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"Maple
Syrup Production" Lesson Plan
Keywords: sugaring,
maple tree, sap, natural resources, maple syrup
Prepared by: Heather
Coder, Pennsylvania Homeschool
Lesson Plan Grade
Level: can be adapted for kindergarten through third grade
Total Time Required:
40-60 minutes, depending on grade level
Setting: classroom
or outdoors
Subjects: history,
science, math
Topics: tree identification,
evaporation, conservation, fractions
Goals for the Lesson
- Students will explore
the steps of maple sugar production.
- Students will understand
the evaporation process.
- Students will appreciate
the labor and effort involved from tree to the final product.
Materials Needed
Optional Supplies
- spile for tapping
trees
- clean bucket
- hand operated drill
with drill bit aprox 6 7/16 inches in diameter
- access to sugar maple
trees in the early spring time
State Standards Addressed:
E & E Standards: Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources (4.2);
Agriculture and Society (4.4); Humans and the Environment (4.8)
Introduction
- Play a taste test
game. Provide each student with samples of artificial maple syrup
and one sample of real maple syrup. Do not identify the real one.
Give each sample a number. Ask the students to taste each sample
and then vote for the number they think is the real maple syrup.
After everyone has voted see how many students were able to identify
the real syrup.
- Discuss ways students
enjoy eating maple syrup. Explain that what is sold as, "maple
flavored syrup" is not true maple syrup. True maple syrup
comes from the maple tree. It takes years for the tree to grow,
plus days of hard work, in cold and muddy weather, to gather and
produce the syrup.
Following the Sap
from Tree to Table
- Use the From
the Woods: Maple Syrup, a Taste of Nature publication
for this section of the lesson. Older students should take turns
reading orally. You will need to read aloud and adapt the information
for younger students. This publication will lay a good foundation
for the remaining activities in the lesson. Read and discuss the
sections "Maple Sugaring Basics," "The Magic Tree,"
and "Making the Syrup."Students should understand that
sap is only 1/50 sugar and the rest is water.
Making Our Own Syrup
and Sugar
- If you have access
to sugar maples in the spring you can do this activity. If you
do not have access, skip to the "No Trees?" section.
- Start this project
by identifying your sugar maple trees. This is best done while
the trees still have their leaves in the summer or fall. Use the
diagram in the publication to assist you and your students. If
your trees do not currently have leaves, they can still be identified,
but you will need to get help from a forester. Your county extension
office can help you locate one.
- The early spring,
when the night temperatures go below 32 degrees F and the day
temperatures go above 32 degrees F, is the time to start gathering
sap.
- Using the drill, make
a hole in the tree at waist height. Drill only 1.5 inches into
the tree.
- Insert spile and hammer
until it is secure.
- Place bucket under
spile. You will see the sap begin to drip. It looks just like
water and it is fun for the students to taste it.
- Check your bucket
every day and empty it.
- The sap should be
kept cold or refrigerated until you can boil it. It will turn
cloudy and spoil if it gets too warm.
- When you are finished
with this activity, remove the spiles.
- Do not attempt to
fill or cover the tap hole, as this could damage the tree. The
tree will heal itself if left alone.
No Trees?
- Use the tree identification
pictures in the publication to observe what the tree would look
like.
- Discuss the pictures
of the tapping and gathering process.
- You can make your
own "sap" to be used for the rest of the lesson.
- Start with the amount
of real syrup you want to make and then add water to it. You will
need to create a ratio of 40 parts water to 1 part syrup. This
will look and taste just like real sap.
Making Syrup and Sugar
- Boil the sap until
most of the water is evaporated and the sap starts turning a light
amber color.
- As the sugar content
gets higher, the sap will bubble and foam.
- Keep stirring.
- Maple producers use
a hydrometer to determine when the syrup is finished. Since you
most likely do not have one, cook the syrup until it will coat
the spoon and that should be close enough.
- Cool some of the syrup
and the students can sample and enjoy it.
- Continue boiling until
the syrup turns to small grains in the bottom of the pot. This
is maple sugar.
Evaluation
While the students are
enjoying their maple treats, ask them to describe the steps that
went into making the syrup. Younger students can draw and number
pictures of the process. Older students can write a diary describing
the journey of a bucket of sap from tree to table.
References
Davenport, Anni, Roy
Adams, and Sanford Smith (2000). From
the Woods: Maple Syrup, a Taste of Nature. University Park,
Pa.: The Pennsylvania State University.
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