Optional Unit: Machines and Work
The principles behind simple machines are studied with reference to the use of those machines in transferring forces and accomplishing work.
This unit is not related to any other unit in grade 5. The Optional Unit on Simple Machines in grade 3 is related.
Science foundational and learning objectives:
Factors: A4, A5, B3, B13, C1, C2, C5, C7, C8, C9, C12, D1, F3, F5, G1
Objectives: 1.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 6
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Independent Learning. Students make connections between the environment and their learning.
Factors: A2, A5, B3,
B7, B9, B13, B17, C2, C4,
C5,
C8, C9, D1,
E3, F2, F5,
G1, G3
Objectives: 1.3, 1.5, 2.1
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3,
6
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Independent Learning. Students
are provided with the opportunity to plan for their
learning and to have hands-on experiences.
Factors: A2, A4, B1,
B3, B7, B9,
B15, C4, C8,
C9, D1,
F3, F5, G1
Objectives: 1.4, 1.5
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Technological Literacy, Independent Learning.
Students have an opportunity to research, plan, and
apply their knowledge as one aspect of their
learning.
Objectives: 1.1
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5,
9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Independent Learning. Students
have active involvement in activities to promote
learning and make connections to real world examples of
machines.
With straws as axles and heavy cardboard
wheels, cars can be constructed from toilet
paper tubes. Use of a hole punch to create
holes for the axles and a cut-out on top
allows the student to put in a driver or
carry a load such as an egg. A dab of the hot
glue gun where the wheels are slipped onto
the straws allows axles to turn without the
wheels falling off. (See grade 3 optional
unit.) Races down ramps are possible.
Measuring distances cars go adds another
dimension. Cars can be "souped-up" with
colour, flags, headlights, and tailpipes.
Another version of the wheel and axle is in
the use of pinwheels and waterwheels.
Pinwheels may be made from a square of paper.
Use a ruler to draw on the diagonals to find
the centre. Cut along the lines about
two-thirds of the way towards centre. Bend in
but do not crease every second point. Put a
straight pin through the ends and the centre
point of the pinwheel. Secure to a straw.
Blow on the pinwheel to observe it turning.
Poke a hole through the centre of an aluminum
pie plate and place a pencil through the
hole.
Around the edge at
regular intervals make cuts with scissors
(about eight). Give each edge segment a bend
and twist to form the blades of the water
wheel. Pour water to make the blades turn or
hold the water wheel under a slow-running tap
to see it in action. If possible look inside
an old clock or watch. Notice the gears
(wheels and axles). Gears can be made with
lids and coarse corrugated cardboard strips
glued around the outer edges. Find the centre
of each lid. Nail these "gears" to a piece of
wood through the centre of each lid so that
one gear meshes with the next. Try this with
the same sized gears and different sized
gears. Turn one. What happens to the other?
Record observations.
Have students examine various screws to
observe the pitch of the threads. Discuss
which would go into wood or metal faster with
a single turn of the screw head. Why are
threads on low-pitched screws closer
together? Have students use a
right-triangular piece of paper to
demonstrate the screw. Along the diagonal put
a dark line. Carefully roll the triangular
paper around a pencil starting at the
shortest edge and rolling to the point. What
do you observe? Make a hole in a thick piece
of cardboard just large enough for the end of
a bolt. Screw the bolt onto the cardboard a
few turns so that its end shows. Put on the
nut. Screw the nut on further. What happens
to the cardboard? Discuss.
Have students construct inclines using halves
of tubes supported so that marbles, small
cars, or other objects might roll down the
ramp. Again distances can be measured when
varying degrees of incline are used. The use
of a spring scale can also be included as
students measure the amount of force needed
to pull objects up different inclines.
If possible, obtain pulleys that may be used
as fixed or movable pulleys. Examples:
clothesline pulleys, meccano, spools secured
by nails or wires. Fasten a pulley to a piece
of wood that can be placed at least a metre
from the floor. Use a spring balance, a
string, and a known weight to measure the
force required to lift the weight. What do
you find? (The single-fixed pulley does not
change the force required but does change the
direction the weight goes up as force is
applied downward. A flag pole is a good
example to look at.) Fasten the end of the
string to the wood. Use a single movable
pulley to which you can fasten the weight.
Pull upward with the spring balance attached
to the other end of your string. What do you
discover? (As in the first activity with the
fixed pulley, direction is changed. This is
how a roofer might lift shingles up to where
the work is being done.) Use both the single-
fixed and movable pulley with the weight
attached and a longer string fastened
to the wood. Have the string go through the
movable pulley and then the fixed pulley
before attaching the spring scale. Now pull
down. What do you find when two pulleys are
used? (The force should be about half the
weight being raised.)
