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Science·Insects & Minibeasts·conceptual

The insect body plan

The insect body plan: all insects share three body parts (head, thorax, abdomen), six legs attached to the thorax, and antennae on the head. Most have wings. They have an exoskeleton — a hard outer shell — instead of bones inside.

Suggested ages 7–9

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Evidence of understanding

  • Label the three body parts of an insect — head, thorax, and abdomen — on a diagram or real specimen
  • State that all insects have exactly six legs and that the legs attach to the thorax
  • Explain that insects have an exoskeleton, a hard outer covering, instead of bones inside their body

Assessment prompt

If The insect body plan looked at a picture of a beetle or ant, could they point out the head, thorax, and abdomen, and tell you that all insects have six legs and a hard outer shell?

Standards alignment

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