Step 1: Group discussion
Ask children to work in small groups and ask them to discuss the question “Why do we look at plants?” Hopefully they’ll touch on ideas around survival, such as: the fact that plants give us medicine and food; how we want to avoid poisonous plants; that there are interesting and unusual plants such as carnivorous plants and sensitive plants, etc.
Once you’ve got feedback from the question, ask the children to imagine that they are on an island. On the island there are two very similar plants growing (but not identical); one is very delicious, but the other is poisonous. They have to be able to identify the plants and be able to show and tell their friends the differences between the two plants so that they don’t poison themselves.
Tell the children that, to do this, they have to learn how to – and practise – looking at leaves closely and drawing them very clearly. But not to taste any!
Step 2: Choosing a leaf
The class remain working in their smaller groups. In their small groups they each choose one plant from which to pick a leaf (or, if you’re providing leaves as a teacher, they simply choose a leaf each).
Encourage the children to choose a typical leaf for this plant; not too big or small, and not bug-eaten ones – so that their drawing shows what the leaves normally look like on their chosen plant.
Make sure each group doesn’t pick leaves from the same plant as another group, and that the leaves aren’t too different from each other – for example, as contrasting as a blade of grass and a holly leaf.
Step 3: Sketching from memory
To begin with, ask the children to cover their leaf so that they cannot see it, and then draw what they remember seeing. They can then reveal the leaf and compare their image with it.