Birds Evolved from Dinosaurs
CONCEPTUALUnderstand that modern birds evolved from a group of small feathered theropod dinosaurs, using evidence such as the fossil Archaeopteryx, feathered dinosaur fossils from China, and shared skeletal features
Mastery Evidence
- State that birds evolved from small theropod dinosaurs
- Name Archaeopteryx or Chinese feathered dinosaurs as key fossil evidence
- List at least two features birds share with theropods (e.g. hollow bones, wishbone, three-toed feet)
Assessment Prompt
“Can [child] explain why scientists say birds are actually living dinosaurs — and point to evidence like feathered dinosaur fossils?”
Prerequisites2
- How animals adapt to environmentssoftAges 8—11
- Dinosaur Hip GroupshardAges 9—11
Show full prerequisite tree
- How animals adapt to environments soft
Curriculum adaptation/evolution concept underpins understanding of dinosaur-to-bird evolution
- Ocean Animal Adaptations soft
Ocean animal adaptations connect to curriculum adaptation/evolution concepts
- Life Changed Over Time soft
Within GB sequence, knowing life changed over time supports understanding adaptation; US teaches adaptation earlier without this prerequisite
- Life Cycles of Organisms soft
Understanding life cycles supports understanding how species change across generations
- Animal Classification Vocabulary hard
Describing unique and diverse life cycles requires metamorphosis, gestation, larva, pupa vocabulary
- Drawing Life Cycle Diagrams hard
Modelling life cycles of living things requires the life cycle diagram representation
- Sorting into categories soft
Life cycle diagrams require classifying organisms into categories — the same sorting skill used in mt_xppl18avyY
- Comparing groups: more or fewer soft
Sorting categories by count benefits from ability to compare quantities
- Counting objects to 20 soft
Counting a set helps when comparing groups, but younger children (GB age 4) can compare using matching without formal counting to 20
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Counting objects to 20 hard
Counting objects in each category requires being able to count sets of objects
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Animal Life Stages hard
Must know basic offspring-to-adult stages before comparing diverse life cycles
- What Living Things Need soft
Understanding survival needs supports understanding growth and development
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- How Animals Have Babies soft
Animal babies topic enriched by curriculum coverage of offspring and life stages
- Pollination & Seed Dispersal soft
Plant life cycle knowledge supports understanding diverse life cycles across organisms
- Seeds & Plant Growth hard
Must understand germination before learning full life cycle including seed dispersal
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- How Plant Parts Work hard
Must know flower function before understanding pollination and seed formation
- Fossils as Evidence hard
Must analyse fossil evidence before drawing the broader conclusion that life has changed over time
- Fossils Reveal Ancient Environments soft
Enrichment knowledge of fossils revealing ancient environments supports formal analysis of fossil data
- Fossils & Palaeontologists hard
Must understand fossils before interpreting what they reveal about past environments
- Dinosaurs Were Real hard
Must understand dinosaurs are extinct before learning fossils are how we know about them
- Evolution vocabulary soft
Interpreting fossil data as evidence of past organisms benefits from fossil record and extinction vocabulary
- How fossils form hard
Must understand fossil formation in rocks before interpreting fossil data for evidence of past life
- States of Matter Vocabulary soft
Describing physical properties of materials uses solid/liquid/gas vocabulary introduced in the states of matter LANGUAGE node
- Living, Dead & Never Alive soft
Understanding living vs dead supports understanding what gets fossilised
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Representing numbers with objects (age 8+) soft
Analysing fossil record data using bar charts depends on scaled bar graph construction skills from Math
- Pictograms and tally charts hard
Constructing simple pictograms/tables is prerequisite to scaled versions
- Pictograms and tally charts (age 6+) hard
Constructing pictograms, tally charts, and bar charts requires these display vocabulary terms
- Sorting into categories hard
Constructing pictograms and tally charts requires classifying and counting objects first
- Comparing groups: more or fewer soft
Sorting categories by count benefits from ability to compare quantities
- Counting objects to 20 soft
Counting a set helps when comparing groups, but younger children (GB age 4) can compare using matching without formal counting to 20
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Counting objects to 20 hard
Counting objects in each category requires being able to count sets of objects
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Sorting Data into Categories soft
Data representation formats (pictograms, tally charts) support organising data
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Pictograms and tally charts (age 6+) hard
Organising and representing data requires data, tally, frequency, and category vocabulary
- Sorting into categories hard
Organising data in categories builds on classifying and counting objects in categories
- Comparing groups: more or fewer soft
Sorting categories by count benefits from ability to compare quantities
- Counting objects to 20 soft
Counting a set helps when comparing groups, but younger children (GB age 4) can compare using matching without formal counting to 20
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Counting objects to 20 hard
Counting objects in each category requires being able to count sets of objects
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Pictograms and tally charts (age 6+) hard
Drawing scaled bar charts and pictograms requires axis, scale, label, and frequency vocabulary
