“Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to film: 1....

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“Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to http://www.getwet.org.uk/primary-school-stories film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview & Evaluation of GetWET project Year 1

Transcript of “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to film: 1....

Page 1: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

“Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning

Please refer to http://www.getwet.org.uk/primary-school-stories film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview & Evaluation of GetWET project Year 1

Page 2: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

What is an experiment?

• You observe something….

• You form a hypothesis (a forecast, based on your observation and/or on what you already know)….

• You test the hypothesis through an experiment, with a ‘fair test’….

• Write up what you discovered (what you expected, and/or what you didn’t).

Page 3: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Vocabulary:

Hypothesis, atom, bonding, hydrogen bonding, molecule, freezing, melting point, solid, liquid, gas, condensation, evaporation, energy, expand, contract, collaborate, surface tension…

Page 4: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Start by inviting the

children to explore

the sensual properties

of water…

Page 5: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Water’s molecular structure

Page 6: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Attach 2 Jelly Tots to either side of a

Fruit Pastille (like Mickey Mouse’s ears),

to form a rough triangle...

This models a water molecule.

2 Hydrogen atoms are bonding with 1

Oxygen atom, to make the H2O molecule…

(The angle between the 2 hydrogen atoms, or Mickey’s ears, is 104.5degrees)…

Don’t eat the sweets till the cocktail sticks have been removed!

Page 7: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Use PE/Dance to explore the 3 states of water: solid, liquid and gas…

Page 8: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Outside, warm the children up by running, walking, and standing still.

Get everyone to shake hands, using one hand, then two.

Ask the children to spread out, then stand very close together…

Page 9: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

In groups of 3, ‘cast’ the children as 1 oxygen atom and 2 hydrogen twin

atoms (PHSE – use, then mix up, the genders..... or avoid cliques!).

The solo oxygen child holds a single hand of the 2 hydrogen children twins.

This is the H2O molecule (like the sweet model above)…

Page 10: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Get the threesomes to walk around, joining up with other molecules

(Hydrogen children grasp the back of an Oxygen child in another water

molecule). Keep moving – this is like water…

Page 11: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Spread the children out & moving fast to replicate gas…The groups of 3 in a water molecule can stay together to represetn water vapour

Page 12: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Slow them down to liquid water again…

Page 13: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Arrange them in a regular pattern to replicate solid water, i.e. ice…

Page 14: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

In the hall later, repeat the exercise…

Then use music with strong emotional and rhythmic content to encourage the threesomes to create mini dance dramas about people liking/disliking each other…

This will reinforce their science learning (hydrogen bonding etc)…

Page 15: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Surface Tension

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How come certain things float on water?...

Waterboatman, observation at Dunkirk Primary School pond

Page 17: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

…And why doesn’t water run all over the place?

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Because water molecules are more attracted to each other than they are to air the molecules at the surface of the water

are pulled / attracted down and sideways into the liquid…

This stretches the molecules on the surface, causing surface tension.

Page 19: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

This is what causes rain drops to be spheres,

until gravity and air resistance turns them into ‘tear drops’

and pulls them out of shape as they fall…

Page 20: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

You can test how surface tension works by dropping water

from a small plastic pipette onto a shiny surface, like a white board.

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Ask the children to write up what they observed,

and suggest how this might be reflected elsewhere

in the natural world….

Why do some surfaces (e.g. concrete) get wet, whilst others do not (e.g. drops of water on a plastic playground slide)?

Page 22: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.
Page 23: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

A hydrophobic surface (plastic) will repel water

A hydrophilic surface (concrete) will attract water and become wet

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You can use detergent to show how water tension can be broken….

Page 25: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

You can use detergent to show how water tension can be broken….

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Sprinkle some pepper onto the surface of water in a glass jar….

Page 27: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

Drop a little washing up liquid from a toothpick onto the surface of the peppery water….

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Ask the children to draw and write up their observations of what happens ….

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Page 30: “Understanding the Unique Properties of Water” Multimodal Learning Please refer to  film: 1. Dunkirk: Overview.

You can carefully place a paperclip on the surface water to show the effects of surface tension….

http://science.wonderhowto.com/how-to/make-paperclip-float-water-0145901/ as example

Break the surface tension with a drop of detergent, and the paperclip will sink

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Water and its structure.mht

Here is a more advanced version of some of the ideas above elements, and more, which you may find of interest as background, or to stretch pupils with a particular interest in science…

In the Power Point ‘Normal’ view,right click on the imageselect ‘Packager Shell Object’, and ‘Activate Contents’ to open the resource