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and then describe the thing that you see by answering the following:
How does it feel? (hard, soft, etc.)
Can one eat or drink it?
Can one play with it?
The one who guesses the answer correctly gets a point. If after five guesses your partners cannot guess what it is, you get a point.
Everything you can touch is matter .
Matter has mass
Try the following (1):
Pick up your ruler. What does it feel like?
Pick up your partner. How does that feel? Which one was more difficult to pick up?
My finding is that:
Try the following:
Take a glass of water.
Put flowers in the water. What happens to the water?
Why do you think it happened?
My finding is that:
From old newspapers cut out all the pictures on the first ten pages. The pictures should be of living and non-living matter. Make two piles of pictures, one for living matter and one for non-living matter. First list the properties of living matter before you begin cutting out.
LEARNING OUTCOME 1: SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
The learner will be able to act confidently on curiosity about natural phenomena, and to investigate relationships and solve problems in scientific, technological and environmental contexts.
Assessment Standard
We know this when the learner
1.1.2 talks about personal experiences, highlighting aspects which relate to science or technology.
LEARNING OUTCOME 2: CONSTRUCTING SCIENCE KNOWLEDGE The learner will know and be able to interpret and apply scientific, technological and environmental knowledge.
Assessment Standard
We know this when the learner
categorises information: sorts objects and organisms by a visible property:
Try the following (1)
Try the following (2)
PROPERTIES OF LIVING MATTER
List the properties that living matter must have before you begin cutting out.
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