CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE L earner’s Book answers Unit 1 The human body Topic 1.1: The circulatory system Getting started 1 Brain 2 Lungs, heart 3 Heart 4 Stomach, intestines Activity 1: Compare circulatory systems of some vertebrates 1 Heart, blood, arteries and veins 2 In humans, the blood is pumped from the heart to the lungs. The blood then goes back to the heart before it is pumped to the rest of the body and returns again to the heart. In the fish, blood is pumped from the heart to the gills and to the rest of the body before it goes back to the heart. In the frog, blood flows in the same pathway as in humans, except that it also flows to the skin to pick up oxygen before it flows back to the heart to be pumped to the rest of the body. Questions 1 a The heart pumps blood around the body. b To supply all parts of the body with food and oxygen and to remove waste products from different parts of the body. 2 The heart muscle contracting as it pumps the blood. 3 To pick up oxygen that is carried in the blood to the rest of the body. 4 They each have different jobs to do to ensure that all parts of the body get food and oxygen, and that waste products are removed from different parts of the body. Arteries carry blood containing oxygen and food to all parts of the body. Veins carry blood from different parts of the body back to the heart. Capillaries join arteries and veins, bring oxygen and food to the body cells and take away waste. 5 The heart pumps blood in arteries to the lungs to pick up oxygen. The oxygen-rich blood travels back in veins to the heart. The heart pumps the oxygen-rich blood in other arteries to the rest of the body. The blood from the rest of the body, which is now low in oxygen, travels back to the heart in veins. Think like a scientist 1: Measuring pulse rate Steps 1–4 Answers will vary. Normal pulse rate in children is about 90 beats per minute. The number of heartbeats counted will probably vary slightly when the pulse is taken again. Learners’ tables should record pulse rates (in beats per minute) of group members. Questions 1 Heartbeat is the contraction of the heart muscle as it pumps blood. Pulse is caused by the pressure of the blood as it is pumped by the heart. 2 No. Learners may not have measured their pulse rates accurately. Some people may be fitter than others and have lower pulse rates. Accept any other reasonable answers. 3 Learners should add the measured pulse rates together. They should then divide the total by the number of measurements taken. 4 Observing over time lungs heart body 1 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Think like a scientist 2: How does exercise affect pulse rate? Think like a scientist 3: Ask and investigate a question Steps 1 a Exercise will increase the pulse rate. Learners should be able to predict from their own knowledge and experience that our pulse rates increase when we exercise. Some learners may be able to explain that our bodies need more oxygen when we are active, which means the heart has to pump faster to supply the extra oxygen. As a result, the pulse rate increases. Learners could ask questions about the circulatory system as a whole, about the heart, about blood vessels or about blood. These are some possible questions: • Do different animals have different heartbeat rates? • Does body size affect heartbeat rates? • How do different kinds of exercise affect pulse rates? • How long does it take for a person’s pulse rate to return to normal after exercise? b 2 Measure pulse rate before and after exercise. Variable to measure – pulse rate. Variable to change – amount of exercise/body activity. Variables to keep the same – the method and equipment used to measure pulse rate, the person whose pulse rate is measured. 3 Timer, stopwatch or watch with second hand 4&5 Results can be recorded in a table and presented in a bar graph. Questions 1 Answers will depend on the prediction made. 2 Pulse rate increased when the person exercised. 3 Exercise makes the pulse rate increase. 4 Fair testing and observing over time. In the fair test we measured a change in one variable (pulse rate) when we changed another variable (the amount of exercise the person did). We kept other variables the same. The changes were measured over a period of time, e.g. every two minutes. Activity 2: Identify other factors that affect pulse rate Learners should use secondary information sources, such as books, the internet or videos to find answers to the questions about pulse rates. Learners’ research should show that pulse rates can also vary according to fitness, age, gender and time of day, as well as emotions. For example, our hearts beat faster when we are nervous. Fit people generally have lower pulse rates than unfit people. Males usually have lower pulse rates than females. Young children usually have higher pulse rates than adults. 2 Depending on the question learners ask, they could choose various methods of scientific enquiry to find the answer: for example, fair testing, pattern seeking or research. Tell learners to look at the pages on Scientific Enquiry skills at the beginning of the Learner’s Book to help them decide which type of scientific enquiry would be most suitable for finding the answer to their questions. Learners could share what they have found out in various ways, such as through a class question and answer session or writing a fact sheet. Topic 1.2: The respiratory system Getting started Learners’ answers will depend on their prior knowledge and understanding about the lungs. Use their answers to identify and address any misconceptions. Activity 1: Investigate breathing 2&3 4 Learners will feel their rib cage expanding and moving outwards when they breathe in. Learners will feel their rib cage contracting and moving inwards when they breathe out. The balloon inflates as it fills with air. This shows that air leaves our bodies when we breathe out. Questions 1 The chest gets bigger because the lungs fill with air. 2 The chest gets smaller because the lungs push air out. 3 Air leaves our body when we breathe out. The air fills the balloon and the balloon inflates/becomes blown up. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 5 Steps 6 a & b When you pull the bottom balloon down, the balloon inside the bottle inflates. When you let go, the balloon inside the bottle deflates. Questions 1 a b c d Balloon inside the bottle The bottle The straw The balloon around the cut-off base of the bottle 6 Graph is based on sample results table. Graph of breathing rate Number of breaths per minute Think like a scientist 1: Make a model to explain breathing 35 a Before exercise started 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 2 4 6 Time in minutes 8 2 The ribs b 3 When you pull down on the balloon diaphragm, air is pulled into the bottle. This makes the balloon inside the bottle inflate as it fills with air. This shows breathing in. When you let go, the balloon diaphragm moves upwards and air is pushed out of the balloon inside the bottle. This shows breathing out. Exercise made the breathing rate increase. You need more oxygen when exercising, so you have to breathe more often to get enough oxygen into the body. c Learners’ own answers. In the sample graph it would take about 5 minutes after exercise stopped for the breathing rate to get back to normal. 