Lesson 4: Seed Producing vs. Non-seed Producing Plants

Seed-Producing vs. Non‑Seed‑Producing Plants — 5E Lesson (Grade 5 GSE)

Seed‑Producing vs. Non‑Seed‑Producing Plants

Grade 5 • Georgia Standards of Excellence (Life Science — Classification of organisms: flowering/non‑flowering; seed‑producing vs. non‑seed‑producing)

Lesson Goals

  • Tell how seed‑producing plants and non‑seed‑producing plants make new plants.
  • Sort real examples or pictures into the two groups and explain the choice with evidence.
  • Use words like seed, cone, flower, fruit, spore, and moss/fern correctly.

Materials

For Demo & Explore

  • 1 apple or bell pepper (shows seeds)
  • 1 pine cone (shows seeds in scales)
  • Fern frond photo or real fern (shows spore dots)
  • Mushroom or clear photo (represents spores)
  • Hand lenses (optional)
  • Sticky notes, markers, tape

For Lab (Groups of 3–4)

  • Set of “specimens”: any mix of real items and/or picture cards such as bean seeds, apple slice, pine cone, flower, grass clipping, moss/fern photo, mushroom photo
  • 1 “Observation Chart” per group (table below)
  • Scissors (to cut cards if using printouts), glue/tape

Bell Ringer (Milestones‑Style) 3 minutes

Question: Which object is best evidence that a plant makes seeds?

  1. Green leaf
  2. Thick stem
  3. Fruit with pits or tiny grains inside
  4. Wide roots

Brief Introduction 2 minutes

Plants make new plants in different ways. Seed‑producing plants make seeds in flowers or in cones. Many seeds are inside a fruit. Non‑seed‑producing plants like ferns and mosses make tiny cells called spores instead of seeds.

Common Misconceptions

  • “All plants have flowers.” — Not true. Pines have cones; ferns and mosses have spores.
  • “Seeds and spores are the same.” — Seeds have a baby plant and food inside; spores are single cells.
  • “If I can’t see seeds, the plant must use spores.” — Some seeds are very small or hidden inside fruits or cones.

Engage — Mini Demo: Seeds vs. Spores 5 minutes

  1. Show the class an apple or bell pepper. Cut to show seeds.
  2. Show a pine cone. Point out where seeds sit under the scales.
  3. Show a fern photo. Point to brown dots (spore cases) on the back of the frond. Show a mushroom photo.
  4. Ask: “What clues tell us a plant makes seeds? What clues tell us it uses spores?” Capture 2–3 ideas on the board.

Explore — Hands‑On Sorting Lab 20 minutes

Question

Do our specimens show evidence of seeds or spores?

Procedure

  1. Form groups of 3–4. Give each group a set of specimens (real items and/or picture cards).
  2. Observe each specimen. Look for clues: flowers, fruit, cones, or spore dots.
  3. Complete the Observation Chart. Decide Seed‑Producing, Non‑Seed‑Producing, or Not sure.
  4. Place each specimen under one of two headers on the desk or wall: “Seed‑Producing” or “Non‑Seed‑Producing.” Use sticky notes to label evidence.
  5. Pick one specimen and write a 1–2 sentence claim using evidence (example starter: “We think ____ is seed‑producing because we see ____.”).

Observation Chart (Copy for Each Group)

Specimen Seed? (Yes/No/Not sure) Evidence/Clues Seen Group Decision
Apple slice or photo
Pine cone
Flowering plant piece/photo
Fern frond or photo
Moss or photo
Mushroom photo

Explain — Whole‑Class Check‑In 10 minutes

  • Seed‑Producing Plants: make seeds in flowers (angiosperms) or cones (gymnosperms). Fruit often holds seeds.
  • Non‑Seed‑Producing Plants: ferns and mosses make spores. Spores are often in cases on the back of fern leaves or in capsules on moss stalks.
  • Key idea: Look for flowers, fruit, or cones (seeds) vs. spore dots or capsules (spores).

Quick‑Check (Milestones‑Style)

  1. Multiple Choice: Which is a non‑seed‑producing plant?
    1. Rose bush
    2. Fern
    3. Peach tree
    4. Pine tree
  2. Multiple Select: Select all clues of a seed‑producing plant.
    • [ ] Cones
    • [ ] Fruit
    • [ ] Spore dots under leaves
    • [ ] Flowers
  3. Multiple Choice: A moss makes new plants using:
    1. Seeds in fruit
    2. Seeds in cones
    3. Spores
    4. Seeds in flowers
  4. Reasoning: A student finds tiny brown dots on the back of a leaf. What is the best conclusion?
    1. The plant is a flowering plant.
    2. The plant makes seeds inside fruit.
    3. The plant likely makes spores.
    4. The plant does not reproduce.

Elaborate — Apply & Communicate 10 minutes

  1. Pairs select one new plant picture from a book or device (or teacher provides). Decide the group.
  2. Write a short claim with evidence: “This plant is ____ because we see ____.”
  3. Share one example with the class.

Evaluate — Exit Ticket (5 Questions) 5 minutes

  1. MC: Which plant part most clearly shows seeds?
    1. Root hairs
    2. Fruit
    3. Leaves
    4. Stem
  2. MC: Which group uses spores to make new plants?
    1. Flowering plants
    2. Conifer (pine) trees
    3. Ferns
    4. Sunflowers
  3. Multiple Select: Check all that are seed‑producing.
    • [ ] Moss
    • [ ] Fern
    • [ ] Mushroom
    • [ ] Pine tree
    • [ ] Apple tree
  4. MC: A plant has cones but no flowers. It most likely:
    1. Makes spores
    2. Makes seeds
    3. Does not reproduce
    4. Only uses fruit
  5. Short Answer: Explain one clue you can use to tell if a plant is seed‑producing or non‑seed‑producing.

Answer Key — Exit Ticket

  1. B
  2. C
  3. Pine tree; Apple tree
  4. B
  5. Sample ideas: seeds inside fruit; flowers; cones → seed‑producing. Spore dots on fern leaves; moss capsules → non‑seed‑producing.

Timing Overview

5E PhaseTime
Engage (Bell ringer + Demo)8 min
Explore (Hands‑On Lab)20 min
Explain (Check‑In + Quick‑Check)10 min
Elaborate (Apply)10 min
Evaluate (Exit Ticket)2 min buffer within segments

Teacher tip for set‑up: If real samples are not available, use printed picture cards of the listed specimens.