing and living.
  6. Each plant-eater takes a bag from two plants and eats half of the remaining popcorn.
  7. Each meat-eater takes a bag from two plant-eaters and eats the rest of the popcorn. 

Next Stop

Kids can trace a food chain from a favorite food. They might try pizza, a jelly bean, or tuna fish.

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