Lesson Plan - Adopt an Axolotl

Learning Objective

Students will understand how a virtual adoption program is helping endangered axolotls.

Content-Area Connections

Life Science 

Standards Correlations

CCSS: RI.4.1, RI.4.2, RI.4.3, RI.4.4, RI.4.5, RI.4.8, RI.4.10

NGSS: From Molecules to Organisms

TEKS: Science 4.9

Text Structure

Problem/Solution

1. Preparing to Read

Watch a Video
Watch the video “Amazing Amphibians,” and have students identify one interesting fact they learned about amphibians and one question they still have.

Preview Words to Know

Project the online vocabulary slideshow and introduce the Words to Know.

  • regenerate 
  • refuges


Set a Purpose for Reading

As students read, have them think about why axolotls need help.

2. Close-Reading Questions

1. Why have axolotls become popular pet choices in recent years?
Axolotls have become popular pet choices in recent years partly because they are cute. The article notes that they have “frilly gills, shimmering tails, and smiley faces.” They also have appeared in many TikTok videos and in video games like Minecraft.
(RI.4.5 Cause/Effect)

2. What does the article describe as an axolotl “superpower,” and why are scientists studying it?
The article describes an axolotl’s ability to regenerate limbs, organs, and parts of their brains as a “superpower.” Scientists are studying this ability in the hope that it could someday help people.
(RI.4.1 Text Evidence)

3. How does the virtual adoption program help axolotls?
The virtual adoption program helps axolotls because the money people pay to adopt axolotls goes toward the creation of axolotl refuges in chinampas. Researchers are installing mesh cages that keep predators and pollution out of these floating farms.
(RI.4.3 Explain Ideas)

3. Skill Building

FEATURED SKILL: Reading a Diagram

Use the skill builder “An Axolotl’s Life” to study the life cycle of an axolotl. Have students do online research to compare it with the life cycles of other amphibians, like frogs and salamanders. Point out that axolotls do not lose their gills or develop lungs the way most amphibians do—and discuss why (they do not leave the water, even as adults). 

(RI.4.7 Text Features)

Text-to-Speech