

Seymour Bones Visits First Grade
Source/Author: Susan Owen, First Grade Teacher
September 28, 2017
Lisa Peck, Upper School Science Teacher and Director of The Center for Medical Science at Shorecrest, brought a special visitor to first grade on Thursday. Seymour Bones is a REAL human skeleton that was donated by the human it belonged to so that students could learn all about the skeleton. It was so cool to see all 206 bones of the adult human body connected together.
First graders learned all about the functions of the skeleton, including how bones and muscles work together to help us move. She also brought a disarticulated skeleton and left it with us so that we will be able to explore and practice putting it together. Thank you, Mrs. Peck and Seymour for helping us explore and learn so much about the important skeletal system!
First graders learned all about the functions of the skeleton, including how bones and muscles work together to help us move. She also brought a disarticulated skeleton and left it with us so that we will be able to explore and practice putting it together. Thank you, Mrs. Peck and Seymour for helping us explore and learn so much about the important skeletal system!