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Rainforest Research Questions
  1. Can you discover three rainforest animals you've never heard of before? Write a short report on one of them, telling what it looks like, where it lives in the forest, what it eats, and what—if anything—eats it.
    Hints: jaguarundi, margay, tapir, peccary, hicatee, iguana, gibnut (also called "paca"), coati, kinkajou, jabiru, capybara

  2. What rainforest animal or plant do you think is most interesting? Write a report and then, at the end, sum up the most important things, as if you were writing "stats" for a trading card.
    Hints: howler monkey, margay, red-eyed tree frog, bromeliad, strangler fig

  3. What does the rainforest look like, sound like, smell like, feel like to someone walking through it? Write a story or a report on what you experienced the last time you spent an afternoon in an imaginary rainforest.
    Hints: Did you see animals? Did you hear them? Did you stop for a moment to smell the flowers? What did the trees and other plants look like? Was it hot? Could you see the sun? Did you meet any people?

  4. Discover three useful things that come from the rainforest. How do they grow? How are they harvested? How do they get to the United States?
    Hints: latex (rubber), turpentine, bananas, Brazil nuts, rattan, cinnamon, chili pepper, peanut, quinine

  5. Make a list of "Weird Facts from the Rainforest." Be sure to give a complete, graphic description of each "fact."
    Hints: check out strangler figs, the biggest flower in the world, bromeliads, and liverworts. And, hey, what's so slothful about a sloth?
Creative Homework Ideas
  • Write a fictional account of your last walk through the rainforest. What did you see, smell, hear? Who did you meet? What scared the heck out of you? What beautiful thing would you not have missed for a million dollars?

  • Report on five important products that originate in rainforests. How do they grow? How are they harvested? How are they imported to the United States?

  • What is life like for people who live in rainforests? Describe and then compare indigenous peoples in two different rainforests (for example, a forest in Belize and one in Africa or New Guinea).

  • Write a series of poems on rainforest themes. Try to communicate the strong sensory impressions you would have if you were walking through a rainforest now. How do these sensations affect your emotions? Do they stimulate your intellect? Why is experiencing the rainforest important?

  • Create a portfolio of animals and/or plants that you saw on a (fictional) walk through a rainforest. Stay true to the forest you've chosen (for example, a forest in Belize or one in Africa or New Guinea). Write a caption for each drawing or painting.

  • Create a series of trading cards based on rainforest animals, plants, peoples, and general facts. Create several series, each specific to a particular rainforest. Choose clear illustration and "statistics" formats for each "type" (animal, plant, people, fact)—and stick to them.

  • Document in pictures and writing the wildlife dependent on a single variety of bromeliad or the plants and animals (including micro-organisms) living in/on/beneath a single rainforest tree.

  • How are people in the United States dependent on rainforests? What are we doing to preserve them? Write a report highlighting the rainforest resources that you think are most important to your community.

  • Write a press release for your local newspaper or radio station describing destruction of rainforests today. What are we losing? How? Why? Who is responsible? What can we do about it?

  • Write an editorial or a letter to the editor of your local newspaper. Express as succinctly as you can the importance of rainforests, the dangers they face, and what we might do to preserve them. If your letter sounds good to you, try getting it printed.

  • Write an article on rainforests for your school paper.

  • Make a list of "Weird Facts from the Rainforest"—the weirder the better. Hint: check out rainforest fauna in New Guinea, the biggest flower in the world, strangler figs, bromeliads, and liverworts.

  • Develop a bibliography or resource list for a rainforest topic or rainforests in general—include books, articles, websites, videos, organizations, and anything else you find.

  • Can you sum up what you know about rainforests in one well-written paragraph? What is really most important? How can you best convey the essence of rainforest in a few words? Is this possible? If not, why not? Would another kind of writing make more sense?

  • Create a website on the rainforest. Include both general information and whatever you can learn about rainforest destruction. What kinds of things can people do to save rainforests? Why should they be interested? What kinds of graphic elements should you include? What will attract browsers to your site? Include links to the best rainforest sites you can find.

  • If you were filming a movie or video about the rainforest, what would you include? Create a story board and scout your location (over the Internet or at the library). Write your documentary narrative or screenplay. Create some sample footage (at the zoo, for example, or in a museum—but get permission from institution administrators, first). What would you have to do to get your film funded?

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