4 The model lung is hollow and not spongy like a real lung. Activity 2: Find out how other animals get oxygen Learners should find out that other animals have different respiratory systems for obtaining oxygen. Simple animals such as worms obtain oxygen by absorbing it through their skins. Insects have openings on their bodies called spiracles through which oxygen enters and carbon dioxide leaves the body. Fish do not have lungs, but have gills that absorb oxygen from the water. Other vertebrate groups (amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals) have lungs and display breathing movements, although amphibians also absorb some oxygen through their skins. 7 Exercise makes the breathing rate increase (or similar conclusion). 8 How fit a person is 9 Observing over time 10 Circulatory system Topic 1.3: The reproductive system Getting started 1 Reproduction is the process by which living things produce more of their own kind/have young (or similar answer). 2 To replace individuals that get old and die/so that all the different kinds of living things do not die out when the adults get old and die (or similar answer). 3 a Most learners should identify themselves as being in the ‘child’ stage (at the right), but some may consider themselves to be in the ‘young person’ stage. b Answers will vary. Parent will be in the ‘adult’ stage. Learners may have siblings who are younger or older than themselves and may be in different stages in the life cycle. Think like a scientist 2: Investigate breathing rate 1–4 This is a table of possible results. Time (minutes) 0 2 4 6 8 Breathing rate (breaths per minute) 15 20 30 25 17 Exercise starts at 0 and ends at 4 minutes. 3 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Activity: What do you know or want to know about puberty? 1 Puberty is the stage in which your body changes and develops so that you are able to become a parent/reproduce (or similar answer). 2 Answers will depend on whether the learner is a girl or a boy. Before puberty Boy and girls normal growth in height little body hair skin not oily Boys voice not deep narrow shoulders and chest Girls narrow hips no breasts 3 Changes during puberty fast growth in height more body hair grows skin may get oily voice gets deeper shoulders and chest get broader hips widen breasts start to develop Learners’ questions are confidential. 2 Types of living things bacteria viruses fungi other parasites Activity 1: Find information about diseases Answers should include the following information: The word we use to describe any living thing that causes a disease is pathogen. The names of the parasites that cause malaria and yellow fever are Plasmodium (malaria) and Entamoeba (dysentery). Malaria is spread by mosquito bites; dysentery is spread by contaminated food and water. Activity 2: Group methods to prevent diseases How disease is spread In food Methods to prevent spread of disease Wash your hands with soap and water. Do not leave food at room temperature. Keep the kitchen, toilet and surroundings clean. Wash raw unpeeled fruits and vegetable before eating them. Keep food covered. Wash knives and working surfaces in the kitchen with hot soapy water after using them. In water Only drink safe, clean water. Boil water from rivers or reservoirs, or treat it with bleach to kill germs. Do not use rivers or other bodies of water as a toilet. Cover your nose and mouth when you cough or sneeze. Keep wounds covered with a plaster and do not touch other people’s open wounds. Questions 1 To make sex cells 2 a Sperm b Ova or eggs 3 a Testes b Sperm duct 4 a Ovaries b Oviduct c Uterus d Birth canal c Penis Topic 1.4: Diseases Getting started 1&2 3 Answers will depend on learners’ own experiences. An infectious disease is a disease that is caused by very small living things called germs. Questions 1 4 a Any living thing that lives on or in the body of another living thing. b They grow and reproduce in the bodies of other living things. Examples of diseases they cause cholera, pneumonia flu, chicken pox ringworm, athlete’s foot malaria, dysentery In body fluids Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Think like a scientist: Analyse hygiene methods that people use 2 Both the ancient Chinese medical book and Malpighi had the idea that the blood circulated through the body in a continuous pathway. Malpighi suggested that the capillaries connected the arteries and veins to allow the continuous blood circulation to happen. 3 He observed water pumps (in London). 4 a He studied the heart and blood vessels and carried out experiments. b To make sure that his observations and results were reliable and correct. a He observed that in one hour the heart pumps more than the body’s weight in blood. 1 wash hands after toilet 2 wash hands before working with food wash keep cover hands kitchen, nose after toilet and working and mouth with surroundings when food clean coughing or sneezing a Keep the kitchen, toilet and surroundings clean. b Wash hands after working with food. 3 The soap helps to kill germs. 4 So that they don’t spread germs from their hands to the food they are going to work with, and so that they don’t spread germs that might already be on the food they work with. 5 To stop germs from our bodies spreading through the air to other people. 6 Germs live and grow better in moist conditions; a dirty towel may have germs on it which rub off onto our hands. Project: The circulatory system Part 1 Discovery of how the circulatory system works 1 a b 5 They incorrectly thought that: • the liver produced blood • the lungs moved the blood around the body • the body used up the blood for energy as it flowed to the different organs • the heart’s function was to control our feelings • blood could pass directly from the right side of the heart to the left side of the heart through small holes • arteries contain air. They correctly thought that: • there are arteries and veins in the circulatory system • blood moves from the right side of the heart to the lungs and back to the left side of the heart • arteries contain blood. 5 b The heart works by muscle contraction to pump blood to body organs. Blood is carried away from heart by arteries and returns to the heart through veins. Gases enter and leave the blood in the lungs. Part 2 Draw a timeline of discoveries about the circulatory system Learners should work in pairs to draw their timelines. They should find the following answers to the research questions: • Transplanted the first human heart: Christiaan Barnard, 1967. • Discovered that humans can have different blood types: Karl Landsteiner, 1901. • Invented the first stethoscope to listen to the heart beating: René Laennec, about 1816. • Discovered that a substance in the blood called haemoglobin carries oxygen: Frederick Hunefeld, 1840. Learners should display their timelines in the classroom. Check your progress 1 a b c d e False – the heart pumps blood around the body True False – your pulse rate tells you how fast your heart is beating True False – arteries carry blood to all parts of the body OR veins carry blood from all parts of the body to the heart. