I first became interested in adding the Orca to the Waldorf
Man & Animal block when I was doing a consulting project for a client who lives in Australia. She wanted her Zoology blocks to feature only Australian animals.
In case you're curious, here is what we came up with:
Block I: Form
Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama)
tadpoles
Giant Clam (Tridacna gigas)
Giant Gippsland Earthworm (Megascolides australis)
Leopard Seal (Hydrurga leptonyx)
Red Kangaroo (Osphranter rufus)
Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax)
Block II: Function
Platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus)
Orca (Orcinus orca)
Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus)
Cow (Bos taurus, Bos indicus)
I wrote to her:
Marsha Johnson said that the three animals we pick to do in the second block of Man and Animal should represent thinking / feeling / willing as well as nervous system / cardiovascular / metabolic.
I didn't include a social insect -- which Kovacs covers in his Drawing from the Book of Nature -- but it just occurred to me that the Orca is a nice blend of cardiovascular health (apex predator) and social consciousness. So I will focus on the Orca as an intelligent and social creature. It seems to have a lot of Feeling but also Intellect.
Then the Saltwater Crocodile is a blend of the cardiovascular health (still an apex predator, and with a very interesting heart) and the digestive forces of the Cow. It seems like a very willful beast with strong digestive forces!
Platypus - all nervous system
Orca - intelligent, social, lots of caring (thinking + feeling)
Crocodile - strong heart, independent, determined (feeling + willing)
Cow - a placid beast that is nothing but digestion :-)
I also found in my notes this interesting tidbit:
Fun Fact I just learned about the platypus.
It has no stomach!
That's very funny because I chose it as a Nerve/Sense animal but it will tie in at the end with the Cow and the Digestive System. So I would wait to talk about the stomach of the platypus (and the orca and the crocodile... our big carnivores) until we get to the cow. Then we can go back and look at everyone's stomachs. Or lack thereof.
Fast forward to the present, where I am doing the Orca myself in Zoology, as an example of a cardiovascular system animal that is also very intelligent and social. I do so appreciate having my own notes to look back on!
Because there are so many interesting animals (like the Platypus), children get to choose an animal and research and write an Animal Report. That is one of our main projects these last two weeks of the school year, as we wrap up Art History, Philosophy, Fractions, Personal Narratives, and odds & ends.
Here is the Orca booklist that I recommended to her (and will use myself) as well as any references to the Orca that I found in previous blog posts:
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