Primary Science Lessons
Year 1
Updated: 2008-07-16
Please send comments to: J.Elfick@uq.edu.au
Suggested answers to
the teacher's questions are shown within [square
brackets]
| Animals and plants |
Living and non-living |
Animals and plants |
Different animals |
Different plants |
Plant
pictures |
Different
leaves |
| Energy |
Knocking sounds |
String
sounds |
Light and shadow game |
Spinning picture |
Mirror
game |
Spinning
top |
| Human body |
Same and different |
Our
height |
Our
fives senses |
Hearing
sounds game
|
Touch and
feel game |
Feelie
bag game |
| Measuring |
Length
game |
Pace distances |
Balanced mobile |
Shapes
game |
Seeds and
seed pods |
Pouring
water game |
| Plants |
Plant
names |
Drink-can garden |
Grow plants from seed |
Roots
and stems |
Plants need sunlight |
Plants
need water |
| Rocks and soils |
Different
rocks |
Plants need soil |
Good soil and bad soil |
Feel
good soil |
Protect
topsoil |
Soil with
a magnifier |
| Substances |
Air
games |
Air
in bags |
Blow soap bubbles |
Falling parachutes |
Drinking straw game |
Air
streams |
Table of contents
1.1 Living and
non-living
1.2 Animals and plants
1.3 Different animals
1.4 Different plants
1.5 Plant pictures
1.6 Different leaves
1.7 Knocking sounds
1.8 String sounds
1.9 Light and shadow game
1.10 Spinning picture
1.11 Mirror game
1.12 Spinning top
1.13 Same and different
1.14 Mark our height
1.15 Our five senses
1.16 Hearing sounds
game
1.17 Touch and feel game
1.18 Feelie bag game
1.19 Length game
1.20 Pace distances
1.21 Balanced mobile
1.22 Shapes game 1 -
compare different shapes
1.23 Shapes game 2
- make new shapes
1.24 Seeds and seed pods
1.25 Pouring water game
1.26 Plant names
1.27 Drink-can garden
1.28 Grow plants from seed
1.29 Roots and stems
1.30 Plants need sunlight
1.31 Plants need water
1.32 Different rocks
1.33 Plants need soil
1.34 Good soil and bad soil
1.35 Feel good soil
1.36 Protect topsoil
1.37 Soil with a magnifier
1.38 Air games
1.39 Air in bags
1.40 Blow soap bubbles
1.41 Falling parachutes
1.42 Drinking straw game
1.43 Air streams
1.1 Living and
non-living
See diagram 9.36: Living and non-living in
a pond
Be able to explain the difference between living things
and non-living things.
Use different living things and nonliving
things.
1. What is the difference between things that are living and things
that
are not living? [Living things 1. need air and water 2. can grow in
size 3. can change shape and 4. can produce baby animals or baby
plants 5. can move by themselves 6. can eat food or make food.
Non-living
things 1. do not need air or water 2. 3. usually remains the same size
and
shape 4. cannot produce a baby 5. cannot move by themselves, and 6.
do not eat food or make their own food. Make a list on the chalk
board.]
2. Were some nonliving things alive in the past? [Yes. For example,
wood
is a nonliving thing, but in the past it was part of a living tree.]
3. Classify the following things into 1. living things 2. nonliving.
[Use * to mark things that were living but are now nonliving.]
| living |
cat |
girl |
fish |
tree |
beetle |
leaf |
potato |
fly |
egg |
seed |
No
living |
pencil * |
stone |
water |
chalk |
wood * |
plastic |
sand |
air |
milk * |
glass |
4. Some examples of living and nonliving things:
Most of our hair is dead but the root of our hair is living.
Water is nonliving but all living things contain water and living
things
such as fish live in water.
Paper is nonliving but they make it from pieces of wood that were once
part of a living tree.
Collect living and nonliving things from the school grounds. Classify
the items as you did in part three of this lesson. Explain how you know
whether something is living or nonliving.
1.2 Animals and plants
See diagram 9.36.4: Animals and plants
Be able to list the characteristics of animals and plants.
Use examples of plants and animals.
1. See, and, perhaps, touch examples of animals and plants:
Animals: cat, dogs, ants, lizards, fish, birds, butterfly, mouse.
Plants: grass, pine trees, bananas, mango, sugar cane, weeds.
Say the name of each plant and animal and where they are found.
2. What are the differences between plants and animals seen in the
class?
Animals can move, plants cannot move but wind or water can carry seeds.
Animals have different colours. Plants leaves are mostly green.
Animals lay eggs or have babies, plants make seeds.
Animals eat plants and other animals. Plants make their food from the
air, the soil, and the sun.
Animals have a head, body and legs, plants have roots, stem and leaves.
Extra Activity:
Play the animal and plant game. Divide the class into pairs. Point
to one child and say "animal" That child has to say something about
animals,
e.g. "they can move". The other child of the pair has to say the
difference
with plants, e.g. "they cannot move".
Nature Walk
How many kinds of plants and animals can you see? Remember that some
funguses, e.g. mushroom, toadstools, bracket fungus on dead trees, are
neither an animal nor a plant.
1.3 Different animals
See diagram: 9.300
Be able to recognize different animals
Use pictures and examples of one of each group:
1. coral, jellyfish, sponge [Coelenterate], 2. flatworm, flukes,
tapeworm [Platyhelminthes], 3. earthworm, leeches, marine bristle worms
[Annelid], 4. snail, slugs, shellfish, oysters, octopus [Mollusc], 5.
starfish, sea urchin, brittle star, sea cucumber [Echinoderm], 6.
mosquito,
butterfly, cockroach, spider, centipede, crab, prawn [Arthropod], 7.
fish
[Bony fish] shark, ray [Elasmobranch], 8. frog, toad, "walking fish",
salamander [Amphibian], 9. lizard, snake, turtle, tortoise [Reptile],
10. parrot, ostrich, kiwi, sparrow, pigeon [Bird], 11. dog, cat, mouse,
rat, flying fox, bat, dolphin, whale [Mammal]
1. Show pictures of animals. What other animals do you know?
2. Can you describe the different kinds of animals?
[1. Live in the sea, small, may have a stony wall, can sting, 2.
Live in the ground or inside you, very flat and small, 3. Live in the
ground or rock pools, body divided into rings, 4. Have a shell, a
slimy
foot, eyes on stalks, 5. Live in the ocean, body divided into five
parts,
hard skin, 6. Live on the land, have jointed legs, hard skins, some
can
fly, 7. Live the sea or river, have a skeleton, have scales or a tough
skin, 8. Have soft wet skin, can swim and jump, lay eggs in fresh
water, 9. Have legs and scales, dry skin, lay eggs on the ground, 10.
Have
feathers and scaly legs, can fly, lay eggs in the nest, 11. Have hair,
soft skin, four legs, warm body]
Extra Activity:
Make a wall chart of the different animals.
