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- Océans & Cycle de l'Eau
- Sun-Powered Seas: A 3rd Grade Water Cycle Expedition
Sun-Powered Seas: A 3rd Grade Water Cycle Expedition (Easy) Feuille de Travail • Téléchargement PDF Gratuit avec Clé de Correction
How does a drop of ocean water reach the top of a mountain? Trace the journey from salty waves to fluffy clouds and back again.
Vue d'ensemble pédagogique
This science worksheet assesses student understanding of the water cycle components and the sun's role in driving hydrological changes. The content uses a scaffolded approach through multiple-choice, true-false, and fill-in-the-blank questions to build conceptual bridges between everyday phenomena like mirror fog and global systems. It is ideal for formative assessment or an introductory classroom unit on Earth's systems and NGSS-aligned weather studies.
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- Identify the sun as the primary energy source driving the water cycle.
- Define and distinguish between evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.
- Explain the role of runoff in returning water to the Earth's oceans.
All 10 Questions
- Most of the water on our planet is found in the oceans. Is this water safe for humans to drink right away?A) Yes, it is fresh water.B) No, it is salty water.C) Yes, because fish live in it.D) No, because it is too cold.
- The sun provides the energy that makes the water cycle move.A) TrueB) False
- When the sun warms up the ocean, the water turns into invisible gas called ____.A) Ice cubesB) RaindropsC) Water vaporD) Salt crystals
Show all 10 questions
- What happens high in the sky to help form a cloud?A) Water vapor cools down and turns back into tiny liquid drops.B) The sun gets hotter and burns the air.C) The wind blows the salt out of the ocean.D) Birds carry water up to the clouds.
- Rain, snow, and hail are all types of 'precipitation.'A) TrueB) False
- After it rains, water that flows over the ground and back into streams or the ocean is called ____.A) A puddleB) RunoffC) Ocean saltD) Snowfall
- Why don't the oceans ever dry up even though the sun is always shining on them?A) The fish keep the water moving.B) The water cycle keeps putting water back into the ocean.C) The ocean is too deep to evaporate.D) People add water to the ocean every day.
- The water cycle has a specific starting point and an ending point.A) TrueB) False
- Imagine you see fog on a bathroom mirror after a hot shower. Which part of the water cycle is this most like?A) PrecipitationB) RunoffC) EvaporationD) Condensation
- Oceans cover about ____ of the Earth's surface.A) One quarter (1/4)B) Half (1/2)C) Nearly three quarters (3/4)D) All of it (100%)
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Foire Aux Questions
Yes, this science quiz is an excellent choice for a substitute teacher because it provides clear explanations for every answer, making it a self-contained instructional tool.
Most third graders will complete this ten question science quiz in approximately 15 to 20 minutes depending on their reading speed and prior knowledge of the water cycle.
This science quiz supports differentiated instruction by using simplified vocabulary and visual metaphors that help struggling readers grasp complex hydrological concepts.
While specifically designed as a grade 3 science quiz, the fundamental concepts covered are also appropriate for second grade enrichment or fourth grade review sessions.
Teachers can use this science quiz as an exit ticket or mid-unit check to identify if students are confusing evaporation with condensation before moving on to more complex weather patterns.
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