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Simple Elementary Hurricane Unit for Kids

July 13, 2021 by Selena Robinson 2 Comments

Hurricane Unit Study
Learn about extreme weather in this hurricane unit study for kids!
Hurricane Unit Study for Kids

It’s the beginning of summer and that’s usually the time that the Atlantic Hurricane Season kicks into high gear.

We’ve been learning about hurricanes for a few weeks, so I thought I’d share a simple hurricane unit for kids that helps students learn about these weather phenomena.

If you like using unit studies, this is a perfect way to talk about wild summer weather!

Simple Hurricane Unit for Kids

Read on to see the list of videos, activities, and resources you can use to teach early elementary students about hurricanes and cyclones. Plus, grab two free printable activities for studying hurricanes too!

For more weather learning, take a look at our list of 15 Weather STEM Activities for kids to try!

This hurricane unit for kids is a perfect way to talk about extreme weather over summer!

How to Use a Hurricane Unit for Kids

I’ve always been fascinated by hurricanes. They’re basically cyclones over water, which is amazing in itself.

They’re incredibly destructive, but the weather phenomena they produce is breathtaking, especially in satellite images.

We had to evacuate a couple of times when I was a kid and I thought it was exciting. As a child, you don’t understand that the possibility of your house being destroyed is not a fun thing.

But I still find the Atlantic Hurricane Season, which runs from June 1 to November 30, to be an interesting time of year for studying extreme weather.

What is a Hurricane for Kids

Watch the video below to learn about hurricanes form. Have your students answer the questions that follow and record their answers on paper.

(The note taking pages at the bottom of this page are perfect for this!)

  1. Where do hurricanes form? (Answer: They form in the warm ocean waters near the Equator.)
  2. How do hurricanes form? (Answer: Warm air above the ocean rises, creating low pressure under the water. Surrounding air rushes into the low pressure area, forming an area of warm, moist low pressure that rises above the water. As air continues to rush in, clouds form. The ocean’s warmth and water vapor causes the clouds and wind to spin.)
  3. How large can hurricanes become? (Answer: Up to 300 miles wide.)
  4. What is the eye of a hurricane? (Answer: The calm center of the storm.)
  5. What is the eye wall of a hurricane? (Answer: The wall of winds that surround the eye. These winds are the most damaging. The eye wall can be up to 30 miles in width.)
  6. What are the rainbands? (Answer: The rain clouds that surround the eye wall. These can be up to 300 miles in width.)
  7. Which hurricane categories are the most dangerous? (Answer: Category 3, Category 4, and Category 5)
  8. How powerful is the energy released by a large hurricane? (Answer: Energy equal to the blast of 10 atomic bombs per second.)
  9. What are hurricanes that form in the Pacific Ocean called? (Answer: Typhoons)

Hurricane Activities for Kids

These are plenty of ways to learn about summer storms! Try some of these elementary hurricane learning activities in your hurricane unit for kids.

  • Label the Hurricane Activity – A printable diagram that displays the parts of a hurricane
  • Hurricane In a Jar – An easy science experiment that demonstrates how hurricanes form
  • Hurricane Comprehension Worksheet – Printable summary of facts about hurricanes
  • Free Printable Hurricane Booklet – A great tool for tracking hurricanes that develop during the season
  • Ridiculous Weather Report – Fun activity for kids who want to create their own weather forecast
  • Hurricane Fill-In-the-Blank Worksheet – A printable report that helps kids understand more about hurricanes
  • Hurricane Tracking Activity – Printable tracking map for hurricanes
  • Hurricane Printable Mini Unit – 16-page printable pack with facts and activities about hurricanes
  • 5th Grade Hurricane Worksheets – Excellent hurricane printables for upper elementary kids with answer key

Hurricane Note Taking Pages

Round out your hurricane unit study with these printable note taking pages! They’re super handy for writing down some of the facts students will learn in this unit.

Just click the image or the link below to get your set free!

Tropical Storm Notebooking Pages

>>>> Tropical Storm Notebooking Pages <<<<

Hurricane Facts Matching Activity

Ready to learn more about different kinds of hurricanes?

This printable hurricane categories matching activity is perfect for introducing students to the Saffir-Simpson scale of hurricane strength.