2. Take the children for a nature walk. How many different animals
can you find?
1.4 Different plants
Be able to recognize some features of different plants.
Use different kinds of plants for this lesson.
Some plants should be weeds and some plants should have parts you can
eat,
e.g. potato.
1. How do you recognize plants? [Plants have green leaves, live in
sunlight, do not eat food but they make their food from the air and the
soil, they cannot move but their seeds can move, they have baby plants
inside seeds.]
2. How are plants different from each other? [Some plants are very
big and some are very small, some are hard and woody. Some are soft and
can be bent, some have flowers and some have no flowers, some have
fruit
you can eat. Some plants have no fruit that you can eat.]
3. Name the plants you know.
4. Hold up different plants and point to them. Is it a plant? Is it
big or is it small? Is it hard and woody, or is it soft and can be
bent?
Does it have flowers? Does it have fruit you can eat?
Extra Activity:
1. Take the children for a nature walk. How many different kinds of
plants can you find?
2. Collect plants to bring back to the classroom and describe.
1.5 Plant pictures
Be able to make different shapes using flowers and leaves.
Use leaves and flowers.
Leaf and Flower Pictures. Children become more familiar with the shapes
of leaves and flowers when they can use them to make shapes.
1. Give each pair different leaves and flowers. Describe the shapes
of different leaves and flowers, e.g. big and round flower, long and
fat
leaf.
2. Use the leaves and flowers to make shapes: Can you make a house?
Can you make a boy or girl? Can you make a boat?
Extra Activity:
1. For the next lesson, bring leaves and flowers from home. You will
have a competition for the best leaf and flower picture.
1.6 Different leaves
See diagram 9.66.2: Different leaves
Be able to describe different leaves.
1. Each group go outside to collect many different leaves from all
kinds of plants.
2. Count the number of different types of leaves each group collected.
1. Are all the leaves the same shape and size? Describe the
differences.
2. Are all the leaves green? [No.] Name the other colours.
3. Name some different trees and describe their leaves.
[Leaves are the factories in the plant to for make food. Most leaves
are green. They have veins that bring water to the leaves from the
roots.
Also, veins carry food made by the leaves to the other parts of the
plant.
Some leaves have parallel veins and others have a network of veins. A
simple
leaf is in one piece. It has one leaf blade only which you may divide
into
sections that are not completely separate. A compound leaf has many
separate
leaflets. Each leaflet has a separate stalk, but all the leaflets are
joined
to a common leaf stalk.]
1.7 Knocking sounds
Be able to make different sounds by knocking things
together,
identify sounds that are loud or soft, high or low. Which musical
instruments
make sounds by knocking things together? [Drum, bells, xylophone.]
Use things that children can hit together:
pencils,
cardboard boxes, knife or other metal object, bottles, rulers, tins.
Also,
collect some musical instruments: bells, drums, rattles.
1. Knock together pairs of the same thing, e.g. two pencils together
or two boxes together, to make a soft sound and a loud sound. Then
knock
together pairs of different things, e.g. a pencil and a tin, a marble
and
a box, a ruler against a tin.
2. Make as many different knocking sounds as you can. Which group
can make the greatest number of different knocking sounds?
3. Sounds Game
Take turns in shutting your eyes and guessing what two things are being
knocked together by other members of the group.
4. Fill a bottle with water and hit with a metal object such as a
knife. Listen to the sound. Pour out some water and hit the bottle
again.
Is the sound the same? [It sounds a higher note.] Keep pouring out
water
and hitting the bottle until it is empty.
5. Ring a bell and let the children touch it. Hit a drum and let the
children touch the skin. Say "hum" for a long time and put your finger
on your throat. What can you feel? [The bell, the drum skin, and the
throat
are moving in and out, you are vibrating.] Hit the drum then push your
hand on it. Or ring the bell then grab it tightly. What happens? [The
sound
stops.]
Extra Activity:
1. Which musical instruments make sound by hitting? [Drum, rattles,
bells, castanets.]
2. Keep very quiet. Then tell the children to describe all sounds
they heard when they were quiet.
3. Make simple musical instruments.
1.8 String sounds
See diagram 4.97.1 | See
diagram: 26.2.1
Be able to make sounds from a ruler and rubber band, show
how to change the sounds made by strings.
Use rulers, rubber bands, open tins.
1. Hold a ruler flat on the desk with about half of it over the edge.
Make a musical sound by pulling up the end of the ruler and letting it
go. Press down firmly on the part of the ruler over the desk with one
hand
then pull up the part that hangs over the edge with the other hand.
2. Does the ruler move? [Yes.] Does it make a sound? [Yes.] Can you
hear the sound when the ruler stops moving? [No.] Change the length of
the ruler over the edge. Pull it up and let it go again. Is the sound
the
same as before? [No.]
If the length of the ruler over the edge is longer or shorter, is the
sound higher or lower? [The shorter the length over the edge, the
higher the note.]
3. Stretch rubber bands between tour fingers then pluck them to make a
sound.
4. Make a guitar by stretching rubber bands around an open box or a
drink-can or a big plastic drink bottle cut in half lengthways. Pluck
the rubber bands to make them vibrate and make a sound.
5. Use long and a short rubber band which have the same width. Which
rubber band vibrates quicker? [The shorter rubber band vibrates
quicker] Which rubber band gives the higher musical note? [The shorter
rubber band gives the higher musical note.]
6. Use a thin and a fat rubber band which have the same length.
Which rubber band vibrates quicker? [The thin rubber band vibrates
quicker.] Which rubber band gives the higher musical note? (The
thin rubber band gives the higher musical note.]
Extra Activity: Which musical instruments make music in a similar way
to the rubber band or ruler? [Guitar, jew's harp.] How do you make the
sounds louder or softer? [Pluck the string harder.] How do you make the
sounds higher or lower? [Make the string shorter or longer.]
1.9 Light and shadow game
See diagram 4.105.3.1 | See diagram 4.105.3 ( "full shadow" = umbra,
"half shadow" = penumbra)
Be able to show how to make shadows, play
games with
shadows,
recognize the light is necessary to make shadows.
Use a bright sunny day and level ground, a stick
one metre long. The Jumping on Shadows game is best played in the early
morning or late afternoon when shadows are long.
1. Play the jumping on shadows game. Fix a stick in the ground that
measures one metre above ground
level. Put a small stone on the end of the shadow of the stick every
half
hour during the day. At the end of the day see where the shadow has
been.
2. Stand so that your shadow is: in front of them, behind them.
3. Touch your shadow, jump on your shadow, shake hands with your
shadow,
catch shadows on your hands.
4. Work in groups and try to make shadows with four arms and four
legs, six arms and six legs.
