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Matter
and heat
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Grade
Level: 1-3
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Overview
Young students have a difficult time conceptualizing many science concepts.
They have a need to actively participate in learning, and even then may
not comprehend why an event occurs. One such concept is the motion of
molecules and the relationship of heat to states of matter.
Purpose
To involve students in demonstrating the relationship between molecules
and states of matter.
Objectives
Students will be able to:
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i. Predict that heating a substance
will cause it to expand (get big), and cooling it will cause it to contract
(shrink). |
ii. Distinguish between solids, liquids,
and gases. |
iii. List examples of solids, liquids,
and gases in their world. |
iv. Explain the states of matter using molecular properties.
Resources/Materials
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Paper punch |
Small microscope or hand lens |
A flask |
Two bowls |
Ice cubes and hot water |
Balloons
Activities and Procedures
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1. Introduction |
-Discuss the concept that everything
is made up of molecules. Show them a "mosaic picture" made up ahead of time
from paper punches. This is a simplified exaggeration of something being
made up of little things. |
-Encourage them to look at several items with hand-held microscopes (30x).
Cloth, colors on covers of workbooks, and leaves are good for viewing
small parts that are invisible to the eye. Emphasize that they are still
not seeing molecules, which are even tinier than each dot they see on
the book cover.
2. Small group experiment Materials needed (for each group)- small flask
or bottle, two bowls, balloon, ice, hot water(from a coffee pot is best,
but you need to supervise this as it will burn)
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Procedure- |
-Put the balloon on the bottle. Have
the children establish that the bottle has air in it and that the air molecules
inside cannot get out of the bottle when the balloon is on it. |
-Ask the children if they think the
balloon will change if we put the bottle in hot water. Encourage idea exchange. |
-Get 3 cups of hot water. Put it
in a bowl and put the bottle in the bowl also. Let each child feel the bottle
as it warms up. Have them observe the balloon. |
-Ask the children if they think the
balloon will change if we move the bottle to cold water. Encourage idea
exchange. |
-Get 2 cups of cold water and 4-6
ice cubes to put in the other bowl. Put the bottle in the bowl, and again
let the children feel the bottle as it cools off. Have them observe the
balloon. |
-Let the children move the bottle
back and forth as time allows, and encourage predicting what will happen
when they do. |
-Ask for possible explanations and accept them all as something to consider.
3. Whole class activity
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-Put a string circle on the floor,
in the middle of an open area (This should be large enough for all the children
to stand in without crowding.) |
-Have the whole class stand up and
explain that they are now going to "become" molecules. Explain that warm
molecules are very active and spread out away from other molecules. Have
them spread out and "bounce." Explain that molecules which bounce all over
are a gas. |
-Ask if they've ever seen children
"huddle" on the playground on a very cold day. Molecules do the same thing.
They slow down and move closer together when they are cold. Ask the children
to come into the circle and to huddle close together. They should then "freeze".
When molecules get cold enough they freeze, although that does not mean
they are totally without motion, even as the children will not be totally
without motion. Ask if they can think of an example of something "frozen"
(ice). Explain that this is a solid. |
-Molecules are sometimes in between.
We call this state liquid. They spread out a little bit, but they stay inside
their container. Have the children bounce slightly and push apart but stay
inside the circle. Ask for an example of a liquid (water). |
-Have them get back in their huddle, very still and "cold." Then have
them "warm up" gradually, staying in the circle. Then have them warm up
more, and explain that they can now float up over the string because they
are a "gas." Ask what would happen if they were even "hotter" (they would
spread out even more). -Now you are ready for some exercise. Using the
cues Hot, Warm, Cold, etc, or Solid, Liquid, Gas, have them show by their
actions what the molecules would do in that state.
4. Discussion
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-Now discuss the experiment from earlier in the lesson. Ask for ideas
on what the molecules were doing inside the balloon.
NOTE An additional adult or two is very helpful for the small
group experiment. Another management technique could be to allow students
to make mosaic pictures of their own while the teacher works with one
small group at a time.
Tying
it all together This provides a good basis of understanding
for further studies of matter. Part/whole relationships in many areas
can be related back to this. Students could be asked to begin a chart
of solids, liquids, and gases using words or pictures. Assessment Find
out from the students if there is any other substance that can behave
like water. Which takes longer to accomplish: Changing water to ice or
changing water to vapor?
Suggestions/Modifications
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- If the class size is very large you may want to demonstrate the molecule
activity with a few students in the front of the room, until all students
understand how it works.
- You may extend the lesson to include the principal characteristics
of atoms and even more with protons, electrons, and neutrons.
- You may substitute some of the materials in this lesson as long as
the outcomes are the same.
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Author(s)
DEBORAH HERNDON, IXL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, ARKANSAS CITY, KS
http://www.col-ed.org/cur/
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