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 2 a Timer, stopwatch or watch with a second hand b B = before exercise A = after exercise 130 Topic 2.1: Proprties of substances 120 Pulse rate in beats per minute Unit 2 Materials: properties and changes 110 Getting started 100 Use learners’ own answers to identify any errors or misconceptions they may have about changes of state. 90 80 70 Activity: Compare boiling and evaporation 60 50 1 40 30 20 10 0 B A Marcus B A Arun B A Jamal B A Kai Name 3 4 5 c Exercise makes their pulse rates increase. d Their pulse rates would be lower than they were directly after exercise. Our bodies need less oxygen when we are at rest so the heart will beat slower and the pulse rates will decrease. a Lungs b Oxygen c Carbon dioxide d Blood e Diaphragm f Ribs a Puberty is the age at which a person becomes able to reproduce. b Any two from grow taller quickly, develop more body hair, skin becomes more oily Tears – contain a chemical substance that kills some bacteria Mucus – traps germs Stomach acid – kills bacteria in food we have eaten Skin – stops bacteria entering the body 6 Bubbles form in the liquid. b The volume of liquid decreases/there is less liquid in the container. c Boiling – heat is added to make the liquid boil, so the particles gain energy more quickly than in an unheated liquid. This makes the liquid particles change to a gas faster. Look for similar drawings in learners’ answers. evaporation boiling gas particles bubbles a b 2 a The skin is a barrier that stops germs from entering the body. If we get a cut or wound, we must clean it to remove germs from the wound. We must cover it with a plaster to stop any germs from getting into the body through the broken skin. Think like a scientist 1: Measure and compare melting points Questions 1 a & b These are melting points for the substances suggested. Ice – 0 °C Butter – 35 °C Candle wax – 57 °C Beeswax – 63 °C Soap – 55 °C Coconut oil – 25 °C Answers will depend on the substances chosen. 2 Learners’ own bar charts. 3 Different substances have different melting points. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 4 5 No. The melting point is a property of the substance and will stay the same no matter how much of the substance is used. The time taken for melting will increase if more of the substance is heated. Because less heat energy is needed to change a solid to a liquid than to change all the particles in a liquid to a gas. Think like a scientist 2: Plan a test to compare boiling points of substances 1 Variable that changes is the substance tested. Variables that stay the same are the thermometer used and the method used to test each substance. Variable that is measured is the temperature at which the substance boils. 2 Learners will need: • a variety of liquids, e.g. water, vinegar, fruit juice, milk, cooking oil • a gas burner or hot plate and a thermometer • beakers or pans. 3 Heat each liquid in a beaker or pan until it boils. Measure and record the temperature of the boiling liquid in each beaker or pan. 4 Getting burned is a risk. Don’t touch the burner/hot plate or the hot beaker or pan. Wear protective gloves and goggles. 5 Record readings in a table. Present results in a bar graph. Topic 2.2: Thermal and electrical conductors Getting started 1 Heat energy from the hot water is transferred to the metal teaspoon and then to your hand when you touch the teaspoon. 2 Hot water → teaspoon → hand/person Think like a scientist 1: Investigate how well different materials conduct heat Questions 1 Learners’ own answers. Answer should be the bead on the metal spoon because metals are good thermal conductors. 2 Order should be: metal spoon, glass rod, plastic spoon, wooden pencil, polystyrene 3 a b The bead on the metal spoon Answers will depend on learners’ predictions. 4 a b The bead on the polystyrene It is not a good conductor of heat. 5 Metals are good conductors of heat. Non-metals (glass, plastic, wood and polystyrene) are not such good conductors of heat. 6 Measure the time it takes each bead to fall off and use the results to draw a bar graph. 7 Observing over time and fair testing. Learners observed the time it took for the bead to fall off each spoon. It was a fair test because the only variable that was changed was the material that the spoons were made from (independent variable). The dependent variable measured was the time taken for the bead to fall off each spoon. The control variables were the water temperature and the size of the bit of petroleum jelly and the bead on each spoon. Think like a scientist 3: Investigate the properties of gases Learners’ drawings should show that the ruler tilted and became unbalanced when air was let out of one of the balloons. Questions 1 The balloons filled up and expanded as air was blown into them. 2 The balloon that remained full of air caused the ruler to tip as it was heavier than the empty balloon. This shows that the air has mass. The empty balloon’s air escaped into the surrounding room and was no longer contained within the balloon. 3 7 We wore safety goggles as protection in case a balloon burst; used scissors carefully so as not to get cut; handled heavy books carefully. Questions 1 A thermal conductor is a material or substance that allows heat to pass through it easily (or similar answer). 2 Metals are good conductors of heat, so the heat from the stove passes easily through the metal to the food in the pot or pan. 3 Plastic is not a good conductor of heat, so the heat from the hot pot or pan does not pass easily to your hand when you hold the handle. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 5 A polystyrene foam cup. It is a poor thermal conductors, so the heat from the tea cannot be transferred easily from the cup into the surroundings. 2 and 6a Substance copper steel aluminium water sugar graphite Prediction: How brightly I think the lamp will shine? Observation: How brightly did the lamp shine? ✓✓ learners’ own prediction learners’ own prediction learners’ own prediction learners’ own prediction learners’ own prediction ✓✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ copper b it is bright (2 ticks) 4 a not very bright (1 tick) 6 b To make sure that their results are more reliable, learners could repeat the test. They could also compare their results with those of other groups. If the results are similar, they are more likely to be reliable. Questions 1 Answers will depend on learners’ predictions. 2 Copper, steel and aluminium 3 a Copper b Sugar 4 Metals are good electrical conductors/Nonmetals are poor electrical conductors. 5 Substances that conduct electricity: copper, steel, aluminium, graphite, water. Substance that does not conduct electricity: sugar 8 Identifying and classifying Scatter graph of values for conduction of heat and electricity 70 copper 60 50 aluminium 40 30 unknown 20 steel 10 0 brass graphite 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 Heat conduction 2 a c 3 The substances that conduct heat well are also good conductors of electricity. 