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Introductory Activity : Ask: "What are clouds? What are they made of? What is rain? What does the sky look like when it rains? Why does it rain? Where does the rain go after it falls? What happens to puddles after it rains?" Get a discussion going about the different parts of the water cycle: evaporation, precipitation, and condensation. Use as many questions as possible to determine which concepts the students may understand and where any misconceptions may be. |
Body : 1. Assemble the terrariums: Have each student build his/her own terrarium by putting about an inch of soil in the bottom of their plastic container, planting a seed according to the package instructions, and giving a thorough soaking of water. The initial watering should be all that is necessary since the plastic container will create a closed environment which will not allow the water to escape into the atmosphere. Label the terrariums and put them in a sunny window or under a grow light. |
Conclusion Activity : Possible questions to ask the students: "We only watered the soil in our terrariums once; how did the water get on the lid? Take your lid off the terrarium and feel the soil. Why is the soil still wet? Do you think that any water has evaporated from the soil? Why? If water evaporated, where did the evaporated water go? Did it ever rain in your terraium? How do you know? Where did the rain come from? Is there anything in your terrarium that reminds you of a cloud or cloud drops?" |
Evaluation Activity : 1. In the students make a picture model in their weather journal which represents their terrariums. Have the students include all the parts of the terrarium like, container, soil, water, lid, plants, etc. Also, have them draw and label the processes (evaporation, condensation, precipitation) they see happening and their locations in the terrarium. |
Internet Resources Referenced in this Lesson : |
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