Zig-Zag and Velocity: A Kindergarten Kinematics Challenge (Hard) ワークシート • 無料PDFダウンロード 解答キー
Can you predict a marble's path? Analyze change in direction and speed through complex marble runs and obstacle courses.
教育的概要
This science quiz evaluates a student's initial understanding of kinematics by exploring how objects change position, speed, and direction. The instructional approach uses everyday scenarios like marble runs and animal races to scaffold complex physics concepts into foundational observations of motion. Ideally suited for early childhood classrooms, this assessment aligns with introductory physical science standards focusing on the effects of pushes and pulls on an object's movement.
このワークシートが気に入らないですか? ワンクリックで、独自の Science Physics Motion Kinematics ワークシートを作成します。
ワンクリックで、教室のニーズに合わせたカスタムワークシートを作成します。
独自のワークシートを作成学習内容
- Identify how changing a path from straight to zig-zag affects the direction of an object's motion
- Compare the concepts of acceleration and deceleration using real-world examples like icy hills and trains
- Analyze how displacement differs from total distance traveled in circular or back-and-forth movement
All 10 Questions
- Imagine a marble rolling down a straight track and another marble rolling down a zig-zag track. If they both start at the same time and height, which one has to change its direction more often?A) The marble on the straight trackB) The marble on the zig-zag trackC) Neither marble changes directionD) They both change the same amount
- If a toy car is moving at a steady speed but it starts turning in a circle, its motion is changing.A) TrueB) False
- A penguin slides down an icy hill. At the top, it moves slowly. At the bottom, it moves very fast. We call this 'speeding up' or ________.A) GravityB) AccelerationC) StoppingD) Spinning
Show all 10 questions
- You throw a paper plane and it suddenly catches a gust of wind that pushes it sideways. What part of its motion changed the most?A) Its weightB) Its colorC) Its directionD) The floor
- Two squirrels race to a tree. Squirrel A runs in a straight line. Squirrel B runs in big loops. Even if they run at the same speed, Squirrel ____ will reach the tree first.A) Squirrel BB) NeitherC) Squirrel AD) The tree
- To describe exactly how a ball moved, you only need to know how fast it went, not which way it went.A) TrueB) False
- A feather and a rock are dropped at the same time. The rock hits the ground first. Why does the rock have a different motion than the feather?A) The rock accelerated fasterB) The rock is prettierC) The feather went upD) The ground moved
- A train slows down as it gets closer to the station. This change in motion where it loses speed is called ________.A) JumpingB) DecelerationC) Fast motionD) Straight motion
- Look at a clock's second hand. It moves around and around. Is its position changing even if it stays attached to the center?A) No, it is stuckB) Yes, its tip is in a new place every secondC) No, it is too slowD) Yes, because it changes color
- If you walk 3 steps forward and 3 steps backward, your ending position is the same as your starting position.A) TrueB) False
Try this worksheet interactively
Try it nowライブラリに保存
編集およびカスタマイズするために、このワークシートをライブラリに追加してください。
よくある質問
Yes, this science quiz is a perfect addition to a substitute teacher's folder because the included explanations for every answer allow any instructor to lead a meaningful discussion on motion without prior physics training.
Most kindergarten students can finish this science quiz in approximately fifteen to twenty minutes, making it a concise check for understanding during a busy science block.
Absolutely, as this science quiz features a mix of true-false and multiple-choice questions that can be read aloud to emerging readers or used as a challenging independent activity for advanced learners.
While it covers advanced vocabulary like velocity and acceleration, this science quiz is specifically designed with kindergarten-appropriate logic and relatable examples to make physics accessible to early elementary students.
Teachers can use this science quiz as a pre-test to see what students already know about how things move or as an exit ticket to gauge comprehension after a hands-on marble run experiment.