4 The measurements for graphite do not fit the pattern. Graphite is a poor conductor of electricity, but it conducts heat quite well. 5 Accept any value for electricity conduction between 100 and 130. 6 A substance that conducts heat well also conducts electricity well OR Metals are good conductors of electricity and heat OR The better a substance conducts heat, the better it conducts electricity. ✓ a 6 1 Thermal insulators Think like a scientist 2: Investigate how well different substances conduct electricity 3 Activity: Compare thermal and electrical conductors Electrcity conduction 4 Copper Steel b d Copper Graphite Topic 2.3: Reversible changes Getting started 1 a The ice has started to melt. b Drawings should show the ice cube melting. 2 Heat causes the ice to melt because it makes the particles in the ice move faster and further apart until they have enough energy to become a liquid. 3 If we put the melted ice back in the freezer it will become solid ice again because it loses heat energy. As the particles in the liquid lose heat energy, they slow down and move closer together until they form a solid. Questions 1 We can make solid jelly become liquid by heating it. heating Solid jelly liquid jelly cooling Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 2 An irreversible change. The liquid egg white and yolk become solid and cannot be changed back to liquids. Think like a scientist 1: Demonstrate a reversible change 1 Learners can choose any change of state: melting, solidifying/freezing, condensation, evaporation. They could also choose dissolving. 2 a Answers will depend on which reversible change learners choose. b If learners are heating substances, they should take care not to burn themselves. 3&4 Questions 1 How fast a substance dissolves 2 Stirring and temperature 3 a Heating makes the particles of the solvent move faster and spread out more. When the solute is added to the heated solvent, the solute particles also gain heat energy and move faster. b The solute particles spread out and move more quickly into the spaces between the solvent particles. This makes the solute dissolve faster. 4 Materials, equipment and answers will depend on which reversible change learners choose to demonstrate. Activity: Describe dissolving 1 The copper sulfate – I can see it spreading out in the water. Think like a scientist 3: Ask and investigate a question about dissolving 2 The water 3 Learners’ drawings should show a uniform blue solution. 4 Learners should explain that the solute particles move and spread out between the solvent particles until they are evenly spread. 5 Dissolving is a reversible change. We can get back the solute by evaporating the solvent. We can change the evaporated solvent back into a liquid by allowing it to condense on a cooler surface. In this activity, learners should think of their own question about dissolving that they would like to find the answer to. These are some possible ideas: • How much solute can dissolve in water at different temperatures? • Does the type of substance affect how fast it dissolves? • Do all solids dissolve faster when we heat the solvent? • Are there any other factors that can affect the rate of dissolving? a Learners should observe that the sugar dissolves more quickly in the jar of hot water. The hot water makes the particles move faster so the solute and the solvent particles come into contact with each more quickly. Learners should choose the appropriate type of scientific enquiry to answer their question. Tell them to look at the ‘Working like a scientist’ pages at the beginning of the Learner’s Book to remind themselves of the features of the different types of scientific enquiry. Answers and methods of investigation used will depend on the questions that learners ask. They could present their findings in a poster or using presentation software, such as Microsoft Powerpoint. b Answers will depend on prediction made. Topic 2.4: Chemical reactions Think like a scientist 2: Does water temperature affect the rate of dissolving? 1 2 3 9 The sugar will eventually dissolve because the movement of the water particles and sugar particles will bring enough of them into contact with one another, so that the sugar particles can spread out between the water particles without stirring or heating the solution. The same amount of solute and solvent were used in each test, only the water temperature was changed. Learners should also have stirred both solutions the same number of times. Learners should conclude that a solute dissolves faster in hot water or that heat makes a solute dissolve faster. Getting started 1 The candle wax melts. It is heated which makes it change from a solid to a liquid. 2 The candle wick burns/becomes black. This is not reversible. 3 A new black substance (soot) formed on the back of the spoon; smoke also forms. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Check your progress Think like a scientist 1: Identify reactants and products 2 b 3 The bicarbonate of soda and vinegar reacted together to make a gas (or similar explanation). 4 The bicarbonate of soda and vinegar 5 The gas Learners’ drawings should show gas bubbles coming out of the jar. 1 6 a & b After a few minutes, a white substance forms in the jar. Think like a scientist 2: Investigate evidence for chemical reactions A 1 2 d 2 Learners’ drawings should show a colour change of the iodine from yellow-brown to blue-black. b Carbon dioxide c Learners should describe the change in the colour of limewater from clear to milky white. 3 The change in colour is evidence that a chemical reaction has taken place. Investigate evidence for chemical reactions B a The temperature at which a solid melts and becomes a liquid. b Copper, gold, silver, aluminium, candle wax, ice c The metals have much higher melting points than the substances that are not metals. d No. A melting point is a property of a substance, so each substance has its own melting point that does not change. a Metals conduct heat better than nonmetals like glass. This means that the heat from the oven is transferred more quickly to the food in the metal dish. b Yes. How well a substance conducts heat is a property of a substance, so a different metal will either conduct the heat better or worse than the first metal dish. 3 a & b Reversible processes: boiling, freezing, evaporating, dissolving + melting or condensing; Irreversible processes: rusting, burning + cooking, baking, rotting or other suitable answers. 4 2–5 Learners should observe an increase in temperature and rusting of the wire wool. a In hot water b Adding heat makes the particles of the solid and the water move faster and spread out more. This allows the particles of the solid to move between the water particles more easily, so the solid dissolves faster. a The iron nail changed colour. b Iron, air and water c The chemical name for rust is iron oxide. The should conclude that a change in colour and temperature are evidence that a chemical reaction has taken place. 