5. Show how to form shadows of animals with your hands such as
butterflies
and birds. Hold your hands about 50 cm above the ground. Let the
children
try in pairs.
Draw around the shadows with sticks. How can you make shadows bigger
or smaller by moving your hands? [The closer the hands are to the
ground,
the smaller the shadow.]
6. Put a stone on the ground. Show that you can make the shadow of
your hands touch it. Walk away from the stone so that the shadow hand
still
touches it.
7. Draw a circle about five metres across on the ground. Choose four
children
to show how the game is played. One is the chaser. The other five run
around
within the circle. The chaser has to jump on the shadow of another
children
and shout "STOP". That child then leaves the circle until the game is
over.
The last child caught becomes the chaser in the next game.
Extra Activity: What is needed to make shadows outside? [The sun, and
an object that stops the light from the sun reaching the ground, e.g. a
stone, but not a piece of glass. The stone is opaque but the glass is
transparent.]
Why are there no shadows on a dull day? [The sun is covered by cloud.]
Can clouds have shadows? [Yes.] Can you see your shadow in the shade or
when you are standing under a tree? [No.] What kind of day do you need
to see shadows? [A sunny day.] What does your shadow look like? [Draw
it
with chalk on the ground.] How can you make the shadow of your hand on
the ground bigger or smaller? [The shadow is smallest when your hand is
closest to the ground.] What do you need to make shadows inside the
house?
[A light and an object.] Show the shadow of your hand on the wall. Can
you make funny shadows on the wall? [Use your hand to make a dog shadow
and a use two hands to make a butterfly shadow.] What are shadows? [If
you put an opaque object in the path of the light, it blocks the light
that
hits it. Because light does not bend or go around corners, the area
behind
the object will receive no light and be dark. The dark area will have
the
same shape as the object. The dark area is the shadow. Light from the
sun
causes all opaque objects to form shadows. Other sources of light, e.g.
candles and torches, can also form shadows.]
1.10 Spinning picture
See diagram 4.142.1
Be able to make a spinning picture so that
two separate
pictures appear as one.
You will need: pieces of light cardboard, scissors, coloured pencils
or paints or crayons, reel of cotton thread or thin string. Suggested
Pictures:
FRONT/ BACK A bird in a / cage. A pig behind a / fence. A fish in a /
bowl.
A boy in a / tree. The picture on the back must be upside down. The
piece
of cardboard should be about 10 cm X 8 cm. When the card is spinning
very
fast an image of each picture forms in our eyes at the same time so you
see the two pictures as one.
1. Give out the materials to them.
2. Show your completed spinning picture to them. Show how to make
it spin.
3. Draw the first picture on one side of the card, draw the second
picture, upside down, on the other side of the card. Make two holes on
each side of the card, thread and tie cotton into these holes.
4. Spin the cards by pulling outwards on the string.
5. If you spin the card slowly how many pictures do you see? [2. ]
If you spin the card quickly how many pictures do you see? [1. ]
Extra Activity: A moving picture can be made by drawing a figure in
different positions on successive pages of a book. Where you flick
through
this book, the figure appears to move. This is how movies work.
1.11 Mirror game
See diagram 4.109.1
Be able to see things by using a mirror.
Use mirrors and some objects like bottle tops,
stones, flowers, pencils.
1. Give out one mirror to each group. Look at the edge of the mirror.
Describe what you see. [A piece of glass with one side covered by
silver
paint.]
2. Reflect the light from the sun to make it shine on the classroom
room. Do not let the children shine the mirror into their eyes.
3. Write these numbers on the chalk board. Tell the children to look
at them with their mirrors: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Which
numbers
look the same in the mirror? [0, 1, 8.]
4. Write these letters on the chalk board. Tell the children to look
at the letters with their mirrors: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R
S T. Which letters look the same in the mirror? [A, H, I, M, O, T.]
5. Look into the mirror and touch one eye with your finger. Which
eye is touched when you look in the mirror? [If you touch your right
eye,
this eye appears to be on the left side of the face in the mirror. The
image is laterally inverted.]
6. Play the mirror game. One child lies on top of the desk and holds a
mirror to see under it.
Another child holds different objects under the desk and the child
holding
the mirror has to say what they are.
Extra Activity: Two Mirrors Game
One child sits very still with one mirror in each hand. Put a small
object or piece of paper on the back of the neck. The child has to use
two mirrors to see what is on the back of the neck.
1.12 Spinning top
Be able to make a spinning top and spin it for a long
time.
Use a spinning top, bottle tops, nails, a hammer, thin
pieces
of stick, large thorns, used matches or coconut, brooms, stiff
cardboard,
large seed pods.
When in action a spinning top balances but when it stops
spinning it loses balance and the top falls over.
1. Show your completed spinning top. Show how to make it spin. Give
each child a bottle top, a nail and a piece of stick. Punch a hole in
the
bottle top using the nail and something heavy. Push the stick through
the
hole. Try to spin the top. Does the spinning top fall over? [No.] When
does it fall over? [When it stops spinning.] The spinning top balances
but when the top stops spinning it falls over.
2. Spinning Top Game. Who can make their top spin the longest? Can
you make the top spin in the palm of your hand? On your finger? Stand
on
one leg, raise your heel and keep your arms folded. How long can you
balance?
Let the children to do it again but this time let the children wave
your
arms. How long can you balance? [you can balance longer if you are
allowed
to wave our arms.]
1.13 Same and different
Be able to observe how we are the same and how we are
different.
This lesson is designed to help young children to make
controlled observations about other children.
1. Children sit on the floor together and later break into two groups
at different ends of the classroom. In what ways are you all the same?
[A.
We all have the same physical features: two eyes, one nose, two ears,
two
arms, two legs, etc.] [B. We all have the same needs: eating,
breathing,
drinking, sleeping, going to the toilet] [C. We all have the same
kinds
of feelings: happy, sad, interested, bored.]
2. In what ways are you different? [A. We can be boy or girl. We can
have different
height, hair length, eye colour, skin colour.] [B. We are all always
breathing
but we have the other needs at different times.] [C. We have
different
feelings at different times.]
3. What differences are easy to see? [Physical differences, e.g. tall
or short.] Which children are short? Which children are tall? Which
children
have curly hair? Which children have straight hair? Describe all them
in
the class.
4. Play the Difference Game. Call out a difference and point to one
end of the classroom. Those children run to the place where you point.
The other children run to the other end of the classroom. For example,
call out: "girl" or "curly hair" or "two eyes" or "wears a dress" or
"wears
shoes" or "is breathing" or "is sleeping" or "is happy" or "does not
listen"!
Did you always run to the end of the classroom? [No] When were all them
the same and when were they different? [For some things, e.g.
breathing,
we are all the same but for many things we are different]
Extra Activity: Look at the palms of the hands. Draw the lines. Do
some children have the same lines? Which children have the same lines?
Which children have different lines?
