What is your favourite weather? Why?
What is the weather that you don't like at all?
Do you want to play a mingle activity?
Go and ask 5 classmates these questions:
What is your favourite weather?
What is the weather that you don't like at all?
Also, write the name of the four seasons in your paper. Do you know them? Let's discover your previous knowledge.
Watch the video on the left.
Form groups of 4 or 5.
Every group has to make a composition of the weather: sunny, stormy, windy, snowy, rainy, cloudy ...
Decide how you want to be your composition and start working at it.
Look again the video and answer these questions.
What can we do to prevent and stop global warming?
Which phenomenon or effect is responsible for global warming?
Learn how to make a rainbow using just a few simple everyday items you can find out how rainbows work.
What you'll need:
A glass of water (about three quarters full)
White paper
A sunny day
Instructions:
Take the glass of water and paper to a part of the room with sunlight (near a window is good).
Hold the glass of water (being careful not to spill it) above the paper and watch as sunlight passes through the glass of water, refracts (bends) and forms a rainbow of colors on your sheet of paper.
Try holding the glass of water at different heights and angles to see if it has a different effect.
What's happening?
While you normally see a rainbow as an arc of color in the sky, they can also form in other situations.
Rainbows form in the sky when sunlight refracts (bends) as it passes through raindrops, it acts in the same way when it passes through your glass of water. The sunlight refracts, separating it into the colors red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
How will you show that air is necessary for burning?
How does oxygen help burning?
What will happen if we put a glass over a burning candle?
The triangle illustrates the three elements a fire needs to ignite: heat, fuel, and an oxidizing agent (usually oxygen).
In order to burn this fuel, oxygen is needed, as it is with any fire. The waste products from the combustion process are water and carbon dioxide. Thus, we breathe because oxygen is needed to burn the fuel (sugars and fatty acids) in our cells to produce energy The air we breathe contains about 21% oxygen.
The burning candle produces carbon dioxide and water in the form of water vapor. The glass becomes foggy due to this water. The flame goes out, of course, from a lack of enough oxygen in the glass. ... If the air in the glass cools down and its volume decreases, a negative pressure is created inside the glass.
Air looks invisible because it sends very little color to our eyes. Most objects seem to have color because they absorb some light wavelengths, or colors, and reflect others back to us. Objects appear to be the color they reflect to our eyes.
Complete these weather worksheets to check all the words and contents that we have been learning the last week.
Review the months of the year, the seasons and the weather vocabulary.
WORKSHEET 1
WORKSHEET 2
WORKSHEET 3
Watch the video and draw all the natural disasters that you discover in it.
Then, we are going to play bingo with the natural disasters vocabulary.
Boys and girls! What's that?! Is it a secret code?
Yes, it is!!!! You have to use the code to discover the message.
Take a paper, translate the code and you will have a beautiful poem about weather.
Write it down
Decorate with weather elements around.
Look at the poster and define Weather and Climate change.
Enter in this page from NASA to play games, watch videos and learn interesting things about weather, climate and air.
If you want to know more things about the weather and the air, feel free to search the internet and discover what can you do for helping the PLANET.