5 Questions 1 2 3 10 A gas is produced, e.g. vinegar and bicarbonate of soda react to produce a gas. There is a colour change, e.g. when iodine reacts with starch and changes from yellow-brown to a blue-black colour or when clear limewater reacts with carbon dioxide and turns white. There is change in temperature, such as in a reaction between wire wool and vinegar; washing powder and water; cement and water. Unit 3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil Topic 3.1: Igneous rocks a Limewater and carbon dioxide Getting started b Calcium carbonate 1 c The colour of the limewater changes from clear to milky white. A: Earth’s crust, B: mantle, C: outer core, D: inner core 2 Magma 3 A volcanic eruption occurs. Bubbles of gas form. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Think like a scientist 1: Collect and sort rocks Learners’ answers will vary according to the rocks they collect and study. Activity 1: Use text, a photograph and a diagram to describe how sedimentary rocks form 1 Any one from heating and cooling of rock to break up surface layers; plant roots breaking up surface rock and rain loosening and dissolving rock. 2 The river uses the broken rocks to scrape the sides and bottom of its valley. 3 On the sea bed or lake bed 4 Because the rocks are formed of layers 5 Weathering; eroding; transporting; depositing; sedimentation Activity: Describe igneous rocks and complete a key 1 Solidification 2 Slowly, because the crystals are large enough to see with the naked eye. 3 Intrusive igneous rock 4 Quickly, because the crystals are too small to see with the naked eye. 5 Extrusive igneous rock 6 a b c 7 Quartz White and larger than the other crystals. Mica Missing words: Left granite; right extrusive Think like a scientist 2: Make your own crystals Questions 1 a b 2 3 The risk is pouring the hot water into the jars. Use protective gloves while pouring the hot water. Learner’s own response. Best reasoned prediction is that jar 1 in the cool environment will start to make crystals first. Learner’s own response. Best reasoned prediction is that the bigger crystals will be in jar 2 which is in a warm place so will cool down more slowly. 4 Learners’ own responses 5 The warmer the environment, the bigger the crystal. 6 The warmer the environment, the slower the crystal forms (or the cooler the environment, the quicker the crystal forms). 7 Jar 2. Topic 3.2: Sedimentary rocks and fossils Activity 2: Identify and describe sedimentary rocks 1–3 Learners’ own responses 4 Sedimentary rocks are formed of sediments stuck together. Sedimentary rocks form in layers. 5 Missing words Left – sandstone Middle – shale Right – limestone Think like a scientist: Make your own plant fossil 1 2 a Sediments on the sea bed b Minerals Because sedimentary rocks form in a sea or lake where the animals’ dead bodies lie. Topic 3.3: Metamorphic rocks and the rock cycle Getting started 1 The rocks are shiny, crystalline and of different colours: white, brown, blue and yellow. 2 Some learners might recognise that this is marble. You can tell them that the rock is marble and that the rock used to be limestone before it was changed or metamorphosed into marble – that’s what we will be finding out in this topic. Getting started The rocks are different to igneous rocks because they are a reddish-brown in colour (not shiny or crystalline) and they are formed of layers. 11 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE To be able to carve this rock and make these patterns which have lasted for hundreds of years, it must be possible to cut and carve the rock, so it must be hard but not crack and shatter when you hit it. Activity 1: Identify and describe metamorphic rocks Getting started 1 Soil 2 Rocks 3 Weathering is the process where rocks are broken up by heat and cold, rain and ice. 1 Marble 2 Sandstone 3 It changes into slate. 4 Gneiss is a metamorphic rock that forms when granite is changed by heat and pressure. 5 Learners’ own responses Activity 1: Types of soil 6 Metamorphic rocks are shiny because they are crystalline. Metamorphic rocks sometimes have many layers because of pressure. Metamorphic rocks sometimes have bands of crystals because of pressure. 1 Think like a scientist: Investigate a soil sample Think like a scientist: How people use rocks in my area Learners’ answers will depend on the examples they find. Activity 2: Describe how a model can help us understand the rock cycle 1 Because it shows how rocks are continuously formed, broken down and re-formed. 2 Arrows 3 Weathering and erosion 4 Cooling 5 Melting 6 Heating, pressurising and burial 7 It can be buried, heated and put under pressure and changed into metamorphic rock. Or it can be weathered and eroded to make sediments which become new sedimentary rock. 8 1–7 and 9–10 Learners’ own responses 8 Air Learners’ own responses 2 Size of particles Sandy soil Large Quantity of A little water soil holds Size of air spaces Large Quantity of Small organic matter 3 Clay soil Loam Small A lot Large and small Medium Small Small Medium Large Clay soil, because it holds a lot of water and the water cannot drain through it. Activity 2: Changing the composition of soil 1 2 a Water the soil when there is no rain. b Dig in compost or fertilisers. c Dig the soil and add sand. a Loam; the dark brown colour shows that it contains a lot of organic matter. b She mixes air and organic matter in with the soil by turning it with a hoe. She takes out the weeds. She waters it in dry weather. a, b and c sedimentary rock granite magma 12 Topic 3.4: Soil burial, heat and pressure heat and pressure cooling metamorphic rock gneiss granite Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 3 Action Change in the composition of the soil Planting same Plant uses up all plant on same soil nutrients in soil. Soil over and over again becomes dry. Using artificial Damages soil texture. fertilisers Dries out soil. Using pesticides Kills organic matter in soil. Not digging and Air and organic matter turning soil not mixed in the soil. 2 a b A consumer is a living thing that cannot make its own food and must eat other living things to obtain its energy. herbivores zebra locust sheep omnivores monkey bear carnivores tiger heron crocodile Check your progress 1 1E; 2A; 3C; 4B; 5F; 6D 2 a Basalt 3 a Igneous b It is crystalline c Minerals (or crystals of minerals) d Magma inside the Earth’s crust cooled to form solid rock. Think like a scientist: Explain a food web and draw food chains a Sedimentary 1 b 4 5 6 b Limestone c Loam Corn → mouse → snake 2 Cabbage → snail → duck → fox 3 Pond weed → tadpole → fish → person Palm shoot, fig, jack fruit It contains fossils b Spotted deer, coconut palm beetle, fruit bat c On the sea bed or lake bed c Tiger, python, hawk a Marble d Orangutan b Limestone 2 Palm shoot, fig, jack fruit, coconut palm beetle c The limestone was heated. The rock melted and then re-crystallised into marble. 