Lesson Plan of Difference between Solutions and Suspensions General Science Grade VI
Lesson Plan of Difference between Solutions and Suspensions
General Science Grade VI
Students’ Learning Outcomes
·
Identify solute and solvent
in a solution.
·
Difference between solute, solvent
and solution.
·
Difference between solutions
and suspensions.
·
Identify uses of solutions
and suspensions in daily life.
Information for Teachers
Concept Map
·
When two or more than two
substances are mixed in such a way that no new substance is formed, the
resulting substance is called a mixture.
·
Mixture is either homogeneous or heterogeneous.
·
Homogeneous: The mixture having uniform composition is
called the homogeneous mixture (mixture of sugar in water).
·
Heterogeneous: The mixture having non-uniform composition is
called the heterogeneous mixture (mixture of sand in iron, mixture of oil in
water).
·
A solution is a homogeneous mixture, which contains one,
or more solutes dissolved in a solvent. Solution has particle size 1 nm or
smaller in diameter. Solution is the substance that dissolves in the solvent
& it is present in small amount in the solution e.g. salt, sugar, etc.
solvent is the substance in which solute dissolves and it is present in large
quantity in the solution. e.g. water, petrol, acetone etc.
·
A suspension is a heterogeneous mixture of two or than two
substances. (Sand in water). Suspension particles are more than 100 nm in
diameter.
·
Colloid is a mixture that is intermediate between
homogeneous & heterogeneous mixtures. (Foam, gel, smoke, milk). They have
particle size between 1nm and 100nm.
Solution & Suspension
Similarity
|
|
Both are mixtures
|
|
Differences
|
|
Solutions
|
Suspension
|
Homogeneous
|
Non-homogeneous
|
Solute separates by itself in
solvent
|
Solute doesn’t by itself from
solvent
|
No residue after filtration
|
Residue after filtration
|
Material / Resources
Beaker, sugar, salt, tea spoons, soil, glucose,
and water
Worm up activity
·
Write the word, “mixture”,
inside a box drawn on board and ask students to give their ideas about it. You
may get a kind of response from the students as shown below. Write their ideas
on board around the mixture box.
(Brainstorming)
Development
Activity 1
Divide students in groups and
instruct them to:
·
Half fill a beaker with
water, add half teaspoon of salt in it and stir.
·
Half fill another beaker with
water, add half teaspoon of sugar in it and stir.
·
Observe the mixtures in both
the beakers.
·
now ask the following
questions:
o Can you see the salt in water?
o Can you see the sugar in water?
o Where did they go?
o Can you separate them? (if yes, then how?)
·
After taking students
responses tell them that salt & sugar are solutes that dissolve in water to
give solution. Tell them the definitions of solute, solvent and solution.
Activity 2
Divide students in small
groups and instruct them to:
·
dissolve a small amount of
glucose in water and stirs
·
img
·
Now ask the following
question:
o What is the result of the experiment?
o What is solute in the solution?
o What is solvent in the solution?
·
After getting their responses
tell them that glucose is salute & water is solvent.
Activity 3
Divide the students in groups
and instruct them to:
·
Take two beakers, label them
A and B.
·
Half fill the two beakers
with water.
·
Add one teaspoon of salt in
beaker A.
·
Add one teaspoon of soil in
beaker B.
·
Stir the two mixtures for a
while.
·
img
Now ask the following
questions:
o How are two mixtures different from one
another?
(Expected response: Mixture A is solution and B
is a suspension.
o Give one example of solution and suspension?
(Expected response: Solution; Glucose in water
Suspension; Chalk in water)
o Which of the following techniques could be used
to separate the mixture A?
a)
Decantation
b)
Filtration
c)
Evaporation
d)
Distillation
(Expected response: Evaporation)
o Which of the following techniques could be used
to separate the mixture B?
a)
Decantation
b)
Filtration
c)
Evaporation
d)
Distillation
(Expected response: Filtration)
After getting students
responses explain them the difference between solutions & suspensions. also
explain the meanings of these four mixture separating techniques i.e.
decantation, filtration, evaporation, and distillation.
Sum up / Conclusion
Conclude lesson by telling
children that we leant.
·
Homogeneous mixtures are
called solution.
·
Solution can be in any
physical state e.g. alloy is a solid-solid solution of metals.
·
Upon filtration solution
don’t leave residue but suspensions leave residue.
Assessment
·
Take a paper and make 6 paper
strips out of it. (prepare 6 strips for each group)
·
write properties of solutions
and suspensions on these paper strips, (one property or example per paper
strip)
·
Distribute the strips among
the groups.
·
Ask students to separate the solution
and suspension strips from one another.
Follow up
·
Ask students to think and
discuss about the phrase “Shake well before use”. Tell them that this sentence
is usually written on certain medications. Why do you think it is important to
shake well before using any such medication?
thanks for the organized and well demonstrated lesson plan
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