Class: VI Chapter: Motion and Measurement of Distances (NCERT Science Class VI – Chapter 10) Total Duration: 15 school days (40–45 min each) → every single concept is taught with exact definitions, derivations, diagrams, activities, common errors, board work, vocabulary, and assessment
PRECISE DEFINITIONS (as per NCERT + slightly elaborated for clarity)
(These exact definitions will be written by students in their notebooks with coloured borders)
- Motion: An object is said to be in motion if it changes its position with respect to its surroundings with the passage of time.
- Rest: An object is said to be at rest if it does not change its position with respect to its surroundings with the passage of time.
- Frame of reference / Reference point: The fixed object or surroundings** with respect to which we decide whether another object is in motion or at rest.
- Rectilinear motion: Motion along a straight line (also called translatory motion). Example: car moving on a straight highway.
- Circular motion: Motion along a circular path. Example: blades of a moving fan.
- Rotational motion: Motion in which an object spins about a fixed axis. Example: Earth rotating on its own axis.
- Periodic motion: Motion that repeats itself after a fixed interval of time. Example: motion of a simple pendulum, heartbeat.
- Oscillatory motion: To-and-fro motion about a mean position (special type of periodic motion). Example: swing, piston of an engine.
- Measurement: Finding the exact size, amount or degree of something using standard instruments and units.
- Standard unit: A fixed and unchanging unit accepted all over the world.
- SI system: International System of units (Système International d’unités).
- Metre (m): The SI unit of length. Defined as the distance travelled by light in vacuum in 1/299,792,458 second.
- Parallax error: Error in reading a scale when the eye is not placed exactly above the marking.
- Least count: The smallest measurement that can be accurately measured with an instrument (for ordinary ruler = 1 mm or 0.1 cm).
DAY-WISE PLAN (Ultra-Detailed)
Day 1 – Historical Development of Measurement of Distances
Board heading: How did man start measuring distances?
- 0–10 min Hook video (2 min) → “From walking to bullet train”
- 10–25 min Story narration + timeline on board Ancient times → Body parts (hand-span, cubit, foot, pace) Ancient India → Angul, Hasta, Danda, Yojana Ancient Egypt → Royal cubit Problem → No two kings had same forearm length → confusion in trade
- 25–40 min Activity Each child measures the blackboard with (i) Cubit (elbow to middle finger tip) (ii) Foot (heel to big toe) (iii) Hand-span Record in table → all values different → conclusion: Non-standard units are unreliable
- Notebook definition 1 & 2 written today Homework: Measure your study table with cubit and foot → bring values tomorrow
Day 2 – Rest and Motion are Relative
Board heading: Rest and Motion
- 0–15 min Demonstration drama Child A sits on chair → Child B walks past → ask Child A: “Who is moving?” → B Now both walk together at same speed → ask again → “B is at rest with respect to me”
- 15–30 min Exact definitions 1, 2, 3 written with coloured diagrams
- 30–40 min Activity sheet → 15 pictures → tick “Motion” or “Rest” with respect to the reference point given Homework: 10 objects at home → write motion/rest w.r.t. you and w.r.t. the wall
Day 3 – Rectilinear Motion
Board heading: Types of Motion – 1
- Definition 4**
- Demo: Toy car on straight ruler track
- Path traced with marker → straight line
- Real life examples: marching soldiers, train on straight track, falling stone
- Notebook: Draw path + 8 examples
Day 4 – Circular Motion
Board heading: Types of Motion – 2
- Demo: Tie stone to thread → whirl it horizontally
- Path → circle
- Definition 5
- Examples: moon around Earth, tip of fan blade, giant wheel
- Difference table: Rectilinear vs Circular motion
Day 5 – Rotational Motion
Board heading: Types of Motion – 3
- Demo: Spin a top, rotate a pencil between palms
- Definition 6
- Key point: Every part of the object moves in its own circle but the object spins about a fixed axis
- Examples: Earth’s rotation, spinning wheel of bicycle
Day 6 – Periodic & Oscillatory Motion
Board heading: Types of Motion – 4 & 5
- Simple pendulum experiment (every child makes one with thread + key)
- Count time for 20 oscillations → calculate time period
- Definitions 7 & 8
- Table of examples: Periodic only (planets), Both periodic & oscillatory (pendulum, swing)
Day 7 – Revision of All Types of Motion + Grand Chart
- Teacher draws huge 6-box chart on blackboard
- Children copy in notebook with coloured pens
- Oral quiz: Teacher shows 25 pictures → children shout the type
Day 8 – Need for Standard Units → Introduction to SI Units
Board heading: Standard Units of Measurement
- Discussion: Why cubit is not used today?
- 1790 French Academy → definition of metre
- Present definition of metre (light-based) → definition 12
- SI units table written: Length → metre (m) Mass → kilogram (kg) Time → second (s)
- Conversion ladder drawn permanently on one corner of board km ←1000→ m ←100→ cm ←10→ mm
Day 9 – Sub-multiples & Multiples + Conversion Practice
- 50 conversion sums on board (increasing difficulty)
- Trick: “King Henry Died By Drinking Chocolate Milk” mnemonic for kilo-hecto-deca-base-deci-centi-milli
Day 10 – Correct Measurement of Length
Board heading: Rules for Accurate Measurement
- Live demonstration of 7 common mistakes
- Scale not starting from 0
- Scale kept tilted
- End of object not at 0
- Eye not vertically above the mark (parallax error – definition 13)
- Bent or broken scale
- Reading from the side
- Not noting least count
- Correct posture shown from 3 angles
- Practical: Every child measures length of (a) pencil (b) eraser (c) textbook (d) own palm in mm and cm → record 3 trials → find average
Day 11 – Measurement of Curved Lines
- Method 1: Thread + ruler
- Method 2: Divider method (for maps)
- Practical: Measure
- Length of your school shoe sole
- Outline of your palm
- Your smile curve
- Edge of a leaf
- Record in table
Day 12 – Measuring Very Large & Very Small Distances
- Large: 1 light-year = 9.46 × 10¹² km (only introduction)
- Small: Thickness of paper ≈ 0.1 mm
- Activity: How many pages in 1 cm stack? → calculate thickness of one page
Day 13 – Fun Outdoor Practical + Motion Identification
- 50 m straight race → rectilinear
- Circle race → circular
- Spinning in one place → rotational
- Swinging on swing → oscillatory
- Children measure distances with measuring tape and identify motion
Day 14 – Project Work + Doubt Clearing
- Project topics distributed (choose one)
- Motion scrapbook (15 pictures with type)
- Working model of pendulum clock
- Chart on evolution of units
- Survey of 10 vehicles → classify motion
Day 15 – Summative Assessment + Grand Quiz
- Written test 40 marks Section A – Definitions (10 marks) Section B – Match, True/False (10 marks) Section C – Diagram-based (identify motion) (10 marks) Section D – Measurement practical (10 marks)
- Prize for top 3 projects
- Class photo with the giant motion chart
Permanent Displays in Classroom (prepare before unit starts)
- Giant timeline chart – Body parts → Ancient units → Metre → Present definition
- 2 m long wall strip marked in dm, cm, mm
- 6-type motion poster with real photos
- Parallax error poster (wrong vs correct eye position)
- Conversion ladder with moving arrow