Along with a brief summary of hurricanes, this activity shows students how to classify each storm’s strength based on its sustained wind speed per hour.

An answer key is also included for easy grading!

To get your copy of this Hurricane Categories Matching Activity, click the image or the link below to have it sent directly to your inbox!

You’ll also get our weekly newsletter – coming this Sunday!

Click here to get your free printable

>>> Hurricane Categories Matching Activity <<<

Want to learn more about weather with kids? Don’t miss these other ideas!

Learn about extreme summer weather with these amazing hurricane books for kids!
These fun weather STEM activities for kids are excellent for simple spring science experiments! Simple enough for home or the classroom!
Teach children how to fingerspell common weather words in sign language with this ASL weather fingerspelling lesson!

Filed Under: Unit Studies Tagged With: homeschool unit studies, hurricanes, science, unit studies, weather

Amazing Hurricane Books for Kids

August 18, 2015 by Selena Robinson 2 Comments

10 Kids' Books about Hurricanes

It’s hurricane season! And we’ve been talking about hurricanes, tropical storms, and tropical depressions with the kids lately. We even got to review a Hurricane Lapbook a few weeks back.

As part of our hurricane studies, I put together a list of kids’ books about hurricanes that are awesome for introducing this topic to children and explaining it in an interesting way.

Check out our picks below! And if you want even more ways to learn about hurricanes, don’t miss our hurricane unit study!

Learn about extreme summer weather with these amazing hurricane books for kids!

Amazing Kids’ Books about Hurricanes

1. Eye of the Storm: A Book about Hurricanes by Rick Thomas

2. Hurricane by David Wiesner

3. Hurricanes by Seymour Simon

4. Hooper Finds a Family: A Hurricane Katrina Dog’s Survival Tale by Jane Paley

5. Tornadoes and Hurricanes! by Cy Armour

6. Hurricane! by Celia Godkin

7. Where Albatross Soar: A Beachside Story of Waves and Storms by Bryan Knowles

8. Read about Hurricanes by Sally Morgan

9. Hurricanes! (First Graphics Wild Earth) by Marcie Aboff

10. The Superstorm: Hurricane Sandy by Josh Gregory

Hurricane Books for Kids

11. Hurricanes: Earth’s Mightiest Storms by Patricia Lauber

12. Zane and the Hurricane: A Story of Katrina by Rodman Philbrick

13. Hurricanes by Gail Gibbons

14. Hurricanes Vs. Tornadoes Vs. Typhoons: Wind Systems of the World by Baby Professor

15. Drowned City: Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans by Don Brown

16. Hurricanes! (Hello Reader) by Lorraine J. Hopping

17. Hurricane Watch! (Let’s Read and Find Out Science 2) by Melissa Stewart

18. Storms by Seymour Simon

19. I Wonder Why Hurricanes Have Eyes (and other questions about natural disasters)

20. Hurricanes (Wild Weather) by Jim Mezzanotte

Amazing Hurricane Books for Kids to Read

Do you have any go-to books about hurricanes that you’ve read with your kids? Share your picks in the comments!

For more hurricane learning ideas, you might also like:

Making a Hurricane Lapbook

Learn about extreme weather in this hurricane unit study for kids!

For more tips to make your kids into readers, check out my Reading for Kids board on Pinterest!

This post is part of The Massive Guide to Homeschool Reading Lists by iHomeschool Network! Click over to read tons of awesome booklists shared by my fellow homeschooling bloggers!

ReadingLists

Fun Science Experiements Every Month

Filed Under: Book Lists, Reading, Science Tagged With: booklists, hurricane books for kids, hurricanes, kids books, science

Hurricane Lapbook Review

July 22, 2015 by Selena Robinson 1 Comment

Making a Hurricane Lapbook

Having lived in the southern U.S. for all of my life, summer is just not summer until you talk about hurricanes. 🙂

When I was a child, I lived closer to the coast and we evacuated a couple of times during the 80s and 90s. Hurricanes Hugo, Andrew, and Floyd are the ones I remember the most. As a kid, those experiences are exciting. As an adult? Not so much.

