Lesson

Compare Solids, Liquids, and Gases

Students compare shape, volume, and particle behavior in solids, liquids, and gases.

Compare Solids, Liquids, and Gases

What students learn

Students learn that solids, liquids, and gases have different properties. Begin with and ask what stays the same when a solid is moved.

Why it matters

Comparing states of matter helps students explain why a rock keeps its shape, water pours, and air spreads out. Use for a quick check before moving to liquids.

Learn the idea

A solid keeps its own shape and volume. A liquid keeps its volume but takes the shape of its container. A gas spreads out to fill space. Watch and then to compare how each state behaves.

Try it

Show a block, a cup of water, and an inflated balloon. Ask students to describe shape and volume for each. Then use before they draw particles for all three states.

Parent guide

At home, compare an ice cube, water in a cup, and air in a bag. Ask your child what changes shape and what keeps shape. If they say gas is nothing, squeeze the bag gently and ask what is inside taking up space.