The
Incredible Journey
(NOTE:
In the printed version of the book, on page 161, this activity
is found in a two color, three column format. The Watercourse
and the Council for Environmental Education retain all rights
to this activity and the illustrations included from the Project
WET Curriculum and Activity Guide).
- Grade
Level: Upper Elementary, Middle School
- Subject
Areas: Earth Science
- Duration:
- Preparation
time: 50 minutes
- Activity
time: two 50-minute periods
- Setting:
A large room or playing field
- Skills:
- Organizing
(mapping)
- Analyzing
(identifying components and relationships)
- Interpreting
(describing)
- Charting
the Course: Other water cycle activities include "Water
Models" and "Imagine!" In-depth investigations
of how water moves can supplement this activity: condensing
and evaporating ("Water Models"), filtering through
soil ("Get the Ground Water Picture"), traveling over
Earth's surface ("Branching Out!"), and moving through
the atmosphere ("Piece It Together").
- Vocabulary:
condensation, evaporation, electromagnetic forces
Where
will the water you drink this morning be tomorrow?
Summary
With a roll of the die, students simulate the movement of water
within the water cycle.
Objectives
Students
will:
- describe
the movement of water within the water cycle
- identify
the states of water as it moves through the water cycle
Materials
- 9 large
pieces of paper
- Copies
of Water
Cycle Table (optional)
- Marking
pens
- 9 boxes,
about 6 inches (15 cm) on a side (Boxes are used to make dice
for the game. Gift boxes used for coffee mugs are a good size
or inquire at your local mailing outlet. There will be one die
[or box] per station of the water cycle. [To increase the pace
of the game, use more boxes at each station, especially at the
clouds and ocean stations.] The labels for the sides of the
die are located in the Water
Cycle Table. These labels
represent the options for pathways that water can follow. Explanations
for the labels are provided. For younger students, use pictures.
Another option is to use a spinner. It is necessary to design
a spinner for each station.)
- A bell,
whistle, buzzer, or some sound maker
Making
Connections
When children think of the water cycle, they often imagine a circle
of water, flowing from a stream to an ocean, evaporating to the
clouds, raining down on a mountaintop, and flowing back into a
stream. Role-playing a water molecule helps students to conceptualize
the water cycle as more than a predictable two-dimensional path.
Background
While water does circulate from one point of state to another
in the water cycle, the paths it can take are variable.
Heat energy
directly influences the rate of motion of water molecules (refer
to the activity "Molecules in Motion"). When the motion
of the molecule increases because of an increase in heat energy,
water will change from solid to liquid to gas. With each change
in state, physical movement from one location to another usually
follows. Glaciers melt to pools which overflow to streams, where
water may evaporate into the atmosphere.
Gravity further
influences the ability of water to travel over, under, and above
Earth's surface. Water as a solid, liquid, or gas has mass and
is subject to gravitational force. Snow on mountaintops melts
and descends through watersheds to the oceans of the world.
One of the
most visible states in which water moves is the liquid form. Water
is seen flowing in streams and rivers and tumbling in ocean waves.
Water travels slowly underground, seeping and filtering through
particles of soil and pores within rocks.
Although
unseen, water's most dramatic movements take place during its
gaseous phase. Water is constantly evaporating, changing from
a liquid to a gas. As a vapor, it can travel through the atmosphere
over Earth's surface. In fact, water vapor surrounds us all the
time. Where it condenses and returns to Earth depends upon loss
of heat energy, gravity, and the structure of Earth's surface.
Water condensation
can be seen as dew on plants or water droplets on the outside
of a glass of cold water. In clouds, water molecules collect on
tiny dust particles. Eventually, the water droplets become too
heavy and gravity pulls the water to Earth.
Living organisms
also help move water. Humans and other animals carry water within
their bodies, transporting it from one location to another. Water
is either directly consumed by animals or is removed from foods
during digestion. Water is excreted as a liquid or leaves as a
gas, usually through respiration. When water is present on the
skin of an animal (for example, as perspiration), evaporation
may occur.
The greatest
movers of water among living organisms are plants. The roots of
plants absorb water. Some of this water is used within the body
of the plant, but most of it travels up through the plant to the
leaf surface. When water reaches the leaves, it is exposed to
the air and the sun's energy and is easily evaporated. This process
is called transpiration.
All these
processes work together to move water around, through and over
Earth.
