Lesson 2: Parts of Animal & Plant Cells

Grade 5 Life Science — Parts of Plant & Animal Cells (S5L3.b,c) — 5E Lesson, 50 minutes
Standard: S5L3.b,c (Georgia GSE)
Topic: Parts of Plant & Animal Cells
Total: 50 minutes

Lesson Overview (5E Model)

Engage — Bell Ringer (5 minutes)

Milestones-Style Multiple Choice

1) Which structure is found in plant cells but not in animal cells?

A. Cell wall B. Nucleus C. Cell membrane D. Mitochondria

Quick Intro (Read Aloud) — Your body is made of tiny cells. Plants are also made of cells. Today you will find and name the main parts of cells and compare plant and animal cells.

Explore — 5-Minute Demo + 20-Minute Lab (25 minutes)

5-Minute Demo: “Wall vs. Membrane”

Materials: 1 zip-top bag, 1 small rectangle box (or tissue box), sticky note (green), marker.

  1. Show the bag: “This is like a cell membrane. It is thin and flexible.”
  2. Slide the bag into the box: “Plants also have a cell wall outside the membrane. It is stiff and helps the cell keep its shape.”
  3. Place a green sticky note inside: “Plants have chloroplasts that make food with sunlight.”

20-Minute Hands-On Lab: Paper-Plate Cell Models

Goal: Build one animal cell and one plant cell model. Label the parts and tell what each part does.

Materials per team (common classroom items): 2 paper plates, 1 sheet of green paper, 1 sheet of blue paper, markers, glue stick, scissors, ruler, scrap cardstock for a rectangle, small dry beans or pasta (optional for organelles), tape, label strips (provided below).

Animal Cell (Round)

  1. Use a paper plate as the cell shape. Draw a smooth border for the cell membrane.
  2. Color the inside lightly to show cytoplasm.
  3. Cut a medium circle from paper and glue it as the nucleus. Add a small dot for the nucleolus.
  4. Add 3–4 small ovals (paper or pasta) for mitochondria.
  5. Glue 2–3 small circles for vacuoles.
  6. Add neat labels.

Plant Cell (Rectangular)

  1. Cut a rectangle of cardstock. Draw a thick border to show the rigid cell wall. Inside it, draw a thin line for the cell membrane.
  2. Shade the inside for cytoplasm.
  3. Add a medium circle for the nucleus.
  4. Glue several small green rectangles/circles for chloroplasts.
  5. Cut a large blue rectangle in the center for the big central vacuole.
  6. Add 3–4 small ovals for mitochondria. Add neat labels.

Data Table (Record What You See)

Cell PartWhat it does (function)Plant cell?Animal cell?
Cell wallStiff outer layer that gives shape and support✔ Yes✖ No
Cell membraneThin skin that controls what goes in and out✔ Yes✔ Yes
NucleusControl center with DNA✔ Yes✔ Yes
CytoplasmGel-like filling that holds parts✔ Yes✔ Yes
ChloroplastUses sunlight to make food (photosynthesis)✔ Yes✖ No
VacuoleStorage for water and materials✔ Large central✔ Small
MitochondriaMakes energy for the cell✔ Yes✔ Yes

Explain — Vocabulary & Misconceptions (10 minutes)

Key Words (student-friendly)

  • Cell wall: stiff outer layer in plant cells.
  • Cell membrane: thin layer that controls what enters and leaves.
  • Nucleus: control center with instructions.
  • Cytoplasm: jelly-like filling.
  • Chloroplast: green part that makes food from sunlight.
  • Vacuole: storage space.
  • Mitochondria: powerhouse that makes energy.

Common Misconceptions (clarify together)

  • “Only plant cells have energy makers.” — False. Both have mitochondria.
  • “Animal cells have cell walls.” — False. Only plants have cell walls.
  • “All vacuoles are big.” — False. Plant cells have one big vacuole; animal cells have several small ones.
  • “Chloroplasts are in animal cells.” — False. Chloroplasts are only in plant cells.

Quick-Check (Milestones Style)

  1. One-Part MC: Which part controls what enters and leaves the cell?
    A. Nucleus B. Cell membrane C. Chloroplast D. Vacuole
  2. Two-Select (Select TWO correct): Which parts are in both plant and animal cells?
    A. Cell wall B. Nucleus C. Chloroplast D. Mitochondria

Elaborate — Apply Learning (10 minutes)

Partner Card Sort: Cut out the label strips below. Sort them into “Plant Only,” “Animal Only,” and “Both.” Glue to a notebook page.

Label Strips (cut apart)
cell wall | cell membrane | nucleus | cytoplasm | chloroplast | vacuole | mitochondria
large central vacuole | small vacuoles | makes food from sunlight | flexible outer layer | powerhouse

Quick-Check (Milestones Style)

  1. Matching: Draw lines or write the letter.
    A. Chloroplast — ____ 1. Control center
    B. Vacuole — ____ 2. Makes food from sunlight
    C. Nucleus — ____ 3. Storage
  2. MC: Which picture would best show a cell with a stiff outer layer and green parts?
    A. Animal cell B. Plant cell C. Bacteria D. Virus

Evaluate — Exit Ticket (5 minutes)

  1. Which two parts help a plant make and store food? Choose TWO.
    A. Cell wall B. Chloroplast C. Vacuole D. Nucleus
  2. What is the main job of the cell membrane?
    A. Make food B. Store water C. Control what enters and leaves D. Hold DNA
  3. Circle all that are in both plant and animal cells: cell wall, nucleus, cytoplasm, chloroplast, mitochondria.
  4. Fill in the blank: The __________ is the control center of the cell.
  5. Short answer (1–2 sentences): Explain one way a plant cell is different from an animal cell.

Answer Key

Engage Bell Ringer

1) A. Cell wall

Explain — Quick-Check

1) B. Cell membrane   |   2) B and D (Nucleus and Mitochondria)

Elaborate — Quick-Check

3) A→2 (Chloroplast→Makes food), B→3 (Vacuole→Storage), C→1 (Nucleus→Control center)

4) B. Plant cell

Exit Ticket

  1. B and C (Chloroplast, Vacuole)
  2. C. Control what enters and leaves
  3. Both: nucleus, cytoplasm, mitochondria
  4. Nucleus
  5. Sample correct ideas: Plant cells have a cell wall; plant cells have chloroplasts; plant cells have a large central vacuole; animal cells do not have chloroplasts or a cell wall.

Time Guide

PhaseMinutesWhat happens
Engage5Bell ringer + intro
Explore255-min demo; 20-min lab models
Explain10Vocabulary, misconceptions, quick-check
Elaborate10Card sort + quick-check
Evaluate5Exit ticket

Cut-Out Labels (for models)

cell wallcell membranenucleuscytoplasm
chloroplastvacuolemitochondrialarge central vacuole

Standards Alignment (Georgia GSE)

  • S5L3.b: Compare and contrast plant and animal cells — addressed in demo, lab models, card sort, exit ticket.
  • S5L3.c: Identify major parts and describe functions — addressed in vocabulary, data table, quick-checks.

Reading level: Grade 5. This page is formatted for printing.