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Elementary Science

Learn about the water cycle and how water changes states from gas to liquid to solid and back again. Understand the processes of evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.

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Elementary Science

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  1. Elementary Science Science Focus Lesson SC.5.E.7.1 Water Cycle Polk County Public Schools

  2. SC.5.E.7.1 Benchmark: Create a model to explain the parts of the water cycle. Water can be a gas, a liquid, or a solid and can go back and forth from one state to another. Essential Question: What causes water to change states throughout the water cycle? Vocabulary: evaporation water vapor condensation precipitation

  3. States of Water • Solids have a fixed volume and shape. Their particles are tightly packed and vibrate but, they stay in place. Examples of Solid water include – ice, snow, hail, and sleet • Liquids have a fixed volume but their shape changes to fit the shape of the container they are in. Their particles are close together, they vibrate and change place. Liquid water – examples- dew, ocean water, lake water, mist, and rain. • Gases have no fixed volume or fixed shape. Their particles are well • separated without order, they vibrate and move freely and quickly from • place to place. Gas–examples–steam, humidity in air and water vapor

  4. What is the Water Cycle? • The WATER CYCLE describes the continuous movement of water on and above the surface of the Earth. • Water can change states among liquid, gas, and solid at various stages of the water cycle. • The water that was here during the time of the dinosaurs is the same water that is here today.

  5. Click on Diagram to access Interactive Water Cycle Web Site

  6. Summarizing • Using the information that you have learned describe the different states of water and give at least one example of each. • Using the information you learned about the water cycle write as many facts as you can remember about the cycle and the water in it.

  7. What is Evaporation? • Evaporation occurs when the sun heats up water in rivers, lakes, puddles, ponds or the ocean and turns it into vapor or steam. The water vapor or steam leaves the river, lake, puddle, pond or ocean and goes into the air. • Plants lose water out of their leaves and when this water evaporates it is called transpiration.

  8. What is Condensation? • Water vapor in the air gets cold and changes back into liquid, forming clouds. This is called condensation. • You see condensation anytime you have a cold glass of water and on a hot day, water forms on the outside of the glass.  The water doesn’t leak through the glass!  The water on the outside of the glass comes from the air.  Water vapor in the warm air turns back into liquid when it touches the cold glass.

  9. What is Precipitation? • Precipitation occurs when so much water has condensed that the air cannot hold it anymore.  The clouds get heavy and water falls back to the earth in the form of rain, hail, sleet or snow. • Rain is a liquid form of precipitation • Hail, sleet, and snow are solid forms of precipitation

  10. What is water Collection? • When water falls to the earth as precipitation, it collects before it evaporates- this is collection. • It may create a puddle then start the cycle over again quickly • It may soak into the soil and become part of the ground water and aquifer– be used by plants then evaporate to start the cycle over again • Or it may run downhill and collect in the oceans, lakes, rivers or swamps where the cycle start up again What is the largest water collection on Earth?

  11. The Oceans are the largest water collections on Earth 97% of the water on Earth is in the ocean 75% of the Earth is covered with Water The oceans are the source of more than 85% of evaporation on Earth More than ½ of all precipitation occurs over the ocean Because of all of these reasons the ocean is very important to the water cycle.

  12. Summarizing • Turn to your shoulder partner. • Partner A explain evaporation. • Partner B explain condensation. • Partner A give an example of solid and liquid precipitation. • Partner B explain why the ocean is so important to the water cycle.

  13. Guided Practice Talk to your shoulder partner about the answer to each question. Read the question carefully and read all answer choices. When the Sun heats up the puddle of water in your backyard and turns it into water vapor, this process is known as ________. Condensation Evaporation Precipitation Collection

  14. B The answer is Evaporation is occurring when the Sun heats up the puddle of water in your backyard and turns it into water vapor.

  15. Guided Practice As time goes by, and water goes through the water cycle again and again, the amount of water on Earth _______. Increases Decreases Stays the same Goes up and down

  16. C The answer is The amount of water that is on Earth now is the same amount that has always been here. It is also the same water that has always been on Earth. The water cycle just cleans the water.

  17. Summarizing Pass a piece of paper around the table. Each group member adds a detail that answers the question. Keep the paper moving until time is called- see how many ideas your group can generate! Essential Question: What are the parts and function of the water cycle and how does water change state?

  18. Check Your Understanding Number your paper from 1-3, select the answers that you think are correct • The water cycle begins with ________. a. Condensationb. Evaporationc. Precipitationd. Trick question-the water cycle has no beginning or end

  19. Check Your Understanding 2. When you look outside and it is raining, the water falling down is in what stage of the water cycle?a. Evaporationb. Collectionc. Condensationd. Precipitation

  20. Check Your Understanding 3. Why do water droplets form on your ice cold glass of water? a. Your glass is leaking b. Evaporation occurred c. Precipitation occurred d. Condensation occurred

  21. Check Your Answers • D • D • D

  22. Summary Question In your science journal explain what causes the water to change states throughout the water cycle.

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