Ideas.  Interesting.  Public catering.  Production.  Management.  Agriculture

Download ppt "Spring has come" Presentation on the theme "the arrival of spring." What happens in late spring in inanimate nature

To use the preview of presentations, create an account for yourself ( account) Google and sign in: https://accounts.google.com


Slides captions:

"Spring came! Spring is dear! Prepared by: teacher - defectologist Shikina O.N.

March - zimobor, protalnik, dry, rookery Signs of May: 1. Frequent fogs in March portend a rainy summer. 2. If a woodpecker knocks in March, then spring will be late. 3. If in March blizzards the snow falls unevenly, wavy, in bumps on the fields, then garden vegetables and spring bread will be born well.

April - birch, pollen, arrival Signs of April: 1. What is the weather on April 1, this will be on October 1. 2. Thunderstorm in early April to a warm summer and a walnut harvest. 3. At the end of April it rains - for the harvest

May - grass, arrival May sign: 1. Bird cherry bloomed early - there will be a warm summer. 2. If swallows fly low, expect rain. 3. Oak leaves turned around - expect a cold snap. 4. A lot of May beetles in the spring - this year's millet harvest.

Spring through the eyes of artists

Levitan. Blossoming apple trees

Poetic Spring

F. I. Tyutchev I love a thunderstorm in early May, When the first spring thunder, As if frolicking and playing, Rumbles in the blue sky.

A. A. Blok Oh spring, without end and without edge - Without end and without edge dream! I recognize you, life! I accept! And I greet with the sound of the shield!

M.Yu. Lermontov Spring. When in the spring the broken ice flows like an agitated river, When the bare earth turns black in places among the meadows, And the darkness falls in clouds On the semi-young fields.

A. A. Fet Already all the fluffy willow Spread around; Again the fragrant spring Has blown a wing.

Spring in the work of composers.

P.I. Tchaikovsky In 1876 he wrote the album "Seasons" Consisting of 12 pieces of music.

A.A. Vivaldi Italian composer and violinist. Concertos about the seasons he wrote in 1723.

Thank you for your attention!!!


On the topic: methodological developments, presentations and notes

Extracurricular event "Spring is coming. Spring is on the way!" Grade 2

Extra-curricular event on the theme "Search, finds, scenarios" Meeting of spring is a special holiday. Let's remember how we met spring before and how we do it now....

slide 2

Today we are going to visit Spring.

And, as was always the case in Russia, we must glorify the hostess so that she would be kind to us and reveal her secrets to us.

Listen to the poem by E. A. Baratynsky and identify the signs of spring in it.

Spring! Spring! How clean the air is!

How clear is the sky!

His azure alive

He blinds my eyes.

Spring! Spring! How high

On the wings of the wind

caressing the sunbeams,

Clouds are flying!

Noisy streams! Glittering streams!

Roaring, the river carries

On the triumphant ridge

The ice she lifted!

More trees are bare

But in the grove there is a decrepit leaf,

As before under my foot

And noisy and fragrant.

Under the sun most soared

And in the bright sky

The invisible lark sings

Congratulatory hymn to spring...

slide 3

What happens in early spring in inanimate nature?

  • slide 4

    What happens in late spring in inanimate nature?

  • slide 5

    What are clouds?

    slide 6

    What dangers await a person in the mountains?

    Slide 7

    What happens in the spring on the reservoirs?

  • Slide 8

    Slide 9

    Card: With what changes in nature does Spring announce its arrival?

    1. The day with the advent of spring became:

    a) shorter b) longer c) remained the same.

    2. The air temperature has become:

    a) higher b) lower c) has not changed.

    3. What natural phenomenon can be observed only in spring?

    a) snowfall b) blizzard c) ice drift

    1. Days with the advent of spring have become:

    a) colder b) warmer c) remained the same.

    2. The day of the spring equinox falls on:

    3. What natural phenomenon can be observed only in spring?

    a) blizzard b) snowfall c) flood.

    Slide 10

    slide 11

    • Why does ice and snow melt in spring?
    • Where does it melt faster?
    • How has precipitation changed with the onset of spring?
    • How has the soil changed?
    • How will nature change in the future?

    Read the proverbs.

    • Spring and autumn - eight weathers a day.
    • Don't worry, it's winter, spring will come anyway.
    • Spring will give to drink - autumn will feed.
    • If you want to eat kalachi, don't sit on the stove.

    How do you understand their meaning?

    Remember what proverbs you know about spring.

    Name the spring months.

    slide 12

    What changes occur in spring in wildlife?

    slide 13

    MARCH - protalnik

    Why is this period of spring so called?

    It melts early - it won't melt for a long time.

    If a migratory bird flows in flocks - to a friendly spring. Long icicles - for a long spring.

    Slide 14

    April - snow

    April is the month of spring primroses

    How a bit of a branch is a watchful dream!

    Barely warmed by the beam,

    Earrings are in a hurry to give away smoke,

    While swaddled foliage.