1.14 Mark our height
Be able to mark our height on the wall for further
measurement.
1. Find a place in the classroom where you can mark heights of
children
with a ball point pen or felt pen. You must have permission to draw on
the school wall for this purpose.
2. Whole class in pairs. Knowing how to mark their heights to see
how you grow is important. Show the children how to stand against the
wall:
feet together, heels against the wall, back against the wall, hands to
the sides, head against the wall, look straight out. Show the children
how to measure the height using a book or a ruler at right angles to
the
wall, mark the wall with their initials and write the date.
3. Practice measuring the height of other children. Mark their height
on a wall at home.
1.15 Our five senses
See diagram 1.13
Be able to investigate the properties of things by using
the five senses: sight, smell, taste, hearing, touch.
Use suitable objects such as pineapple or other
fruit, or jam, sugar, water or kerosene. Be careful about asking the
children
to taste things.
1. Play the senses game. Show a drink or a fruit. Can you describe it?
What does it look
like? [Sight.] What part of the body do you use for seeing? [Eyes.]
What
part of the body do you use for smelling? [Nose.] Describe the taste.
What
part of the body do you use for tasting? [Tongue.] What part of the
body
do you use for hearing? [Ear.] What does it feel like? [Touch.] What
part
of the body do you use for feeling? [Skin.]
2. Repeat the other steps using other objects. Use your five senses
on other objects.
Extra Activity:
Play the blindfold game. One child closes the eyes or has a blindfold.
Give the child a fruit.
Tell me what it is without looking at it but using the other senses.
Repeat
the game with other things, e.g. describe a piece of chalk using the
five
senses.
1.16 Hearing sounds
game
See diagram: 26.4.4
Be able to recognize and describe the sounds.
Use some objects that make different sounds
when hit, e.g. glass, spoon, bell, drum. Also, collect two bottles. One
bottle should be full of water.
1. The ear is in two parts, the outer ear and the inner ear.
2. Feel your outer ear. Can you move your ears? [Yes, when you raise
your eyebrows.] Can animals turn their ears? [Yes, cats and dogs can
turn
their ears.] 3. The inner ear contains a little piece of skin called
the ear drum.
Close your mouth, hold the nose closed, then try to blow your nose. The
funny feeling comes from the eardrum. Never put sticks or pencils in
your
ears because this will damage the eardrum.
4. Tap the desk and then keep tapping and press your ear on the desk.
What do you hear? [The sound is louder when your ear is on the desk.]
Tap the back of the hand. Press the hand against one ear and tap again.
What did you hear? [The sound is louder when your hand is pressed
against
your ear.]
Tap an empty bottle, keep tapping and pour in water. What do you hear?
[The sound was high but it gets lower as you put more water in.]
5. Play the hearing sounds game. Tap different objects with a spoon and
listen to the sounds. Turn
around
so you cannot see what is tapped. Tap different objects again. Can you
remember the sound? Can you say what was tapped without looking?
Extra Activity:
1. Bend your ears into the smallest size. 2. Draw ears from two
children.
Are they the same shape?
1.17 Touch and feel game
See diagram: 9.243
Be able to describe the touch of different objects and
say which parts of the body are the most sensitive.
Use objects that are hard, soft rough, smooth,
wet, dry, light, heavy, e.g. stone, cotton, sandpaper, nylon, fishing,
damp soil, dry chalk, feathers, lead sinkers.
1. Play the touch and feel game.
Put a pile of different objects on the floor. Let a group sit
around
it. Hold up an object that is hard, soft, rough, smooth, wet dry,
light,
heavy.
2. Each child to pulls out a few hairs. Touch the following points
of the body: tip of tongue, finger tips, corner of the mouth, inside
the
lip, tip of the nose, palm of hand, the heel, back of hand, the
forearm,
upper arms, the middle of the back. Can you feel the hair at all these
places? Where can you feel the touch of the hairs best and worst?
[Usually
in the order above, "best" is on the tip of the tongue and "worst" is
on
the middle of the back.]
3. Play the two hairs game. One child closes the eyes. Another child
touches a part of the body
with one or two hairs. Can the child point to where the body was
touched?
Was it one hair or two? [When the hairs touch close together, they feel
like one hair.]
Extra Activity: Close the eyes and touch the cheek with each object.
Hold the palm of the hand very close to the cheek but not touching it.
Can you feel the heat from the cheek?
1.18 Feelie bag game
Be able to feel and recognize things using the sense of
touch.
Use a feelie bag for each group and small
objects
like shells, matchsticks, bottle tops, nuts etc. Put them in the feelie
bags so they cannot see the objects.
1. Play the feelie bag game. This game is not a guessing game: you must
1. describe what you feel,
e.g. "it feels soft", "it feels round" 2. then say what they think
the
object is, e.g. "it is a bottle top". 2. Put your hand in the feelie
bag
and feel an object. Describe it to the class. What do they think the
object
is? Take out your hand. 3. Let the children take turns to reach into
the
feelie bag, describe the feeling of one object, then say what they
think
it is, then take the object out and show it to the other children.
4. When all the objects have been taken out, put them in again and
play the game again.
Extra Activity: Collect pairs of small objects, e.g.
two pencils, two marbles etc. Put one of each pair in the feelie bag
and
the other on the floor. Give one child the feelie bag, but not looking
at the objects on the floor, ask that child to describe an object in
the
bag, another child has to pick out the same object from the collection
on the floor.
1.19 Length game
See diagram 2.1.0: Length 1 | See
diagram 2.1.1: Length 2
Be able to conserve length by showing that the position
of two sticks does not change their size.
Young children do not conserve length. They do not
understand
that an object can only get longer or shorter by adding something to it
or taking
something away. They think that an object can change in length when
they change its position. Before their children start measurement, they
must think like
this: "It looks longer in that position, but it cannot be longer
because
I did not add anything to it", or "It looks shorter in that position,
but
it cannot be shorter, because I did not take anything away from it".
The
following test will help you to know if their children are thinking
like
this. The answer to every question is "yes". You will need for each
group:
two sticks, equal in length, 15 cm long, or two pencils
equal
in length.
children.
1. Put the two sticks side by side, with a space between them. Are
the sticks the same length? [Yes] If the child answers "No", let the
child
pick up the sticks, compare them, and then put the sticks back in the
same
position. If the child answers "Yes", move one stick about 4 cm to the
right. Tell the child again: "Are the sticks the same length?" If the
answer
is "No", ask "Which is longer?" and "Why is it longer?" Let the child
compare
the sticks. If the child answers "Yes", tell the child "Why?" The child
should always answer "Yes, the sticks are still the same length, only
their
position has changed".
3. Repeat the question but move one stick to the right and the other
stick to the left.
4. Now move the sticks at right angles to each other when you change
their position from that shown in No. 1.