3 a Tiger, python b a 1. Weathering 2. Erosion 3. Sediments 4. Sedimentation 5. Heat 6. Pressure Both eat spotted deer; python also eats the fruit bat. The rock cycle Unit 4 Food chains and food webs Topic 4.1: Food chains, food webs and energy transfers Getting started 13 1 a b 1 Activity: Draw food chains a A producer is a living thing (usually a green plant) that can make its own food. b Fern, bean plant, palm tree 4 a Any three from: fig → orangutan → python fig → orangutan → tiger fig → fruit bat → hawk fig → fruit bat → python jack fruit → fruit bat → hawk jack fruit → fruit bat → python palm shoot → fruit bat → hawk palm shoot → fruit bat → python palm shoot → spotted deer → tiger palm shoot → spotted deer → python jack fruit → orangutan → python jack fruit → orangutan → tiger palm shoot → orangutan → python palm shoot → orangutan → tiger Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Living things 14 rice plants 9 caterpillars 5 frogs 2 kingfishers a The amount of energy gets less and less as it is transferred through a food chain. b This is because not all of the energy in a food a consumer eats is passed on to the next link in the chain – some of the energy is used up by the consumer and as heat. Topic 4.2: Harm to food chains and food webs b 5 30 20 10 0 The kingfishers. This is because as you move up the food chain, the same number of pesticide particles are transferred to fewer living things on each level. The higher up the food chain, the more pesticide particles are collected/enter the body of the consumer. a Rice plants b Caterpillars c Frogs d Kingfishers 1 The farmer sprays pesticide onto the producer/corn. 2 The pesticide moves through the food chain in the bodies of animals that eat the sprayed plants and the animals that eat them. 2 Eating the living thing Corn + pesticide → snail → person or Corn + pesticide → snail → bird → person 3 Rice plant → caterpillar → frog → kingfisher 4 Learners should explain that the game shows that toxic substances like pesticides move through a food chain when a living thing eats another living thing that has the pesticide in its body. If animals eat a lot of living things that contain the pesticide, they will accumulate high levels of pesticides in their bodies. 3 14 40 Questions 1 Questions 50 Living things in the food chain Getting started Learners’ own ideas may include substances they know of, such as oil, acids or pollution in general. 60 rs 5 Graph of pesticide particles accumulated gfi she A consumer, such as a hawk, does not depend directly on producers to get its energy because it does not eat plants. A hawk eats animals that get their energy from eating plants, and in this way depends on energy stored in the producers. a rs 4 4 illa Energy is transferred from the producer when a consumer eats the producer. lan 3 ep They use it to make food. ric 2 Number of pesticide particles From the Sun ts Questions 1 Average number of pesticide ‘particles’ collected 7 11 20 50 kin A food web shows that living things eat a range of other living things to obtain their energy, not just one thing as shown in a food chain (or similar answer). This is a possible results table based on using 100 ‘particle’ tokens and a class size of 30 learners. fro gs 3 erp 5 Think like a scientist: Play a food chain game cat b Any one from: palm shoot → coconut palm beetle → orangutan → python palm shoot → coconut palm beetle → orangutan → tiger Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Activity: Research information about mercury in food chains 4 It re-uses plastics that would otherwise be thrown away and end up in the oceans. Learners’ presentations should include the following information: • Mercury gets into the environment when mercury waste or chemicals containing mercury are released by coal burning power plants, factories or mines into the air, soil, rivers and the sea. • Mercury gets into food chains when it is absorbed from the soil by plant roots, from the air by plant leaves, or from the water by aquatic plants and animals. • Mercury moves through food chains when living things eat other living things that have absorbed mercury into their bodies. • Mercury is harmful to living things because it damages their bodies. For example, in humans and other mammals, mercury damages the nervous system. It can also affect growth and reproduction in many animals. 5 The ecobricks are used to build day care centres and pre-primary schools for children in poor communities in South Africa. 6 a Learners’ own ideas. For example, buy fewer products that are packaged in plastic; use paper drinking straws instead of plastic straws; use re-useable shopping bags or paper or cloth shopping bags. b Learners’ own answers. For example, to prevent damage to food chains; to make our environment look better. Example of food chain: shrimp amount of mercury small fish green algae Project guidance Part 1 1 Animals in the food chains can mistake plastics for food and swallow them. The plastics get stuck in the animals’ digestive systems and can kill them. Microplastics can also stay in the bodies of the sea animals and be passed through food chains. The microplastics can have harmful effects inside the body if they accumulate, especially in consumers higher up the food chains. 15 1 a Grasses, acacia tree b Termite, impala, zebra c Baboon d Three: lion, hyena, leopard e Any three from: grass → zebra → lion grass → zebra → hyena grass → zebra → leopard grass → impala → lion grass → impala → hyena grass → impala → leopard grass → baboon → lion grass → baboon → leopard grass → baboon → hyena tuna fish octopus Check your progress 2 Microplastics form from larger plastics that break down into tiny particles due to the action of sunlight and waves. 3 Because there are lots of large plastics in the oceans which keep on breaking down into smaller and smaller pieces. f Any two from: acacia → termite → baboon → lion acacia → termite → baboon → leopard grass → termite → baboon → lion grass → termite → baboon → leopard grass → baboon → hyena → lion grass → termite → baboon → hyena → lion or acacia → termite → baboon → hyena → lion g Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 2 a Dot plot of average number of particles taken in 3 4 green algae shrimps small fish Living things in the food chain b 4 c 3 d 120 e Any two from pesticides, microplastics, mercury, cadmium Unit 5 Forces and electricity 16 1 A satellite is an object that orbits a bigger object in space. 2 An artificial satellite is put into space by humans. A natural satellite is a satellite that already exists in space. 3 Because of the force of gravity between the Earth and the Moon. 4 His mass is the same but his weight is less on the Moon than on Earth (learners will not know this yet but it will be interesting to hear what they think). Yes b His weight will be less. c Gravity is less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has a smaller mass than the Earth. Astronauts have to wear heavy suits and boots to make it easier for them to adjust to walking on the Moon’s surface. The smaller gravity on the Moon makes walking more like floating if the astronaut is not carrying extra weight. When the astronaut tips the glass, the water will go sideways. He will have to use a straw! Think like a scientist: Measure the mass and weight of objects 1 The forcemeter readings are ten times the measuring scale readings. 