    A.Tvardovsky

    A lot of juice flows from a birch - by a rainy summer. Early flight of bees - to the red spring. Birds build nests on the sunny side - by the cold summer.

    slide 15

    May - grass

    May is cold - a year of grain. Late flowering of mountain ash - by cold autumn. When bird cherry blossoms, the cold always lives.

    slide 16

    Early flowering plants.

    In spring, representatives of the Plant Kingdom come to life.

    Name early flowering plants.

    • snowdrops
    • Coltsfoot
    • Corydalis
    • Lungwort
    • Ranunculus anemone
  • Slide 17

    Why were they named like that?

    • Where do they get the strength for early emergence and flowering? (Nutrient supply.)
    • Wind-pollinated plants bloom early (willow, alder, poplar, etc.). Explain why.
    • Then - pollinated by insects. Explain why.
    • Find those characteristic features of their structure that determine their early awakening to life.
    • Which of these plants did you see, in what places did you meet them?
    • Try to explain the origin of their names.
  • Slide 18

    Willow

    An early-flowering, wind-pollinated tree is a willow. It blooms in early spring, before all the other trees have leafed out.

    Slide 19

    Ash

    Light-loving.

    Blooms in April-May before the leaves bloom,

    It grows quickly on fertile soils, is frost-resistant, sometimes suffers from late spring frosts. It bears fruit from 25-40 years old, lives up to 300 years. It spreads by self-seeding and runs wild. The leaf falls in late autumn and is often green.

    Slide 20

    Migratory birds.

    Questions: Changes in inanimate nature and in the life of plants have also affected the life of animals in the spring.

    Think about which animals appear first in spring, insects or migratory birds? Why?

    slide 21

    What explains the massive arrival of birds in the spring? (The presence of a sufficient amount of food: flies, worms, and other insects.)

    • Which birds return first?
    • Tell us about their behavior.
    • environmental rules.
    • Let's draw up rules of conduct in nature, in which we will reflect the concern for the conservation of early flowering plants and migratory birds.
    • Why do people need to take care of birds and protect them?
    • The first heralds of spring are rooks. It is important that they walk along the first thawed patches. March 17 is considered Grachevnik. At this time, these birds begin to arrive. Starlings and larks will fly after the rooks. On March 21, according to the old custom, they baked buns with raisin eyes, which they called "larks".
  • slide 22

    Here are some examples of the number of insects that birds eat themselves and bring to their chicks. The great tit destroys up to 6000 insects during the day, rooks destroy up to 8000 harmful worms and caterpillars. During the summer, a swallow catches up to 1,000,000 midges and mosquitoes. Thus, birds protect crops and plantings and are of great benefit to humans.

    slide 23

    Why spring is the time of awakening of nature?

    summary of other presentations

    "Integrated lesson on the world around" - Ovrag. Compass. Pacific Ocean. Kerosene. How is the word "tundra" translated? What is the support of the human body. The amount of information about the environment. How many muscles in the human body. The main property of the soil. The lowest part of the mountain. The boundary of the visible space. Tasks that stimulate cognitive interest. Ancient geographical maps. The mountains. Property hard coal. What is humidity. The world.

    "Stones" - The wind brings the seeds of plants into the cracks of the rocks. Bunches of herbs, bushes and even trees grow in the stones. In nature in warm days stones and rocks are heated. Water enters the cracks. Water rolls pebbles, grinds, crushes and gradually turns into sand and clay. And they get cold at night. How are stones destroyed?

    Benelux - Belgium. Luxembourg. Country of bicycles. Entrance to the zoo. Brussels. One of the smallest countries in the world? Coat of arms and flag. Fields of tulips. Which countries make up the Benelux? Square in Luxembourg. Benelux countries. Capital Amsterdam. Netherlands (Holland). Flag and coat of arms. Tulip country. The Netherlands is a country of canals. The only floating flower market in the world. The flower is the symbol of the Netherlands. There are many old windmills in Holland.

    "Diversity of nature" - Work in groups. Kingdoms. creative work in pairs. Kingdom of bacteria. Mushroom Kingdom. Nature. The meaning of nature for me. Nature. Inanimate nature. Give an example. Animal Kingdom. Diversity of nature.

    "Castles of France" - Castles of France. Mont Saint Michel. Cathedral of Our Lady of Porig. Creepy chimeras. Bargem Castle. Palaces and castles. Chaumont-sur-Loire castle. Palace of Versailles. Chambord Castle. If Castle. Amboise castle. Chenonceau castle.

    "Moon is a natural satellite" - Moves around the Earth. A lunar eclipse lasts no more than 1 hour. The bright Sun disappears for a few minutes. The surface of the moon is covered with craters. The Moon is Earth's closest neighbor in space. In July 1969, a man stepped on the surface of the moon for the first time. Only one of the sides of the Moon always faces our planet. The moon has been under intense exploration. The surface of the moon. During a full moon, the entire surface of the moon is illuminated.

  • Loading...