- Sorting Data into Categories hard
Drawing picture/bar graphs extends organising and representing data
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Pictograms and tally charts (age 6+) hard
Organising and representing data requires data, tally, frequency, and category vocabulary
- Sorting into categories hard
Organising data in categories builds on classifying and counting objects in categories
- Comparing groups: more or fewer soft
Sorting categories by count benefits from ability to compare quantities
- Counting objects to 20 soft
Counting a set helps when comparing groups, but younger children (GB age 4) can compare using matching without formal counting to 20
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Counting objects to 20 hard
Counting objects in each category requires being able to count sets of objects
- One-to-one counting hard
Cardinality principle builds on one-to-one correspondence — you must count correctly to know the last number tells 'how many'
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Evolution vocabulary hard
Recognising that living things have changed over time and fossils provide evidence requires evolution and fossil record vocabulary
- Evolution vocabulary hard
Understanding that adaptation may lead to evolution requires both 'adaptation' and 'evolution' vocabulary
- Variation & Survival Advantage hard
Must understand variation provides survival advantages before connecting adaptation to evolution
- Inherited characteristics hard
Must understand trait variation before explaining how variation provides survival advantages
- Inheritance Vocabulary hard
Analysing data about inherited traits requires 'inherited characteristic', 'variation', and 'offspring' vocabulary
- Habitats & Basic Needs soft
Habitat knowledge supports understanding how adaptations suit specific environments
- Where Are the Poles? soft
Polar regions enrich the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary hard
Describing how habitats provide for basic needs requires habitat, environment, conditions, shelter vocabulary
- What Is a Rainforest? soft
Rainforest habitat knowledge enriches the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- What Living Things Need hard
Must know basic needs of organisms before understanding how habitats provide for those needs
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- Living, Dead & Never Alive hard
Must distinguish living from non-living before understanding habitats that support living things
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must recognise common minibeasts before exploring where each type lives
- Inheritance Vocabulary hard
Explaining how variation provides survival advantages requires 'variation', 'species', and 'trait' vocabulary
- Changing Environments soft
Environmental change knowledge supports understanding why adaptation matters for survival
- Habitats & Basic Needs hard
Must understand how habitats support organisms before understanding what happens when they change
- Where Are the Poles? soft
Polar regions enrich the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary hard
Describing how habitats provide for basic needs requires habitat, environment, conditions, shelter vocabulary
- What Is a Rainforest? soft
Rainforest habitat knowledge enriches the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- What Living Things Need hard
Must know basic needs of organisms before understanding how habitats provide for those needs
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- Living, Dead & Never Alive hard
Must distinguish living from non-living before understanding habitats that support living things
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must recognise common minibeasts before exploring where each type lives
- Simple Food Chains soft
Food chain knowledge helps understand knock-on effects of environmental change
- Herbivores, Carnivores & Omnivores hard
Must know carnivore/herbivore/omnivore to understand food chains
- Habitats & Basic Needs hard
Must know about habitats and interdependence before learning food chains
- Where Are the Poles? soft
Polar regions enrich the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary hard
Describing how habitats provide for basic needs requires habitat, environment, conditions, shelter vocabulary
- What Is a Rainforest? soft
Rainforest habitat knowledge enriches the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- What Living Things Need hard
Must know basic needs of organisms before understanding how habitats provide for those needs
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- Living, Dead & Never Alive hard
Must distinguish living from non-living before understanding habitats that support living things
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must recognise common minibeasts before exploring where each type lives
- Ocean Animal Variety soft
Food chains benefit from knowing the variety of animals that eat each other
- Minibeasts in the food chain soft
Garden minibeast food chains provide concrete examples for curriculum simple-food-chains
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must know common minibeasts before placing them in food chains
- Rainforest Animals soft
Rainforest animals provide rich examples for simple food chains (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary soft
Discussing how environments change and pose dangers uses habitat and conditions vocabulary
- Dinosaur Hip Groups hard
Must understand theropods as a group before learning birds evolved from them
- Famous Dinosaur Species hard
Must know common species before classifying them into Saurischia and Ornithischia
- Plant-Eaters vs Meat-Eaters hard
Must understand basic diet classification before advancing to anatomical classification
- Herbivores, Carnivores & Omnivores soft
Curriculum herbivore/carnivore/omnivore classification provides foundation for dinosaur diet sorting
Unlocks3
- Changing Scientific KnowledgesoftAges 9—11
- Palaeoart & SpeculationsoftAges 9—11
- Dinosaur-to-Bird TransitionhardAges 11—13