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Matte r (At about the 2 nd grade level) What is matter? By Moira Whitehouse, PhD

Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

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Lower elementary introduction to matter and the three states of matter.

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Page 1: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

Matter (At about the 2nd grade level)

What is matter?

By Moira Whitehouse, PhD

Page 2: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

Matter includes everything around us--• our couch, our bed, our computer

• our food and our drinks• our family and our dog or cat

Page 3: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

• the grass and the trees

• the Sun and the Moon

• all the planets• everything in our Universe

Page 4: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

Yes!

Everything

Everything

Everything

Page 5: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

Matter on Earth is usually in one of three states.

Page 6: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

solids

Page 7: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

• Keep their shape unless they are broken

• Do not flow or pour

We know when matter is a solid because solids:

Page 8: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

liquids

Page 9: Matter (states of) 2nd grade (teach)

We can tell when matter is a liquid because liquids:

• Do not keep their own shape; they take the shape of the container they are in.

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And...liquids flow or pour.

Oil being poured on a salad

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Then what about sand, sugar and salt? Don’t they pour, flow and take the shape of the container they are in?

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If you magnify sand or sugar, you can see that they are not liquids. Sand, salt, and sugar are made up of very small particles that have a definite shape .

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Child blowing air (a gas) into a balloon.

gasThen there is that third state of matter:

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A balloon or a bubble are just containers that hold a gas. For us that gas is usually air.

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There are other gases besides the gases in air. These balloons contain a gas called helium which is lighter than air.

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Air like all gases takes the shape of its containerand expands to fill its container.

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Most gases including the gases in air are invisible—you simply cannot seem them.

A jar of air

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However, you do know air is there when it moves things such as this windmill.

Wind—moving air– causes this windmill to rotate.

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Or when you use the gas in your lungs to blow out a candle.

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Can you name the three states of matter?

Bubbles hold an invisible gas called water vapor

Can you tell the difference between these three states?