Use your mathematics skills to measure the
distances that "simulated" forces and weights
move using different classes of levers. You
will need two pieces of light weight
cardboard perhaps 40 cm X 2 cm. Hole punch
near both ends and at several points near a
midpoint on each. Use a paper fastener as a
fulcrum to secure the two pieces of cardboard
together. On a large piece of newsprint draw
a baseline. Lay your lever along this line.
Fasten the bottom one with two short pieces
of tape. For a first class lever, the
fastener should be at midpoint. Rotate the
top lever. Measure from your baseline to the
hole punched at each end. One will give you
the distance the "weight" was lifted, while
the second will measure the distance the
"force" moved downward. Change the fastener
(fulcrum) to another point off centre. Again
rotate the lever and make measurements. Make
a chart of your results. For a second class
and third class lever, the fulcrum will move
to an end hole. Again fasten down the bottom
lever to your base line. As you rotate the
lever (for second class levers) your force
distance will be the measurement at the end
opposite the fulcrum while the weight
distance will be at various points nearer the
middle of the lever. For the third class
lever force and weight change positions. Make
several measurements for each class of lever.
Record and discuss.
With supervision, have students use the paper
cutter, scissors, and various types of knives
(perhaps to cut fruit for a fruit salad).
This integrates well into a Nutrition theme.
Allow students to examine the cutting surface
of axes, saws and chisels. Have them notice
not only the cutting edge but the wider part
which helps separate the wood. If there is
sufficient supervision and safety is stressed
students may be able to use these tools.
Another type of wedge has a rounded point
like the nose cone of a rocket or blunt
punches. A third type of wedge has a pointed
end such as a needle, pin, or nail. Have
students record examples of wedges and how
they work. Students might use a long narrow
rectangular piece of paper, draw one
diagonal, and cut along the diagonal. What do
you now have? (two inclined planes or right
triangles) Often door wedges and chisels are
shaped like this. Now flip one triangle and
place the long sides together so that the
points are together with short sides of the
original rectangle meeting at the 90 degree
corners. Diagonals will become the opposite
sides of the isosceles triangle. Tape the
adjoining edges. Now you have a wedge like
that found in a knife or an axe.
Objectives: 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 2.1, 2.2
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3,
4
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy,
Personal and Social Values and Skills, Technological Literacy, Independent Learning. Students have their learning enhanced when
they are able to manipulate objects.
Factors: A2, B1, B3,
B7, B9, B13, B17, C2, C5,
C8,
C9, D1, E3,
F2, F5,
G1, G3
Objectives: 1.5, 2.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
5, 9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Technological Literacy, Independent Learning.
Students have the opportunity to be creative as they
construct simple or compound machines that do
"work".
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 2.2, 2.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3,
4
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Independent Learning. Students have
input into their learning, while being encouraged to
use their creativity.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
6
Common Essential Learnings: All the CELS
( Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy, Technological Literacy, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Independent Learning) can be
incorporated here.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 2.3
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
5, 6, 9
Common Essential Learnings: Use Communication,
Critical and Creative Thinking, and Independent Learning.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 1.3, 1.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy, Technological Literacy, Independent Learning. Students have the
opportunity to do some independent research.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 1.5
Assessment Techniques: 1,
3
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Independent Learning. Students
have input into planning for their assessment.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 1.4, 1.5, 2.3, 2.4
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 4,
6, 9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Independent Learning. Students have
input into planning for their learning. Freedom to
investigate any one of a variety of topics in
individual ways provides an opportunity for exploration
using the media of choice.
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Objectives: 1.4, 1.5, 2.3
Assessment Techniques: 1, 3, 5,
9
Common Essential Learnings: Communication, Critical and Creative Thinking, Numeracy, Personal and Social Values and Skills, Independent Learning. Students have
the opportunity to learn beyond the classroom.
Factors: A2, A4, A5,
B1, B3, B7,
B9, B10, B13, C1,
C2, C4, C5,
C8, C9, C10, C12, D1, E3,
E6, F3, F5,
G1
Factors: A4, A5, B3,
B7, B10, B13, B15, C1, C2,
C4, C5,
C7, C8, C9,
C10, C12, D1, E3,
F3, F5,
G1
Students should be prepared to explain how their
construction works, what task it does, what force might
need to be applied, and where it would be most useful.
Students may use recycled materials collected by the
class, materials brought from home, or use shared
items. Encourage independent and cooperative work. Some
students may choose to do independent work at home and
share their creation with the class later.