Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 7 • Making soil

Students consolidate their knowledge by investigating soil layers (from organic material down to bedrock) and making their own soil.

Students will:

  • investigate and model soil layers.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • design and create a labelled model of soil layers.
  • undertake a gallery walk.

Lesson

Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 6 • Minerals in rocks

Students examine rocks, and models of rocks, for minerals, then explore the importance of minerals.

Students will:

  • break apart and examine properties of the minerals in a model of a rock, including colour, lustre and tenacity.
  • investigate the difference between gems, minerals, crystals and rocks.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • complete the Model rock analysis Resource sheet.
  • discuss how and why rocks and minerals can be changed by humans (for example breaking, shaping, polishing).
  • record examples of how their lives would be different without minerals.

Lesson

Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 2 • Features of soil

Students investigate soil samples to observe what they can see, feel and hear in soil.

Students will:

  • explore and describe what is in soil.
  • discuss different components of soils.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • complete the Exploring soil samples Resource sheet.
  • present their findings verbally in teams.

Lesson

Year 3
Launch

Lesson 1 • Schoolyard exploration

Students participate in a geology quest through the school grounds or local area to find and record the locations of rocks and soil. They collect a sample for further exploration.

Students will:

  • identify examples of rocks and soil in the school grounds and record how they are being used.
  • consider what they already know about soils and rocks and their importance.
  • pose questions for investigation about soils and rocks.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • complete a table to record their findings.
  • contribute to a class TWLH chart.

Lesson

Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 5 • Scratch test

Students investigate the hardness of rocks with a simple scratch test, then examine how a rock’s hardness determines its use.

Students will:

  • scratch test rocks to compare their hardness.
  • explore how rocks are used based on the property of hardness.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • record their observations on the Hard rock Resource sheet.
  • order rocks from softest to hardest.
  • discuss the different uses for softer rocks and harder rocks.

Lesson

Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 4 • Rock sort

Students observe a rock in detail so it can be recognised amongst a collection of other rocks. They sort and classify a collection of rocks then attempt to work out other groups’ classification systems.

Students will:

  • identify and sort rocks according to observable features.
  • recognise that rocks are made of one or more minerals.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • draw a labelled diagram of a rock.
  • describe features of rocks.
  • describe how rocks have been sorted and classified.

Lesson

Year 3
Inquire

Lesson 3 • Soil profiles

Students measure their settled soil profiles and create a labelled diagram, then determine soil texture using the ribboning technique.

Students will:

  • observe and measure the soil components in their profile.
  • use the ribboning technique and a flow chart to determine soil texture.

 

Students will represent their understanding as they:

  • draw an annotated diagram of their soil profiles.
  • discuss soil texture observations.
  • discuss what soil components could change over time and the benefits of compost.

Lesson

Credits for Dig deep

Credits for work used in the Dig deep sequence

The following images have been used in the Dig deep sequence:

ImageAttribution
PebblesStock photo ID: 924188934
Asbestos with muscoviteAram Dulyan, in the Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Asbestos fibresAram Dulyan, in the Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons
CrocoiteAssianir, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
CrocoiteDietmar Down Under, CC BY 2.0, via Flickr
Slightly oxidized leadBest Sci-Fatcs, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Galena-QuartzRod Lavinsky, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Hg MercuryHigany, in the Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Mercury in glass medical thermometerJacek Halicki, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Banded iron formation from the Precambrian of Australia. (11.5 cm across at its widest)James, St. John, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Compost, millésime 2007wisemandarine, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Flickr
Ruler with millimeter and centimeter marksDnu72, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Quartz Didier Descouens, CC BY-SA, via Wikimedia Commons 
GalenaIvar Leidus, CC BY-SA, via Wikimedia Commons 
Potato chips Evan-Amos, Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons 
A single banana peel in the Franklin Farm section of Oak Hill, Fairfax County, VirginiaFamartin, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
MarshmallowsFather.Jack, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons 
Year 3

Dig deep

Students learn about the observable properties of soils, rocks and minerals, and their importance as resources. They explore a way to sustainably use or reuse a resource that exists because of soils, rocks or minerals, in a design challenge adapted to their local context.

'Dig deep' IS ONE OF OUR NEW TEACHING SEQUENCES FOR V9

  • On the 'Sequence overview' tab you'll find all the lessons in this sequence and curriculum alignment.
  • The 'Our design decisions' tab shows how key scientific ideas develop over the sequence, and shows how the sequence addresses curriculum achievement standards.
  • The 'Preparing for this sequence' tab guides you through important information and considerations for this sequence.
  • Have you taught this sequence? Use the Feedback button to let us know how it went!

Launch

Lesson 1 • Schoolyard exploration

Students participate in a geology quest through the school grounds or local area to find and record the locations of rocks and soil. They collect a sample for further exploration.

Launch
Dig deep

Inquire

Lesson 2 • Features of soil

Students investigate soil samples to observe what they can see, feel and hear in soil.

Inquire
Dig deep

Lesson 3 • Soil profiles

Students measure their settled soil profiles and create a labelled diagram, then determine soil texture using the ribboning technique.

Inquire
Dig deep

Lesson 4 • Rock sort

Students observe a rock in detail so it can be recognised amongst a collection of other rocks. They sort and classify a collection of rocks then attempt to work out other groups’ classification systems.

Inquire
Dig deep

Lesson 5 • Scratch test

Students investigate the hardness of rocks with a simple scratch test, then examine how a rock’s hardness determines its use.

Inquire
Dig deep

Lesson 6 • Minerals in rocks

Students examine rocks, and models of rocks, for minerals, then explore the importance of minerals.

Inquire
Dig deep

Lesson 7 • Making soil

Students consolidate their knowledge by investigating soil layers (from organic material down to bedrock) and making their own soil.

Inquire
Dig deep

Act

Lesson 8 • Sustainable design

Students consolidate their learning, using the design thinking process to use or reuse a material that exists because of soil, rocks or minerals.

Act
Dig deep

The Australian Academy of Science supports and encourages broad use of its material. Unless indicated below, copyright material available on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence.

Curriculum and syllabus alignment

Achievement standards

By the end of Year 3 students describe the observable properties of soils, rocks and minerals and describe their importance as resources. They describe how people use data to develop explanations. They identify solutions that use scientific explanations.

Students pose questions to explore patterns and relationships and make predictions based on observations. They use scaffolds to plan safe investigations and fair tests. They use familiar classroom instruments to make measurements. They organise data and information using provided scaffolds and identify patterns and relationships. They compare their findings with those of others, explain how they kept their investigation fair, identify further questions and draw conclusions. They communicate ideas and findings for an identified purpose, including using scientific vocabulary when appropriate.

Australian Curriculum V9 alignment

Science as a human endeavour

Science understanding

Science inquiry

Test page

new changes to the test page. Some changes to test

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