Children sort everyday materials into the three states of matter and discover that the same substance can exist in more than one state.
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Teach: solid, liquid, gas, state, compress, flow, shape, container. Water in three states — ice, water, steam — is the single most effective illustration of all three states of matter.
Focus on solid and liquid only before introducing gas, which is the hardest state for children to conceptualise.
Can children correctly classify five materials as solid, liquid, or gas? Can they describe one key property of each state?
Water, ice or cold water, and air in a bag demonstrate all three states. No other equipment needed.
Children often classify materials by feel — sand seems liquid because it pours. Sand is a solid — each grain has its own shape. It is the collection that pours, not any individual grain.
States of matter underpin chemistry and physics. The idea that the same substance exists in different states depending on temperature introduces the concept of phase transitions.
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