5. Tell the child: "Are the sticks the same length?" [Yes] Put one
stick standing up instead of moving it sideways. "Are they still the
same
length?" [Yes]
6. Get eight sticks of chalk or pencils that all have the same length.
Put them in two equal rows. When them are sure that the two rows are
the
same length then arrange the sticks in the following way. "Are the two
rows the same length" [Yes] "Explain their answers." [If them think
that
one row is longer than the other, replace the sticks in the original
position]
Extra Activity: You can repeat this game by moving the sticks into
the following position.
1.20 Pace distances
Be able to measure distances consistently using paces.
Before the lesson, find a medium sized child and tell
the child to walk ten paces in a straight line. Mark this distance
inside
or outside the
classroom and mark two lines at right angles to it at the start and
finish. Make sure them can count to twenty. Find two trees about
fifteen
child's paces apart.
1. Line up them on the start. Walk steadily for ten steps, then stop.
2. Show the children the finish line. Some have stopped before it
and some have stopped past it. Start again. You have to walk ten even
paces
and stop on the finish line. Let the children do this many times until
you all have the same size paces.
3. Pacing Game:
Divide the class into two groups. Send each group to a tree. Call out
the name of one child in each group. When you say "go", the child walks
towards the other tree counting the paces. The winners walk the same
number
of paces.
4. Divide the class into two groups outside the classroom door. Each
group walks around the classroom in different directions and counting
paces
until they come back to the door. Is the number of paces the same?
Extra Activity: What is the length in paces of the football field,
cricket pitch, a school playground? How many paces from school to
home?
1.21 Balanced mobile
See diagram 2.1.5: Mobiles
A mobile is made of several balances. Make a mobile with sticks,
cardboard
shapes and small objects. When it is finished, hang it from the ceiling
of the classroom.
1. Start by making balance A. Find a point on the stick where it will
balance. Tie the string at that point.
2. Take a longer stick to make B. Tie A to one side of it and another
object to the other side.
3. Make C as you have done A.
4. Tie B and C to a longer stick. Tie a string to this stick so that
it will all balance. Why are all the strings not tied at the centres of
the sticks?
Extra activity: Make a mobile using leaves and flowers.
1.22 Shapes game 1 - compare different shapes
See diagram 2.1.2: Shapes and order
Be able to compare different shapes and put them in order
of size.
For each group in the class cut out two cardboard squares
with sides 10 cm. On one square draw and label the shapes A, B, C, D,
E,
F, and G as in the diagram. You can also colour them different colours.
Cut out each shape.
1. Give each group a plain cardboard 10 cm square and a pile of the
seven shapes A to G. Let the children play with them.
2. Are C and E the same size or different? [They are the same size
because one shape can fit exactly on top of the other.] Can you use C
and
E to make D? [Yes, they can fit together to make D, see diagram 2.]
3. Are C and D the same size or different? [C is smaller than D.]
4. Are E and F the same size or different? [E is smaller than F.]
Can you use C and E to make F? [Yes, they can fit together to make F,
see
diagram 4. .]
5. Are C and G the same size or different? [G is bigger than C.] Can
you use C and E to make G? [Yes, they can fit together to make G, see
diagram 5. .]
6. Are D and F the same size or different? [D and F are the same size
because D is equal to C and E, and F is equal to C and E]
7. Are D, F, and G the same size or different? [D, F and G are the
same size.]
8. Can you make A using three smaller shapes? [Yes, you can make A
with F and C and E, see diagram 8. .]
9. Can you arrange the shapes in order of size on the desk? [Yes,
largest A and B, medium-sized are D, F and G, smallest is C and E.]
10. Can you fit all the shapes together on top of this shape, the
plain cardboard square? [Yes, see diagram 10. .]
Extra Activity: 1:
The names of the shapes
Square (D) has four sides
and the four corners. The angles are the same. Triangle (C, E, G) has
three sides and three angles which may be the same or different.
Parallelogram
or "squashed square" (F) has four sides and the four corners. The
opposite
angles are the same.
Extra Activity: Find the following shapes in the classroom and in the
school buildings - square, triangle, parallelogram (squashed square).
1.23 Shapes game 2
- make new shapes
See diagram 2.1.3: Shape 1 | See
diagram 2.1.4: Shape 2
Be able to put together three simple shapes to form new
shapes and describe them.
For each group you will need to cut out the same shapes
as in year one. The shapes are A and B, two large triangles, G, one
medium
triangle, C and E, two small triangles, D, one square, F, one "squashed
square" (parallelogram)
1. Give each group three of the shapes and then describe the new shape.
2. The combinations of shapes are:
E, C, A., see diagram 2. C, F, D., see diagram 3. Select other
shapes to combine.
1.24 Seeds and seed pods
See diagram 9.113.1: Bean pods
Be able to identify, collect and classify seed pods and
classify seeds in order of size.
Use a large collection of seed pods. Collect
seed pods before the lesson. Find many different kinds and keep two of
each kind. Look for big and small, hard and soft seed pods.
1. How many different kinds of seed pods have their group collected?
Put all the seed pods on the desk.
Which group has collected the most seed pods?
2. How many different kinds of seed pods have you collected?
Which group has the shortest seed pod?
Which group has the longest seed pod?
3. Arrange all the seed pods in a line in order of length, the longest
at one end and the shortest at the other. Each group hold up its
longest
seed pod.
4. Arrange all their seed pods in a line in order of width, the widest
at one end and the narrowest at the other.
Which group has the widest seed pod?
Which group has the narrowest?
5. Open their seed pods and look at the seeds inside. How many seeds
can you find in the pod? Which seed pods contain the largest seeds?
Which
seed pods contain the smallest seeds? Take out the seeds. Arrange their
seeds in order of size. Find the biggest seed, the smallest seed and
the
medium-sized seed.
Extra Activity: Seed Collection: Collect different seeds in a glass
jar.
1.25 Pouring water game
Be able to estimate how much water and sand in different
containers.
Use tins and bottles of different sizes, clean
sand, water.
1. Show three containers A, B, C. Show the height of sand or water
in container A. container B, and container C.
2. Point to the height on the other containers where the water or
sand would reach if poured into them from container B.
3. Give out three containers to pairs of children.
4. Play the pouring water game.
4.1 One container has water or sand in it.
4.2 One child points to the height on an empty container, the other
child pours to see if the height is correct.
4.3 Let the children try to guess the height for different containers.
4.4 Pour B into A, A into C, C into B. Has the volume changed? [No,
the volume has not changed. However, the same amount of water or sand
is
at different heights in the containers.]
Extra Activity: Fill two containers with the same amount of water or
sand. Fill the third container with either more or less than that
amount.
Which two containers have the same amounts of water or sand?
1.26 Plant names
See also: Plant names
Be able to state the correct names of garden crops using
the local names.
