Essential and guiding questions:
- What is in the cup?
- Describe the ice. What does it look like? Feel like?
- What is the ice made of?
- How is ice made?
- Pour the ice into a container of a different shape or size. What does it look like now? Does it look the same or different? Has the shape of the ice changed? Why do you think that is?
- What will happen if we leave the ice out on the desk/table? Why? How do you know?How long might this take?
- What happened to the ice? Why?
- What is in the cup?
- How is it like the ice? How is it different from the ice?
- Describe the water. What does it look like? Feel like? Pour the water into a container of a different shape or size. What does it look like now? Does it look the same or different? Has the shape of the water changed? Why do you think that is?
- Did the ice change its shape when you poured it into this container? Why or why not?
- Can you think of something else that we can pour in that will take the shape of the container?
- Return the water to the glass. Is there any way that we could change this water back to ice? How? How long might this take?
- Change is happening all around us. There are some changes that happen so quickly or slowly that we cannot see them. Did the change in the water happen slowly or quickly?
- How long did it take for the ice to turn into water? Do you think that there is any way to speed up this change? How? If time permits, allow students to share and test their ideas. (Students might suggest and test blow dryer, fan, sunlight, different spots in the room, radiator, salt, stirring it, different container, etc.)
- Is there any way to slow down this change? (different container, insulator, different location in the room, place in the shade, put a fan on it, etc.) How can we compare the rate of change? (Time it, use ice in a plastic cup as a control.)
- Can you think of anything else that changes from one form to another? In the kitchen? In the bathtub? How might soap change?
- How can we make water go from water to ice?
- How can we make water go from ice to water?
- Give two examples of where you would see water going back and forth from one form to another.
- Does the water ever "get tired?" Would we ever get to a point where we couldn't get this change to appen?