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OK, have you ever heard of a bat's egg? No.
Or maybe your grandmother taught you about a bat's egg?
[Clarifies question in local language] So what are you telling me - that a bat lay
eggs? Yes.
So it's a bird? Now I am asking you - myself, I haven't seen
a bat's egg. So what about you - have you ever seen an egg of a bat?
No. I want you to tell me the truth.
[Inaudible class discussion] The bat's don't want to live in the village,
even in the town we have bats. So only one has seen. Where did you see the
egg? [Inaudible]
OK for a bird, let's talk about the birds. How many legs does the bird have?
Two. Exactly.
And how does it move? It flies.
It only flies? No - and walking too.
With what, with how many legs? Two.
OK - and what about a bat? It does nothing.
It goes to a branch and it looks like it's dead.
Let's look at the bat once again. OK, so we are saying that for a bird, it walks
sometimes it walks with two legs right? Yes.
And what about a bat? It can jump.
OK, does the bat have hands? No, oh, yes [lively class discussion]
Mochan, does a bat have hands? No Madam.
It only has legs? OK how many are saying it has hands?
A bat? It does.
Yes, it has hands. No.
Now, we have had a discussion on the bat. So, for today, I will leave it here and what
I would like you to do when you go home, I want you to research more on a bat. Find out
if it has legs, where it lives, how it moves, and what it feeds on, OK?
When you go home, find out about how a bat moves, if it has hands, how it feeds and where
it lives. When you come back the next lesson, you have
to tell me, OK? Find out from your friends, you can ask anyone. OK so this will be your
homework. Hello? Yes, this will be your homework and
then when you come tomorrow, you come and present. Yes.
So that's all for today.