Before this lesson, visit the local market. Note all the
food plants being sold and where they were grown. Make sure that they
know
the local name and an English name for each food plant, e.g. sweet
potato,
yam, potato yam, taro, Chinese taro, banana, sago, giant swamp taro,
cassava,
sugar cane, chilli, breadfruit, winged bean, green snake bean, choko,
pumpkin,
bitter cucumber, snake gourd, mango, guava, papaya, pineapple, lemon,
orange,
pomelo, granadilla, soursop, five corners, tumeric, ginger, lemon
grass,
watercress, cabbage, aibika, sweet potato, taro, yam, cassava, corn
(maize)
sugar cane, rice, beans, hibiscus cabbage (aibika) pumpkin, chilli,
coconut.
Collect examples of crops and prepare to take the children for a walk
in
the garden. Ask a farmer to give you all the correct names.
Be able to recognize all the food plants in the market,
state where they come from and for what they are used.
1. Take the children to the market or bring food plants to the
classroom.
What are the names of the food plants? Where do they come from? Can you
eat them? Can you cook them?
2. Let the children talk to some sellers if they do not know the
answers.
3. Return to school. How many food plants have they remembered?
Extra Activity: Note all the different food plants in your home and
home gardens. The next day, ask the children to tell you their
names.
1.27 Drink-can garden
See diagram 9.125.2
Be able to grow seeds
in drink-cans and watch them grow.
Use bean seeds and corn (maize) grain, two for
each child, water, watering tins with holes in the bottom, good garden
soil, containers, e.g. tins, coconut shells, wide bamboo, chalk boxes,
plastic bottles.
1. Give each child a container. Make holes or splints in the bottom
so that water can pass through. Fill the container nearly to the top
with
soil.
2. Give each child two seeds. Plant each seed 2 - 3 cm deep in the
soil, then pour water onto the soil in the tins.
3. Look at your plants each day and notice any changes that take
place.
Keep the soil damp.
4. Which seeds grow the fastest? [Beans grow faster than corn
(maize).]
Why do you put water on the soil? [To make the seeds grow.]
Extra Activity: Plant out when the plants are too big for the cans.
Dig a hole, fill it with water and let it drain. Hold the can upside
down
with one finger each side of the stem. Hit the bottom of the can
sharply.
The plant and soil will fall out into your hand. Put the soil and plant
in the hole carefully without damaging the roots.
1.28 Grow plants from seed
See diagram 9.113.1: Grow seeds
Be able to describe the changes in seeds when they
germinate.
Use seeds of beans or corn or any large seed,
coffee jars or any large containers, wet soil, paper. Allow a few days
for this activity.
Give each group three seeds.
1. Describe the shape, colour and size of the seeds.
2. Each group plants the seed in a jar. Plant the seeds close to the
wall of the jar.
3. Observe the seeds every day. When do the roots appear? When does
the first shoot begin to grow? Does the seed become bigger or smaller?
4. When the seeds have germinated, show the different parts.
Extra Activity: Grow some corn in the home garden. Describe what
happened
to the seed in your garden.
1.29 Roots and stems
See diagram 9.53.5: Different stems
Be able to recognize different roots and stems and
classify
them.
Use different kinds of roots and stems.
1. Show the plants. Can you see the roots? [They are very thin.] Can
you see the stem? [Stems are usually above the ground. Leaves and roots
are joined to stems.] Some plants have underground stems where food is
stored, e.g. ginger, sweet potato, taro, yam.
2. Take the children outside. Find 1. a woody stem, e.g. Eucalyptus,
mango, sugar cane, coconut 2. soft stem, e.g. pumpkin 3. Grass
stems
have overlapping leaf bases, e.g. grasses, rice, banana, corn (maize).
3. Look at the roots of a small tree and a grass. How are they
different?
[A small tree has a tap root, but grass has lots of little roots.]
Extra Activity: Make a classroom display of different kinds of roots
and stems.
1.30 Plants need sunlight
See diagram 9.145.1: Silver paper over leaf
Be able to show that plants need sunlight.
Use a young plant growing in the ground or in
a tin or half coconut. Also, you will need a box or tin with a hole cut
in the side.
1. What are the differences you notice between day and night? [Hotter
/ colder and sunlight / no sunlight.]
2. Where do the hotness and light come from? [The sun.]
3. Do you need the sun? [Yes, to warm us and give us light to see
things.]
4. Do plants need the sun? [Yes, they need the light and warmth to
make them grow.]
5. How can you show that plants need sunlight?
[5.1 Plants do not grow well in shade.]
[5.2 Set up an experiment to observe what happens when plants do not
have sunlight.]
6. Plant growing towards the light. Put the box with the
hole in the side over the plant. After a few days the plant grows
towards
the light. Draw the plant growing towards the light.
7. Leave a stone or piece of wood on the grass. Look under it after
a few days. What do you see? [The grass becomes yellow when it loses
its
green colour. Later the grass dies.]
Extra Activity: Do any plants grow better in the shade? [Young plants
need some shade to protect them from the hot sun but they cannot grow
in
the dark.]
1.31 Plants need water
Be able to show that plants
need water.
Use plants that wilt easily, growing in tin
cans or half coconuts or in the ground. Take some juicy stems or leaves
to the classroom.
1. Show the juicy stems or leaves. Squeeze them until some juice comes
out. What is coming out? [Water.] Plants contain lots of water.
2. How do you show that plants need water? [Set up an experiment. Give
some plants water and the others no water. The plants given no water
will
droop down. It will wilt.]
3. Draw two plants:
One plant given plenty of water
One plant that has wilted because it was given no water
4. Can plants die because of too much water? [If there is too much
water in the soil, the roots cannot breathe and the plant will die.]
Extra Activity: Pour some water in the soil and then dig down to see
where it went.
1.32 Different rocks
Be able to describe different rocks, make up groups of
rocks with the same property, and put a new rock in one of those
groups.
Use 1.1 rounded stones from rivers, 1.2 pieces
of gravel that are small stones with sharp edges often used to make
roads, 1.3 pieces of stone showing layers, 1.4 pieces of stone showing
crystals, 1.5 stone that makes a mark when rubbed on paper. you call
this streak.
You will also need paper, nails and a magnifier for each group. You
will
need enough rocks so that each group of children has the same kinds of
rocks. You can break a big rock into pieces by wrapping it in a cloth
then
hitting it with a hammer.
1. Give each group each kind of stone 1. to 5. and a magnifier.
Is the stone hard or soft? Can you break it into pieces? Can you
scratch
it with a nail?
What colour is the stone?
Is the stone made of layers?
Is the stone shiny or dull? [It may contain shiny crystals.]
Does the stone feel smooth or rough?
Rub the stone on a piece of paper. What colour does it make on the
paper?
Extra Activity: Stone Sculptures. Show how to rub or cut soft stone
into different shapes.
