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Two Eyed Soap - LP - The Cottonwood Pact: Science & Reciprocity
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Unit Title: "The Cottonwood Pact: Science & Reciprocity"

Anchor Phenomenon: Why did the bugs stop biting Binesi after he helped the swallow? Duration: 5 Lessons (45 mins each)


Lesson 1: Lightning's Gift (NGSS 4-PS3-2, 4-PS3-4)

  • Objective: Understand energy transfer from lightning → tree.
  • Activity:
    • Demo: Rub balloons on hair (static = mini-lightning), "zap" paper trees.
    • Data Hunt: Measure char depth on wood blocks after "strikes."
  • Reciprocity Circle: "What 'debts' do we owe nature for energy? (e.g., trees give us shade → we water them)."

Lesson 2: Web of Life (NGSS 5-LS2-1, CASEL: Social Awareness)

  • Objective: Model ecosystem interdependence.
  • Activity:
    • String Web Game: Students become river species (fish, dragonfly, cottonwood). Cut strings when one "dies" – watch the web collapse.
    • Binesi's Journal: Draw 3 ways the swallow depended on bugs. How did helping the bird help Binesi?
  • Reciprocity Frame: "Give 2, take 1" – For every resource we use, name two ways to give back.

Lesson 3: Soap Science (NGSS 5-PS1-4, CASEL: Responsible Decisions)

  • Objective: Explore chemical change through soap-making.
  • Activity:
    • Lab: Render fat (shortening) + ash (baking soda) → soap. Test pH changes.
    • Ethics Discussion: Tȟašúŋke said: "Use cedar respectfully." Why offer tobacco before harvesting plants?
  • Class Treaty: Draft a "Reciprocity Code" for using classroom supplies.

Lesson 4: The Return (NGSS 5-ESS3-1, CASEL: Relationship Skills)

  • Objective: Design reciprocal solutions for human impacts.
  • Activity:
    • Case Study: Watch deer overpopulation videos (no wolves → too many deer → forests die).
    • Engineering Challenge: Build "bug hotels" (twigs, pinecones) to attract pest-eaters to school gardens.
    • Binesi's Choice: Why was freeing the swallow better than keeping it? Write a "Release Pact" for a classroom pet (e.g., butterflies).

Lesson 5: Cycle of Care (Culminating Project)

  • Objective: Create a reciprocal system.
  • Activity:
    • Plant Cottonwood Cuttings: Measure growth weekly.
    • Reciprocity Ledger: Track:
      WHAT WE TOOK: Water, soil space  
      WHAT WE GAVE: Shade for insects, CO₂ absorption
    • Ceremony: Students whisper thanks to saplings using Ojibwe/Lakota phrases from the book ("Pilamaya", "Miigwech").

Assessment Tools

  • Science Notebook: Sketches of energy transfers + ecosystem webs.
  • Reciprocity Report Card: Self-score how well they upheld their "Classroom Treaty."
  • Cottonwood Diary: Notes on sapling growth + insect visitors.

Why This Works for MG Readers

  • Concrete Science: Lightning = static electricity; soap = pH changes; bugs = food webs.
  • Tangible Reciprocity: "Give 2, take 1" rule → ethical math.
  • Minimal Fantasy: Focuses on real events:
    • Binesi's bug fear → studying swallows → feeding worms → freeing bird.
    • Cottonwood sap → treaty soap → conflict resolution.
  • CASEL Integration: Responsibility = caring for saplings; Social Awareness = bug hotel teamwork.

"You helped the swallow, so the swallows helped you. That's how circles work."
– Simplified wisdom from Tȟašúŋke Waŋžíla

This unit transforms Binesi's journey into a blueprint for empirical kindness – where every pH test and planted sapling whispers: "What we take, we must return transformed." 🌱🔬


Original Author: Kevin

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