Lesson Plan of Stars and PlanetsGeneral Science Grade V
Lesson Plan of Stars and Planets
General Science Grade V

·
Explain that the Sun is a
star.
Information for Teachers
·
A star consists of very hot
glowing gases.
·
A star emits its own light. Therefore,
our Sun is a star.
·
There are a number of stars
in the sky and are seen at night time.
·
The Sun is the nearest star
to the Earth.
·
All the stars are not of the
same size, mass and brightness.
·
Some stars are closer and
others are far away from the Earth.
·
Astronomical objects which
don’t have their own light are called planets.
·
A planet is nearly a
spherical ball of rock and/or gas that orbits a star.
·
Planets look bright because they
reflect light of the sun. Our Earth is a planet.
Material / Resources
A bulb, tennis balls etc. textbook
Worm up Activity
·
Switch the bulb ON and ask
the students:
---Is the bulb luminous object?
(Expected response: Yes)
·
Call three students and ask
them to hold a white ball each and stand around the bulb in such a position
that the light falls on the balls.
·
Ask the students: Are the
balls luminous object?
(Expected response: No, the balls are
not luminous. They reflecting the light of the bulb)
·
Now tell the students that
the heavenly bodies which emit their own light are the stars and the heavenly
bodies which reflect the light of stars and don’t have their own light are the
planets.
·
Now ask the students: What do
you see during day and during clear night in the sky?
(Expected response: We see a
very bright and hot Sun during day and a very cool and bright Moon during the
night time. Countless twinkling stars are seen in the sky on a clear night)
·
Ask the students: What do you
think; the Erath, The Moon and stars are the only objects in space?
(Expected response: No)
·
Inform them that the Sun and
stars emit light of their own while the Moon and the Earth don’t.
(Expected response: No) then
why?
·
After their responses, inform
them that our Earth doesn’t emit its own light. Hence, it is not a star. It is
a planet.
Development
Activity 1
·
Ask the students: Do all the
stars in the sky look equally bright? (Expected
response :No )
·
Inform them that the nearer
star look bright and far away stars look dim.
·
Ask them: What do you know
about the very faint dots in the sky? (Expected
response : These are stars which are very far away).
·
Ask the following questions to
strengthen their concept.
- Have you noticed the street lights?
(Expected response: Yes)
---How the nearest light looks?
(Expected response: Its looks
very bright)
--- How the farthest light look?
(Expected response: It appears
very dim).
·
After the discussion explain
that stars close to Earth look more bright as compared to others.
Activity 2
·
Light up two similar torches
in a dark room.
·
Ask the students: Are they
both equally bright?
·
Now place one near the
students and one far away and ask: Do these still appear equally bright?
(Expected response: The
nearest looks bright and the farthest one looks dim).
·
Now ask: What about the
stars? Do you think they might be brighter than they appear? How bright do you
think they are?
·
Ask them: Which one emits its
own light, Moon or Sun?
·
(Expected response: The Sun).
·
Make them understand that Sun
emits its own light. Hence, it is called a star and the Moon reflects the light
of the Sun.
Sum up / Conclusion
·
A star is made of very hot
glowing gases. It emits its own light.
·
The Sun is a star. It is
nearer than the other stars.
·
Our Earth is a planet. It doesn’t
emit its own light.
·
Nearer stars look more bright
while the stars very far away look like dots.
·
Stars have fixed positions in
their patterns. The planets change their positions.
Assessment
·
Assess the understanding of
the students by asking the following questions.
--What makes stars to glow?
(Expected response: Very hot gases of
the stars make them o glow).
---How many stars are there in the sky?
(Expected response: There are so many
stars in the sky. We can’t count all of them).
----What is the shape of the Sun, earth and
Moon?
(Expected response: Almost spherical).
Follow up
·
Ask the students to recall
the rhyme, “Twinkle Twinkle Little star”
·
Inquire them: Why do stars
twinkle?
·
After the students’ response:
inform them the air around our Earth is moving in different directions in many
ways. The light passing through the different layers of air is bent many times.
This cause the twinkling of the stars.
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