Bugs!

Kindergarten–Grade 1

Children can improve their understanding of the natural world and their classification skills by observing bugs.

What You Need

  • Books about insects and spiders—preferably with photographs (for titles, see the list of children's books in the Resources section at the end of this booklet)
  • A magnifying glass

What to Do

  • With your child, search your home and neighborhood for bugs.< !!! > Look for bugs:

    • around your front door
    • in cracks in the sidewalk
    • in gardens
    • at picnic areas
    • on lights
    • in corners of rooms

  • Using the guides, help your child to identify each type of bug that you find, such as ants, spiders, beetles, crickets, bees, flies, butterflies, mosquitoes, moths, wasps or ladybugs.

  • If you find ants, point out that ants work together as a community. Have her observe, for example, what an ant does when it finds a bit of food. Explain that when an ant finds food, it doesn't eat it on the spot. It runs back to the hill to "tell" the other ants. As it runs, it leaves a trail that the other ants can smell. These ants can then find the food by smelling their way along the trail.

  • Find out about spiders:


    • Why do spiders spin webs?

    • What are webs made of?

    • How many pairs of legs do they have?

  • Help your child to think of other ways that she might classify the bugs—for example, by color or by size or by whether they have wings or antennae.


Bugs do what they do to survive. They're constantly looking for food. Bugs can be both helpful and harmful. Termites, for example, have a bad reputation because they destroy houses by eating the wood. But termites have a good side, too. In a forest, they break down dead trees, which keeps the forest floor from becoming too cluttered.


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