Using station
illustrations, create a one page graphic on which students record
their movements during the Incredible Journey.
Procedure
Warm Up
Ask students to identify the different places water can go as
it moves through and around Earth. Write their responses on the
board.
The
Activity
1. Tell students that they are going to become water
molecules moving through the water cycle.
2.
Categorize the places water can move through into nine stations:
Clouds, Plants, Animals, Rivers, Oceans, lakes, Ground Water,
Soil, and Glaciers. Write these names on large pieces of papers
and put them in locations around the room or yard. (Students may
illustrate station labels.)
3.
Assign an even number of students to each station. (The cloud
station can have an uneven number.) Have students identify the
different places water can go from their station in the water
cycle. Discuss the conditions that cause the water to move. Explain
that water movement depends on energy from the sun, electromagnetic
energy, and gravity. Sometimes water will not go anywhere. After
students have come up with lists, have each group share their
work. The die for each station can be handed to that group and
they can check to se if they covered all the places water can
go. The Water
Cycle Table provides an explanation of water movements
from each station.
4.
Students should discuss the form in which water moves from one
location to another. Most of the movement from one station to
another will take place when water is in its liquid form. However,
any time water moves to the clouds, it is in the form of water
vapor, with molecules moving rapidly and apart from each other.
5.
Tell students they will be demonstrating water's movement from
one location to another. When they move as liquid water, they
will move in pairs, representing many water molecules together
in a water drop. When they move to the clouds (evaporate), they
will separate from their partners and move alone as individual
water molecules. When water rains from the clouds (condenses),
the students will grab a partner and move to the next location.
6.
In this game, a roll of the die determines where water will go.
Students line up behind the die at their station. (At the cloud
station they will line up in single file; at the rest of the stations
they should line up in pairs.) students roll the die and go to
the location indicated by the label facing up. If they roll stay,
they move to the back of the line.
When students
arrive at the next station, they get in line. When they reach
the front of the line, they roll the die and move to the next
station (or proceed to the back of the line if they roll stay).
In the clouds,
students roll the die individually, but if they leave the clouds
they grab a partner (the person immediately behind them) and move
to the next station; the partner does not roll the die.
7.
Students should keep track of their movements. This can be done
by having them keep a journal or notepad to record each move they
make, including stays. Students may record their journeys by leaving
behind personal stickers at each station. Another approach has
half the class play the game while the other half watches. Onlookers
can be assigned to track the movements of their classmates. In
the next round the onlookers will play the game, and the other
half of the class can record their movements.
8.
Tell students the game will begin and end with the sound of a
bell (or buzzer or whistle). Begin the game!
Wrap Up and
Action Have students use their travel records to write stories
about the places water has been. They should include a description
of what conditions were necessary for water to move to each location
and the state water was in as it moved. Discuss any cycling that
took place (that is, if any students returned to the same station).
Provide students with a location (e.g., parking lot, stream, glacier,
or one from the human body-bladder) and have them identify ways
water can move to and from that site. Have them identify the states
of the water.
Have older
students teach "The Incredible Journey" to younger students.
Assessment
Have students:
- role-play
water as it moves through the water cycle (step 8)
- identify
the states water is in while moving through the water cycle
(step 4 and Wrap Up)
- write
a story describing the movement of water (Wrap Up)
Extensions
Have students compare the movement of water during different seasons
and at different locations around the globe. They can adapt the
game (change the faces of the die, add alternative stations, etc.)
to represent these different conditions or locations.
Have students
investigate how water becomes polluted and is cleaned as it moves
through the water cycle. For instance, it might pick up contaminants
as it travels through the soil, which are then left behind as
water evaporates at the surface. Challenge students to adapt "The
Incredible Journey" to include these processes. For example,
rolled-up pieces of masking tape can represent pollutants and
be stuck to students as they travel to the soil station. Some
materials will be filtered out as the water moves to the lake.
Show this by having students rub their arms to slough off some
tape. If they roll clouds, they remove all the tape; when water
evaporates it leaves pollutants behind.
Resources
Alexander, Gretchen. 1989. Water Cycle Teacher's Guide. Hudson,
NH: Delta Education, Inc.
Mayes, Susan.
1989. What Makes It Rain? London, England: Usborne Publications.
Schmid, Eleonore.
1990. The Water's Journey. New York, NY: North-South Books.
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