Animals for a Day

Level: Medium to Difficult

Activity A

Show the students a list of many different animals (mammals,
amphibians …), and ask them to choose, individually and without speaking,
an animal they would like to be for a day. Give them a minute. Then
(something they won’t be expecting), get them to write a few sentences,
once again working alone, about their day, or their thoughts-as the animal
they have chosen. Give them a few minutes.

Activity B

Ask the students to read/tell their story, adding
in extra bits as they go along.

Activity C

Ask them why they chose this animal, and then go on to pick up
on what they said, expanding it into a session of exchanges between the
students, involving yourself if you feel like it.

Activity D

Get a blank page and draw a circle in the center. Then, place the words
“animal in captivity” inside the circle. Give each student a copy of the
page and tell them to do an INDIVIDUAL brainstorming exercise on the words
in the circle. That is, get them to draw lines from the circle, each line
leading up to a word or image suggested by the animal’s situation. Give
them all a few minutes to do this.

This, we can call a word-map, or even a mind-map.

Next, get each student to read out the ideas that came spontaneously into
their heads as they thought. You can all marvel at the number of
differences-or similarities that arise, and go on to discuss the matter of
captive animals.

Don’t forget to question students on why they put in such and such a thing.
Watch out for strange concepts!

Put all the pages together so that the students can somehow see the work
carried out by the rest.

Perhaps now, as a group, they could all focus on the main aspects of
animals in captivity, occasionally playing devil’s advocate – if they all think it’s a bad thing raise the issue of conservation if they don’t think it’s a bad thing ask their opinions on animal testing and experimentation etc.

You could then move on to debate issues like endangered species, whale
hunting …