2 Learners’ own responses. They should find ALL measurements of weight are ten times the mass. 3 One kilogram of mass has a weight of ten newtons on Earth. 4 a The mass of objects would be the same as on Earth. Mass is the same everywhere. b The weight of objects would be different to those measured on Earth. This is because the Moon has a smaller force of gravity than the Earth. Topic 5.1: Mass and weight Getting started a Activity 2: How gravity affects weight in space 1 Zero gravity 2 Gravity 3 Bones become weak, muscles become weak, confusion of up and down, for example. 4 They use and tie themselves to footholds and handholds. 5 To try to keep their muscles working. 6 To help them remember which way is up. Activity 1: What is the difference between mass and weight? 7 Very little or nothing 8 The same as it was on Earth 1 She was not scientifically correct. She should have said ‘The baby’s mass is 3.6 kg.’ 9 They have to suck food out of sachets and suck drinks up with straws. 2 An object’s mass remains the same wherever it is. An object’s weight depends on the force of gravity. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Topic 5.2: The effects of forces Getting Started 1 The ping-pong ball is at rest. 2 Yes, there are forces acting on it. 3 4 Activity 2: Identify the effects of forces in ball games 1 gravity 2 3 normal force 4 4 The person is hitting the ball with a bat. Think like a scientist: Investigate and discuss the effects of forces on an object Learners observe and discuss the various points to inform their answers to the questions. Activity 1: The effects of forces Make an object move: roll the ball along the table towards the book. 5 a He will catch the ball. b It will stop the ball from moving. a He will kick the ball. b The ball moves and changes direction. a She will hit the ball. b It will move and change direction. a Gravity and normal forces b The balls move, change direction when they hit each other or the sides of the table and stop when they drop into the pockets. Learners’ own responses, such as throwing a ball makes the ball change direction; catching the ball stops the ball moving; bouncing a ball against the wall makes a ball change direction. Topic 5.3: Floating and sinking Getting started Possible answers: 1 It will float. 2 Learners are likely to say that it feels light in weight. 3 It will sink. 4 Learners are likely to say that it feels heavy. Change the shape of an object: press down on the ball with your hand. 5 Learners might suggest the weight/mass is spread across a large area which allows it to float. 2 Think like a scientist 1: How does mass affect floating and sinking? Slow down a moving object: roll the ball along the table with a cloth on it to create friction. Stop a moving object: hold up a book on the table to stop the ball. Change the direction an object is moving in: flick the ball sideways to someone else in the group. gravity Learners’ own responses book push Activity: Fair testing, force diagrams and writing a conclusion 1 normal force 3 gravity push friction normal force 17 The ball moves, changes direction and bounces off the table. book The control variables are the liquid in the large container and the mass of the small plastic container (these remain the same). The independent variable is the total mass of sand (or rice) you put in the small container (this changes). The dependent variable is the floating or sinking of the container (this is what you observe as a result of changing the total mass of sand in the small container). Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 3 The type of liquid in the large container was always the same; the same small container was used each time; 10 g of sand was measured with the same measuring scale each time. a 6 18 16 Note that the gravity arrow should be the same length as the upthrust arrow. Graph showing the relationship between container’s base area and the number of coins in it before sinking 14 Number of coins 2 gravity 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 upthrust 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Area of base cm2 b Note that the gravity arrow is longer than the upthrust arrow. gravity The graph shows a positive trend. Topic 5.4: Different circuits and circuit diagrams Getting started upthrust 4 When the mass of the object is less than or equal to the mass of water displaced by the upthrust force, the object floats. When the mass of the object is more than the mass of water displaced by the upthrust force, the object sinks. Think like a scientist 2: How does shape affect floating and sinking? 1 and 2 Learners should discover that a large, flat-bottomed boat can carry a greater number of marbles before sinking. 18 3 The larger the surface of the container in contact with the water, the more likely the object inside the container is to float. 4 An object of a certain mass that has a small, compact shape will sink. An object of the same mass with a larger, flatter shape will float. 5 a Although the container ship has a large mass, it has a large, flat shape that allows it to float. b When the ship carries empty containers its mass is less so it floats higher in the water than when the containers are full. 1 Two cells, a switch, a lamp and connecting wire. 2 No. 3 The switch is open so the circuit is broken and the lamp will not light up. Activity: Use circuit symbols to read and draw circuit diagrams 1 a Circuit B b Circuit A c Circuit C 2 Circuit B 3 Circuit B. It has a 3 V battery instead of a 1.5 V cell. 4 5 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Think like a scientist 1: Build circuits with different components In a series circuit there is only one path for the electric current. If one lamp is removed from a series circuit, the other lamp will not light up because the circuit is broken. In a parallel circuit, each lamp has its own circuit. If one lamp is removed from a parallel circuit, the other lamp will remain lit. The remaining lamp will shine with the same brightness as before. 1 A circuit with a cell, A circuit with a a lamp and a switch. battery, a switch and a buzzer. 2 Learners should have concluded that the buzzer would sound louder. 3 By adding another cell to the circuit. 4 a Circuit B. b Circuit A only has a 1.5 V cell, which is not strong enough for the buzzer to work; circuit C has an open switch. Think like a scientist 2: Make and compare a series circuit and a parallel circuit 1 Yes, the lamps shone more brightly in the parallel circuit. This is because, in a parallel circuit, the full strength of the electricity goes to each lamp. In a series circuit, the strength of the electricity has to be shared between the lamps. 2 No: unscrewing one lamp broke the circuit. 3 Yes: the other lamp lit up. It shone with the same brightness as before. This is because the same strength of electricity goes to each lamp. 6 a Circuit B is the series circuit and Circuit A is the parallel circuit. b Circuit A. The lamps will shine more brightly because each lamp has its own circuit and receives the full strength of the battery. Check your progress 1 2 a Grams (g) and kilograms (kg) b Newtons (N) a 70 kg b 700 N c 70 kg d 350 N 3 Force has: • changed the shape of the car – it is crushed • changed the position of the car – it has overturned • changed the movement of the car – it has stopped • changed the direction of movement of the car – the car is on its roof facing the opposite direction. 