1.33 Plants need soil
Be able to show that plants need good soil to grow well.
Use examples of plants growing in good garden
soil and plants growing in poor sandy or gravel soil with little
organic
matter.
1. Show plants growing in good and bad soil. What differences can
you? [Differences in the size of the plant, whether there are flowers
or
fruits, size of the fruit, any diseases.]
2. Why do plants need soil? [Soil is needed to hold the plants up,
to give the plants water, and to give the plants food.]
3. What are the three things all plants need to make them grow well?
[Sunlight, water, good soil.]
4. Where do you find good soil and bad soil? [You find good soil in
the forest, near rivers, new gardens on slopes, near the beach, in old
gardens used a lot.]
5. Try to dig up some good soil and bad soil without breaking them.
Put them into glass jars for display in the classroom.
1.34 Good soil and bad soil
See diagram 6.26: Soil profiles
Be able to show the difference between good and bad soil.
1. Take the children to a place where there is good soil with small
plants growing in it. Dig a hole about half metre deep. [What you see
when
you look at the side of the hole from the inside is called the soil
profile.]
2. Show the two main layers of the soil: the topsoil and the subsoil.
What differences can you see? [The topsoil is narrower and darker and
contains
most of the roots of small plants. The subsoil is very deep and lighter
and only the roots of big trees are in it.] Measure the depth of the
topsoil
with your finger.
3. Now move to some bad soil and dig a hole. What difference do you
see between the bad soil and the good soil? [The topsoil is thinner or
there is none at all. It contains fewer roots of small plants.]
4. Dig holes in different places in the school garden and describe
differences in the depth of topsoil. Where do you find the most / the
least
topsoil? [You find most topsoil where there is plenty of plant cover.
You
find least topsoil where there is little plant cover or on
slopes.]
1.35 Feel good soil
Be able to describe the feel of good soil and then
understand
the importance of rotting leaves.
Use a place where lots of leaves are rotting
into the soil.
1. Show the rotting leaves. Let the children feel leaves
1.1 which are not yet rotten, 1.2 which are rotten. What is the
difference between the feel of the
living leaves and the rotten leaves? [The living leaves feel smooth.
The
rotten leaves feel sticky.]
2. What is the feel of the topsoil? [It feels sticky.] What happens
to the rotten leaves? [They go into the soil.] What colour are the
rotten
leaves? [Black.] Is the subsoil black? [No.] Why is the subsoil not
black?
[There are no rotten leaves in it.]
3. What is the difference between good soil and bad soil? [Good soil
has lots of topsoil.] Why is the topsoil so good for plants? [It had
rotten
leaves in it.]
4. How do rotten leaves make the soil better?
4.1 They give plant food to the soil.
4.2 They make soil softer and easier to dig.
4.3 The soil sticks together and holds water for the plants.]
5. The rotten leaves form humus. This is the black sticky substance
found in the topsoil. Subsoil does not feel sticky because there is no
humus in it.
Extra Activity: Where do you find good soil and bad soil?
1.36 Protect topsoil
See diagram 6.62: Water on slopes
Be able to take care of the soil so that it can give us
good crops.
Use a place where topsoil is washed away.
Show where topsoil is washed away.
1. The topsoil is the part of the soil that holds the plant foods.
If the topsoil is lost then plants cannot grow well.
2. How can the topsoil be lost? [It can be washed down slopes and
into rivers where it is washed away.]
3. How can you prevent soil from being washed away? [1. Cover the
bare
soil with leaves such as coconut fronds. 2. Do not dig soil on a steep
slope. 3. Plant crops across the slope and not up and down the slope.]
4. How do farmers stop the soil from being washed away? [Make
terraces.]
Extra Activity: If you have to use steep land, Show how to construct
terraces of flat land on the slopes.
1.37 Soil with a magnifier
Be able to identify components of soil.
Use for each group a magnifier, a handful of
topsoil, jar or bottle.
Give each group a handful of garden soil taken from just below the
surface.
1. Take a little bit of the soil then use the end of a pencil to
divide
it into different things: stone particles, roots and leaves, little
animals,
black sticky stuff.
2. What can you see when you use the magnifier? [you can see the parts
of the soil.]
3. Are the earth particles all separate or are some particles stuck
together, like crumbs? [Some of it forms crumbs.] The black sticky
stuff
is called humus. It binds together some stone particles to form crumbs.
Good soil has crumbs of soil particles.
4. What colour is the soil? Rub some wet soil on paper, what is the
colour? [The colour is reddish brown and other colours.] Let the paper
dry. Does it change colour? [Yes.] Keep the paper on a wall board. The
colour of the soil when rubbed on white paper is called its streak.
Make
the streak of different soils.
1.38 Air games
Be able to explain that air is all around us.
Use a book, a sheet of paper and a little piece
of scrap paper for each group of two.
1. Breathe in through your nose, then blow out on your hands. Fan
your faces with your hands, then fan your friend's face with a book.
Hold
out your arms and spin around quickly.
2. Can you see air? [No.] What did you feel in your nose? [Air.] What
did you feel when you blew on your hands? [Air.] What did you feel on
your
face? [Air.] What did you feel on your hands? [Air.] Can you feel air
when
the air is not moving? [No.] Can you feel air when the air is moving?
[Yes.]
Can you feel air when your hands are moving? [Yes.] Can you feel air
when
you are not moving and the air is not moving? [No.]
3. Air Game
Give each pair of children a piece of paper or a book. Make a ball
out of scrap paper. Draw a soccer ground on the floor with a half way
line
and two goal lines each end. Put the paper ball on halfway. When the
teacher
says "Go" each child tries to fan the ball over the opposite goal line.
You can draw a bigger soccer ground and allow more than two players.
Extra Activity: Take the children outside on a windy day. Can you see
air? [No.] How can you tell if air is moving near us? [you can feel it
on
our face.] How can you tell if air is moving near trees? [The leaves
move.]
How can you tell if air is moving near water? [Ripples on the water
surface.]
How can you tell if air is moving in the sky? [you see clouds
moving.]
1.39 Air in bags
Be able to fill bags with air and describe the feeling
of air in the bags.
1. Fill your bag with air by opening the bag and moving it quickly.
Then quickly close the bag by twisting the end. When you have caught
lots
of air in the bag, tell the children to try to feel the air in the bag.
2. Hold the bag full of air between your two hands. Can you push your
hands together? [No.] What keeps your hands apart? [Air.] Let the air
out
of the bag. Why can you now push your hands together? [There is not
much
air between your hands.]
3. Hold an open jar or bottle over a bucket of water. Push the jar
into the water open side down. Does the water fill the jar? [No.] What
keeps the water out? [Air.] Was the jar really empty? [No, it was full
of air.]
4. Put the jar under the water, open side down. Now turn it slowly,
open side up. What do you see? [Bubbles come out.] What is inside a
bubble?
