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ACTIVITY in Observations, Density, Physical Properties, Introduction. Last updated June 21, 2019.


Summary

In this activity, students investigate whether certain materials will sink or float in water. Students will also explore how the shape of an object can affect its volume and density.

Grade Level

Elementary school

Objectives

By the end of this activity, students should be able to

  • recognize that some objects sink and that others float.
  • understand that the shape of an object can affect whether it will sink or float.
  • describe objects in the terms of their physical properties.
  • relate the concepts of shape, volume and density based on their observations.

Chemistry Topics

  • Observations
  • Density
  • Physical properties
  • Inferences

Time

Teacher Preparation: 10 minutes

Lesson: 20-25 minutes

Materials

  • Aquarium tank or clear container filled almost to the top with water
  • Items to put into the tank that sink and some that float (be sure to have some that float with flat bottoms for comparing with the clay that floats)
  • Golf ball-sized ball of clay
  • Electronic scale
  • Student activity sheet
  • Paper towels

Safety

  • Always wear safety goggles when handling chemicals in the lab.
  • Students should wash their hands thoroughly before leaving the lab.
  • When students complete the lab, instruct them how to clean up their materials and dispose of any chemicals.

Teacher Notes

  • For preparation gather a few items that sink and a few that float. Fill a fish tank or clear container almost to the top with water. Roll the clay into a ball, make copies of the Student Activity sheet.
  • Prepare a limited number of items to save time. (Students love this and may ask you to try many more objects.)
  • Do not fill the tank too full. You need to put your arm to the bottom without losing water.
  • Challenge: Ask students what they could do to floaters to make them sinkers, and what they could do to sinkers to make them floaters.
  • Vocabulary:
  1. Gather Data - When you gather data you observe things
  2. Record Data - You write and/or draw what you observe
  3. Compare - Tell how things are the same and different
  4. Properties - What makes an object different then another such at shape and size
  • Opening: Play the song, “It’s Called Chemistry” by Kim Mitzo Thompson.
  • Depending on the ability level and age of students, you could keep a large version of the data table on a classroom whiteboard or chart paper instead of having student’s record information.
  • For each object discuss possible physical properties other than shape and mass (suggestions: color, texture, state of matter). Then discuss the shape and have students take turns placing the objects on the scale to collect the value for the mass.
  • Once the row in the data table is complete for an object (other than the “sink or float” column) Have students take turns placing the object on top of the water to see if it will sink or float (save the clay for last). After each item record if it sinks or floats.
  • Have the students predict if the item will sink or float after you do one or two.
  • Before placing the clay ball in the water, have the students predict if it will sink or float. Have a student drop the clay ball into the water. Then ask if the clay could possibly float. Prompt students to change the shape to see if it will float. Have a few students change the shape.
  • Help the students conclude by checking their charts that most bowl or boat-like shapes float and that compact masses sink. Also help them conclude that when clay matter's property of shape is changed so is its ability to float.
  • Have a culminating discussion about density (the mass per volume of an object). Discuss how the shape of an object affects its volume, therefore affecting the overall density value. Objects with density values higher than water will sink, while those with smaller values than water will float. It you can change the volume of an object; you can change its density, which can in turn cause it to sink or float.

For the Student

Data

Object Physical Properties Shape Mass Sink or Float

Clay Table

Shape Mass Sink or Float