4 a and b gravity 4 gravity upthrust upthrust series circuit 5 19 parallel circuit In a series circuit with two lamps and one battery, the lamps will burn less brightly than in a parallel circuit with two lamps and one battery . c The duck has a mass equal to or less than the mass of water displaced, so it floats. The stone has a greater mass than the mass of water displaced, so it sinks. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Activity: How we see reflected light 1 A mirror, a lake with clear, still water 2 A mirror image 3 A is the incident ray; B is the reflected ray. 4 They could add another 3 V battery. d They could make a parallel circuit. ra y c y ra nt de It is a series circuit because the electric current only has one path. ci in b normal te d a re fle c 5 Think like a scientist 1: Demonstrate how light travels when it reflects 1 inc ide nt ray ed ect refl Unit 6 Light and the solar system ray Topic 6.1: Reflection 2 The angles were the same. Getting Started 3 So that we could see that the light left the mirror at the same angle as it arrived for any angle. 4 When a ray of light reflects off a plane mirror it makes the same angle with the normal as it did when it arrived at the mirror (or similar). 1 The Sun 2 Light travels from the Sun to the tree. Light reflects off the tree into Sofia’s eyes. 3 5 20 4 A smooth, shiny surface 5 Yes, all surfaces reflect some light otherwise we would not see them. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Think like a scientist 2: Make and test a periscope Think like a scientist 1: Demonstrate how light travels when it refracts 1 1 2 3 A periscope is a device that uses mirrors to allow you to see over the top of something in front of you. 2 Learners could test their periscope in the classroom to see things that are higher up, while looking straight ahead. They could position themselves below a window and hold the periscope so that they could see through the window. incident ray 3 reflected ray incident ray reflected ray 4 Because the reflected ray from the top mirror has to go straight down the periscope to the bottom mirror. 5 Light travels from the Sun to the person on the other side of the wall. Light reflects off the person to the top mirror of the periscope. Light reflects off the top mirror and travels down the periscope to the bottom mirror. Light reflects off the bottom mirror into your eye. 6 By making the periscope taller. 7 Learners’ answers may include seeing the stage at a concert or seeing a procession when there are people standing in front of you, or for seeing above water in a submarine. Topic 6.2: Refraction Getting started Learners will think this is a trick! It is an optical illusion . . . they will not know the complete explanation because that is refraction – what the topic is all about. But you could ask them if they have any ideas why the arrows appeared to point in the opposite direction – the fact that the light has to travel through water and then air for example. 21 Learners’ own responses 4 The pencil wasn’t really bent. 5 The light passes through water, glass and air. 6 Light from the pencil travels through the water in the glass and then bends when it passes through the glass to the air. 7 The pencil appeared to be bent because the light refracted when it moved from the water through the glass to the air. 8 During the demonstration, the light travelled from the card through the air, then through the glass into the water, and finally out of the glass and into the air once more before it reached our eyes. This means that the light bends once when it travelled through the glass into the water, and then it bends again when it travelled out of the water through the glass and into the air. As a result, the light rays cross and the arrows appear to be turned around. Think like a scientist 2: Make and test a convex lens 1 It has the same bulging shape. 2 Light rays pass from the print through the water drop and bend inward and converge at a point just beyond the water drop. This point where the rays converge is the focus and we see the enlarged print. 3 Learners can discover their own answers. Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE Topic 6.3: The solar system 6 Learners should identify a pattern of waning from full Moon to new Moon and waxing from new Moon to full Moon. 7 Observing over time and pattern seeking. Getting Started 1 The Sun, planets, moons, (and asteroids and comets) 2 The Sun 3 A star emits/sends out light and a planet reflects light. 4 The Moon travels around the Earth Think like a scientist 1: Make a scale model of the solar system Activity 2: Identify phases of the Moon 1 Waning 2 1: full Moon; 2: last quarter; 3: waning crescent 3 New Moon 4 1 The Sun is represented by a tennis or cricket ball and the planets by sugar grains, peas and lentils. 2 The sizes of the planets and the distances from the Sun are more to scale. 3 About 750 metres Activity 1: The planets waxing gibbous 5 29.5 days 6 The Moon’s orbit around the Earth. 1 Jupiter 2 Mercury Check your progress 3 Mercury 4 Neptune 1 5 Venus 6 Jupiter 7 Neptune 8 Mercury 9 Mercury 10 Neptune 11 Saturn 12 Jupiter 13 Earth 14 Jupiter and Saturn a The bending of light is reflection/ refraction. b A piece of glass with a curved surface is a lens/mirror c A periscope uses mirrors set at 90°/45° angles. d When the lit up part of the Moon becomes bigger over a period of days, the Moon is waxing/waning. e The bent pencil in the glass of water is a trick of the light/an optical illusion. a 1 is an incident ray and 2 is a reflected ray b Equal 15 Uranus and Neptune Think like a scientist 2: Observe and describe the phases of the Moon 1–4 Do not expect learners to produce drawings of the phases of the Moon for every day of the month (this would be unnecessary and not possible if it is overcast). A typical week could be: : Sun Mon cloudy no moon Tue Wed cloudy Thu Fri Sat cloudy cloudy If a learner produces 30 perfect pictures of the Moon when you know on many days it was not possible to see the Moon, you will know that they have made it up! 5 22 Learners should label phases on their drawings – e.g. above they could label waxing crescent 2 3 A light ray from the stone travels through the water and then bends or refracts when it passes from water to air. The ray continues to Sofia’s eye. However, Sofia’s normal line of sight is a straight line to the stone, which appears to be floating in the water higher up. 4 a 1: Earth; 2: the Moon; 3: Saturn; 4: Mercury; 5: the Sun; 6: Venus b 365¼ days c 29½ days d Body 3 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021 CAMBRIDGE PRIMARY SCIENCE 6: TEACHER’S RESOURCE 5 a The Sun’s rays b Waxing c 2= first quarter 4= full 7= waning crescent 23 Cambridge Primary Science – Baxter & Dilley © Cambridge University Press 2021