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Grade 3 Science
Chapters

11. Scientific Inquiry and Skills

22. Plants: Structure and Function

33. Animals: Characteristics and Needs

Basic Needs of AnimalsVertebrates and InvertebratesAnimal HabitatsBody Coverings: Fur, Feathers, ScalesHow Animals MoveAnimal Behavior and SurvivalFood and DietsParenting and Care of YoungComparing Local AnimalsPets vs. Wild Animals

44. Habitats and Ecosystems

55. Life Cycles and Growth

66. Human Body and Health

77. Matter: Properties and Classification

88. States of Matter and Changes

99. Forces, Motion, and Simple Machines

1010. Energy: Light, Heat, and Sound

Courses/Grade 3 Science/3. Animals: Characteristics and Needs

3. Animals: Characteristics and Needs

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Study animal characteristics, basic needs, behaviors, and how animals are grouped based on observable traits.

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Basic Needs of Animals

Basic Needs of Animals Explained for Grade 3 Students
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Basic Needs of Animals Explained for Grade 3 Students

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Basic Needs of Animals — Building on What We Learned About Plants

Remember when we studied plants and learned they need sunlight, water, air, and soil to grow? Good memory — you’re about to level up. Plants and animals both need certain things to stay alive, but animals get a little more dramatic about it: they move, they hunt (well, sometimes they ask politely), and they need cozy places to sleep.

This lesson builds on the plant unit (plant parts, functions, and life cycles) and shows how animals also have needs that keep them living, growing, and reproducing. We'll compare, observe, and even play 'habitat designer'. Ready? Let’s go.


What Are the Basic Needs of Animals?

Animals — from ants to zebras — need a few key things to survive. Think of these like the animal survival checklist:

  • Air (oxygen)
  • Food (for energy and growth)
  • Water (for life and body processes)
  • Shelter (a safe place to rest and hide)
  • Space (room to move and find food)
  • Temperature & care (comfortably warm/cool and protection from danger)

Micro explanation: Why these matter

  • Air: Animals breathe oxygen (most of them), which their bodies use like fire uses oxygen — to burn food and make energy.
  • Food: Food gives animals energy to move and materials to grow — like fuel and building blocks in one.
  • Water: Cells need water to work. Without water, everything gets stuck and cranky.
  • Shelter: Protects animals from weather and predators — and gives babies a safe place to grow.
  • Space: Animals often need enough room to hunt, find mates, or avoid crowding that causes stress.
  • Temperature & care: Too hot or cold can be deadly; many animals need the right climate or a special behavior to stay safe.

"This is the moment where the concept finally clicks: animals don’t just ‘want’ these things — they need them to keep every cell in their body happy."


How This Builds on Our Plant Lessons

You already know plants need sunlight, water, and soil. Animals need water too (same reason — life!), but instead of sunlight, many animals get energy by eating plants or other animals. While plants make their own food using leaves, animals must find it. Remember: plants are like kitchens that make food from sunlight; animals are like delivery drivers that pick up food and eat it.

Ask: "Why do both plants and animals need water?" — Because water helps cells work, in both leaves and livers.


Real-Life Examples: Meet Four Animals and Their Needs

Animal Main food Shelter Special need
Dog Dog food (meat, grains) Doghouse, home Needs human care and exercise
Bird Seeds, insects Nest in trees Needs space to fly; perches
Fish Flakes, small critters Water (aquarium, pond) Needs oxygen in water (gills)
Frog Insects Water and plants near a pond Needs moist skin and water to lay eggs

Small observation note

Imagine a fish in a bowl with no clean water — that shows how water quality is as important as water itself. For living things, 'good water' often matters more than 'some water'.


Short Activity: Design-a-Habitat (1 class period)

  1. Pick an animal (dog, bird, fish, frog).
  2. Draw its home and label where it gets food, water, air, shelter, and space.
  3. Add one change to the habitat if the weather becomes too hot or too cold.

Prompt for students: "Why did you put the water source where you did?" This encourages thinking about safety and accessibility.


Quick Experiment Idea: 'Pet Detective' Observation

Materials: paper, pencil, simple checklist.

Steps:

  1. Choose a classroom pet or a picture of an animal.
  2. Observe: Does it have water? Food? Shelter? Space?
  3. Write one thing you’d change to help the animal better meet its needs.

This builds observation skills and connects needs to real care actions.


Why Do People Keep Misunderstanding This?

Some think animals can live anywhere — like putting a polar bear in a tropical zoo exhibit and expecting it to be fine. The misunderstanding comes from mixing up general needs (all animals need water) with specific needs (polar bears need cold and lots of fat-rich food). That’s why learning both the shared needs and the special needs is important.

Imagine this: A plant in shade wilts because it can’t get sunlight. A lizard in cold sunshine moves slow because its body can’t warm up. Same idea — different ways the environment matters.


Why Teachers and Scientists Care About Basic Needs

Scientists and caretakers observe animal needs to:

  • Keep pets and zoo animals healthy
  • Protect wild animals and their habitats
  • Design safe environments (farms, aquariums, wildlife reserves)

As future scientists (or very responsible pet owners), students learn that small changes — like clean water or a nest box — can make a huge difference.


Key Takeaways (Short & Sticky)

  • All animals need air, food, water, shelter, and space.
  • Animals get energy by eating; plants make energy from sunlight.
  • Some needs are shared by many animals; other needs are specific to an animal's type.
  • Observing an animal tells you what it needs most right now.

"If plants are kitchens, animals are hungry customers — and your job is to make sure their order gets filled correctly."


Final Little Challenge (Think-Pair-Share)

Pick an animal and tell a partner: What one change would you make to its home to help it survive better? Then switch and hear their idea. Share the best idea with the class.

That’s it — you’ve gone from studying roots and leaves to thinking like an animal caregiver and a scientist. Go forth and notice needs: they're everywhere, from the pond to your backyard dog bowl.

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