[Air. What is inside the jar now? [Water.] Why can the water get into
the
jar? [There is no air inside the jar to stop the water coming in.]
5. Stand in front of the children and say "What is between you and
me? [Air.] Can you see it? [No.] How can you prove to me that it is
there?
[Feel the air by waving the hand.]
Extra Activity: Push some clothes or cloth under water. Do you sink?
[No.] What keeps them up? [Air is trapped in them.]
1.40 Blow soap bubbles
Be able to blow soap bubbles and describe them.
Use drinking straws (or papaya stems or bamboo
stems) jars of water, soap or detergent, wire loops. Make the soap
solution
the day before.
1. Show how to make soapy water by putting the pieces of soap or some
detergent into the water in the jar and shake.
2. Put some soapy water in the palms of your hands. Press your hands
together so that a small hole forms. Blow through this hole. Can you
blow
bubbles?
3. Dip one end of the stem or straw into the soapy water and blow
gently through the stem in the air. Can you blow bubbles?
4. Dip a loop of wire into the soap solution. Is there a thin film
of soap across the loop Can you see it? Blow through the loop slowly.
Can you blow a big bubble? 5. How do you blow big bubbles and small
bubbles? [To make small
bubbles
blow quickly, to make big bubbles blow slowly.]
6. What is a bubble made of? [A bubble has a skin of soap. Inside
is air.]
7. Describe the shape and colour of a soap bubble.
8. Why does a bubble break? [The skin is too thin, if it hits
something
the skin breaks, if the air inside gets bigger the skin breaks.]
Extra Activity: Bubble Game
Who can blow the biggest soap bubble? Whose bubble lasts the longest
before it breaks?
1.41 Falling parachutes
Be able to make a parachute, throw it, and describe its
fall.
Use sheets of paper, stones, string, squares
of cloth, one demonstration parachute.
1. Stand on the desks and drop a piece of paper, flat surface down.
Describe how it falls. [It floats from side to side. It does not fall
straight
down. It falls slowly.]
2. Crumple the paper into a ball then drop it. Describe how it falls.
[It drops straight down. It falls quickly.]
3. Drop a piece of cloth, some string and a stone. Describe how you
fall. [They fall straight down.]
4. Look at the small parachute made of cloth, string and stone. Throw
it up. Describe how it falls. [The parachute falls straight down. It
falls
slowly.]
5. Why does the parachute fall slowly? [The air under the cloth of
the parachute stops it falling quickly. The air pushes up.] Activity.
Children
can make their own parachutes and throw them up in the school grounds.
Who can throw the highest? Which parachute falls quickest? Which
parachute
falls slowest? [If the weight attached to the parachutes are the same,
bigger parachutes will usually fall more slowly.]
1.42 Drinking straw game
See diagram: 4.227.1
Be able to pick up water and carry it using a straw.
Use drinking straws (or the petiole of a papaya
leaf, or the hollow stem of grass) a bucket of water and a rag.
1. Press your left index finger against the bottom end of the straw.
Pour water into the straw or dip it into a bucket of water. Dry the
outside
of the straw. Press your right index finger on the top end of the
straw.
Take away your left finger from the bottom end. The water will stay in
the straw. Is there any water in the straw? [Yes.] Raise their right
index
finger and the water will drop out.
2. Give each group a straw. Show how to push the straws under the
water in the bucket, then press their fingers against the top end then
take the straw out with the water inside. Take the straw full of water
across the room then drop the water into a jar.
3. Water Carrying Game
Each child has to pick up some water with the straw and carry it across
to a jar. The group that carries the most water to their jar wins the
game.
Extra Activity: Water Drop Game
Each child has to fill a straw with water and let three drops only
fall into a jar. The group that does this the most times wins the
game.
1.43 Air streams
See diagram: 4.242.1
1. Put a ping-pong ball inside a funnel. Blow hard through the stem
of the funnel to blow the ball out of the funnel. You cannot blow the
ball
out of the funnel. Think of air streams as fluids. According to the
Bernoulli
Principle, as the velocity of a fluid increases its pressure decreases.
The fast moving air travelling through the neck of the funnel is at a
lower
pressure than the slow moving air in the wide section of the funnel so
the ball is pushed towards the neck of the funnel. Invert the funnel
and
hold the ping-pong ball in the hand. Blow hard through the stem. Remove
your hand from under the ping-pong ball. The ping-pong ball does not
fall.
2. Put the ping-pong ball on a table. Cover it with the funnel. Blow
through
the stem and pick the ball up from the table. The pressure in the wide
section of the funnel is greater than the pressure in the neck of the
funnel
so the ball is pushed up towards the neck. Cut a piece of thin
cardboard
about 7 x 7 cm. Draw diagonals from each corner and put a pin through
the
card where the lines cross at the centre. Secure the head of the pin by
covering it with adhesive tape. Put the pin in the hole of an empty
thread
spool and try to blow the card from the spool by blowing through the
spool.
Turn the spool and card upside down. Hold the card against the spool
lightly
with a finger. Blow firmly through the spool, then remove the finger.
Air
moving through the inside of the spool is at a lower pressure than the
air outside the spool. Thus atmospheric pressure pushes the card
against
the end of the spool.
3. Attach a funnel to a source of compressed air, e.g. a vacuum
cleaner.
Blow up a balloon and put a piece of copper wire around the neck for a
weight. Turn on the compressed air and balance the balloon in the air
stream.
Try to balance a ping-pong ball between the balloon and the
funnel.
1.44 Area game
See diagram 2.1.2: Shapes
Be able to conserve area.
The following tests for conserving area. You will need:
two rectangular pieces of cardboard, 20
cm x 15 cm. Eight small rectangles of cardboard 4 cm x 3 cm. Before you
start, be sure that the two large pieces of
cardboard are identical and that the small pieces are all identical.
1. Arrange the cardboard and small pieces as shown below. Do the small
pieces cover the same area as the big piece of cardboard? [Yes.]
2. If the children say "Yes" then arrange the small pieces as shown
below. Do the pieces on this card cover the same area of cardboard as
the pieces on the other card? [Yes.] Explain your answers. If the
children say "No" bring the four small pieces together again.
3. Draw lines on one piece of card. Are the squares the same size? If
the children say "No", let the children compare the shapes by putting
one on top of the other. Do the two squares cover the same area of
floor, or table? [Yes.]
4. Cut off the piece A and place it as shown. What does it look like?
[A bird.] Do these shapes cover the same area of the floor? [Yes.] If
the children say "No", put piece A back to its original position.
Compare the pieces again by putting one on top of the other.
5. If the children say "yes" above, cut off another piece, arrange it
differently, and tell them, "Do these shapes cover the same area of the
floor as the square"? [Yes.]
6. Put all the pieces back together.