Now that we live farther inland, we don’t worry about hurricanes to the extent people on the coast do, but they’re still fascinating weather patterns to study. So I was excited when I got the chance to try a hurricane lapbook from Knowledge Box Central!

Using a Hurricanes Lapbook from Knowledge Box Central for Homeschool

Take a look at how you can use this lapbook in your homeschool! And, for more hurricane learning, don’t miss our Hurricane Unit Study!

Disclosure: I received a copy of this resource in exchange for this post. All opinions are my own and I was not required to post a positive review.

Study hurricanes with this awesome hands-on hurricane lapbook for kids!

Hurricane Lapbook Review

After getting the hang of the Math Mini Office Lapbook, this one wasn’t much more work. It’s more involved, but I thought it was pretty fun to assemble. Maybe I’m just a nerd. 🙂

Hurricane Lapbook

I added a hurricane graphic that I got from Wikimedia Commons to the front. Otherwise, I’ll probably forget what it is…lol.

Hurricane Lapbook

Look at that beauty!

When you get a lapbook from Knowledge Box Central, the assembly instructions show you a completed picture of the inside so you can see where everything goes.

Plus, the instructions explain how to put each book together and even suggest when to use colored paper. A huge help for people who tend to get overwhelmed easily (like yours truly).

Hurricane Lapbook

Here’s the inside of the first folder. There are three in all.

Hurricane Lapbook

And the inside of the second folder…

Hurricane Lapbook

And the third!

Hurricane Lapbook

Two of the books in the last folder fold down – including the Pet Plan…

Hurricane Lapbook

…and the Hurricane History book.

Hurricane Lapbook

I usually start a lapbook activity by just giving the kids a chance to explore all of the minibooks. These are all blank inside, so if they want to use them, they’ve got to learn something to write inside!

Knowledge Box Central
Hurricane Lapbook

What makes this lapbook even better is that the PDF includes most of the information you’ll need to teach about hurricanes. So it’s not just a hurricane lapbook – it’s really a mini hurricane unit study.

I just sent the file to my Kindle Fire and let Tigger read from certain sections. Then we’d discuss them together.

Hurricane Lapbook

After learning about some of the most destructive hurricanes in U.S. history, Tigger started filling in the “Hurricane History” minibook at the back of the lapbook. She made notes of the year, the name of the storm, the location it affected, and the level of damage. Some of those storms that struck before the invention of modern radar were truly terrible.

Hurricane Lapbook

Then we flipped back to the beginning of the book and started discussing how meteorologists determine when a storm qualifies to be called a hurricane. We learned about the wind speed requirements for tropical depressions, tropical storms, and hurricanes. Tigger used the information to fill in a minibook.

Hurricane Lapbook

And, of course, she wanted to learn about tornadoes. What child doesn’t? 🙂

The “Tornadoes” minibook is a flip book that has space for kids to record what they learn about each aspect of these destructive storms. One of the supposed “positive” aspects about hurricanes when I was young was that you generally had plenty of time to evacuate. But tornadoes are, of course, another story. Just another reason to take those hurricane watches seriously.

Hurricane Lapbook

The Fujita scale has been revised and it is now called the EF scale. We looked up the wind speed classifications online and Tigger filled in her Tornadoes minibook with what we learned. She couldn’t believe that tornadoes could ever have winds of 200 mph or higher. I think we may do a unit study about tornadoes this year as well. 😉

We loved the Hurricane Lapbook from Knowledge Box Central! We’ll be using it throughout the school year and we’re excited about all the things we’ll be learning!

To get a look at the Hurricane Lapbook and all of the other lapbooks available, visit Knowledge Box Central today!

Want to learn more about weather with kids? Try these other learning ideas!

Learn about extreme summer weather with these amazing hurricane books for kids!

Weather ASL Fingerspelling Practice

Learn about extreme weather in this hurricane unit study for kids!

And see more ideas for homeschool units on my Unit Studies Pinterest board!

Knowledge Box Central

Filed Under: Curriculum Reviews, Homeschooling, Lapbooking Tagged With: hurricanes, lapbooks, weather

Hi! I'm Selena, a teacher and a veteran homeschool mom to four. I'm so glad you're here!
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