Grade 6 Notes For 2020
Grade 6 Notes For 2020
Grade 6 Notes For 2020
TOPICS COVERED
LIVING ORGANISMS
WATER
ELECTRICITY
LIVING ORGANISMS
ACTIVITY
Define respiration
Plants need oxygen during respiration, oxygen enters the leaves through stomata.
Plants respire when the stored food (glucose) react with oxygen to release energy, water
and carbon dioxide.
Animals respire when oxygen they breathe in react with glucose in the cells to release
energy, water and carbon dioxide.
Describe growth, movement and feeding in living organisms
Growth:to increase in size
Movement: is the ability of living organisms to change position
Feeding: is to take in food (to eat)
ACTIVITY
PLANTS
VARIATION AMONG PLANTS
Flowering plants
1. Monocotyledons (monocots)
2. Dicotyledons (dicots)
Maize plant
Wheat plant
Palm
Sorghum plant
Mahangu plant
Natural grass
Bean plant
Marula tree
Tomatoes plant
Camelthorn trees
Baobab tree
Mopanes tree
(Platinum p 97)
Monocots dicots
Have narrow leaves Have broad leaves
Leaf veins are parallel Leaf veins are branched
Flower petals in multiples of three Flower petals in multiples of four or five
Have a fibrous root system Have taproot system
Have one seed leaves (cotyledons) Have only to seed leaf (cotyledon)
(DiagramsLets do pg.92)
Compare & explain how the leaves and flowers from different local trees
and other plants differ and are alike.
Flowers:
Food crops
1. Bread:Wheat
2. Biscuits: Wheat or Maize
3. Breakfast cereal: Wheat or Maize
4. Crisps ( chips): potatoes, Sweet potatoes or Beetroots
5. Cool drinks: sugar canes
6. Sweets: fruits and vegetable
7. Sugar: Sugar canes
8. Juice: Fruits
Activity
Complete the table below. Remember that some processed foods might come from more than
one plant.
wheat
Maize
Mahangu
Potatoes etc.
Much of the food we eat comes from plants, trees, crops, bushes, leaves and sometimes
even roots. The most obvious examples of the foods we source from plants are fruits
and vegetables. All of the fruits and vegetables grow on plants.
Onions
carrots
apples
oranges
pears
Potatoes
tomatoes
Bananas etc.
Identify and describe the differences between cultivated and wild plants
Cultivated plants Wild plants
These are plants that have been These are plants that grow on their own in
grown by human. the wild.
They need human help to grow. They grow naturally.
Grow very fast. Grow very slowly.
Activity
Choose the correct words from the box to fill in the missing spaces
All our food comes from _________________. Processed foods such as bread, biscuits and
____________ ___________ also come from plants. Some food crops are grown in Namibia
but some are ________________ in other parts of the _______________. Namibia is too hot
and dry for many plants to _______________.
Fast-growing plants:
Describe the basic structure of plant cells (onion & geranium cells) and
animals (liver cells)
1. Nucleus: is the central structure of the cell.
2. Chloroplasts: it’s the organelle that contains the green pigment called chlorophyll.
ACTIVITY: Draw the general structure of an animal and plant cell and
clearly label them. (6)
Identify the similarities and differences between plant and animal cells
Photosynthesis
Define photosynthesis
Water
Carbon dioxide
Chlorophyll
sunlight
ANIMALS
1. Insects
2. Fish
3. Amphibians
4. Mammals
5. Birds
6. Reptiles
Give local example of the following animal groups
Examples of insects
Ants; Flies
Bees; Beetles
Butterflies; Crickets; Cockroaches
Examples of amphibians
Frogs; Newts
Toads; Salamanders
Examples of fish
Carp; Bass
Pilchards; Hakes; Sharks
1. Body parts
2. Body covering
3. Breathing organs
4. Movement
5. Habitat
6. Reproduction
7. Shape
8. Size etc.
Insects
Amphibians
Fish
Compare the different groups of animals and infer why animals are grouped
the way they are
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
Make a model
LIFE CYCLE OF ANIMALS
Life cycle: the stages a living thing goes through during its life.
Identify and name the stages in the life cycle of two common animals found
n their local environment (insects, amphibians or fish)
1. Explain the differences between a complete life cycle and an incomplete life
cycle.
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
2. Look at the diagram showing the life cycle of a butterfly ( insect) and the frog
(amphibian). Write a short paragraph, comparing the cycle of insects and
amphibians.
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
To use animals sustainably means not to use them all up at one time.
Explain the value of wild animals to the local and national economy
Generate income
Create job opportunities
Generate foreign currency
Provide raw material for industries
ENDANGERED ANIMALS
Is when the number of animals of species drops very low and is in danger of
becoming extinct.
1. Cheetah
2. Leopard
3. Rhino
4. Wild dog
5. Pangolin
6. Vultures
7. Walthog etc.
Fish meal
Shell fish
Fresh fish
Guano
Seal pelt (fur)
Activity
1. Name two endangered animals that live in our national parks
_______________________________________________________
2. Name two land animals and two sea animals that tourists come to see in
Namibia.
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
3. Say why wild animals are important our environment.
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
4. Write down two ways in which Namibia earns money from its wild animals
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
CARE OF ANIMALS
Define captivity
Is when animals are kept in the place where they are not free to leave.eg. Park.
Space
Water
Shade
Air
Food
Providing them with enough health food and right type of food
Providing them with clean water
Providing them with shelter
Giving them veterinary attention (medication)
Treating them with care/Give them love
Give them plenty of exercise
Wash your animals
Explain how to feed and care for goldfish/ Guppies at school or at home
Activity
1. Study the following illustrations. What is wrong with the captive environment
in A,B and C
A B C
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
2. Choose an animal that you have or would like to have at home and explain
how to feed and care for the animal.
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
PRACTICAL INVESTIGATION
Investigate how animals are dependent on plants in their local environment
(SOLID FOUNDATION,PAGE 151, GR 6)
Carry out an investigation to determine how animals are dependent on plants in your local
environment
Name of the animal Name of plant How the plant is used by the
animal
The objects that we use every day are made of different materials which are different types of
matter. Different materials have different properties, so we need to choose the materials with
the properties needed for a specific object.
Colour: The colour of the material. It affects how the material looks and how it absorbs or
reflects light.
Texture: How the material feels when you touch it. Is it rough or smooth?
Hardness: How difficult the material is to scratch or change the shape.
Lustre: How shiny the surface of the material is?
Brittleness: How easily the material breaks or shatters without bending.
Flexibility: How easily the material can bend without breaking.
Malleability: How easily the material can be changed into a different shape.
Smell: How does the material smell?
Activity
Some objects float (stay on top of water), while some sink (go down) when you put them in
water.
Why things float?
1. Force of gravity. It pulls the object downwards depending on the mass of the object.
Heavy objects sink while light objects float.
2. Force of buoyancy: it pushes the object upwards. It is caused by displaced water pushing
back against the object.
Natural materials
Materials that come from nature.They come from plants, animals or underground.
Example: sand, stones, clay, iron ore, crude oil, natural gas, diamonds, wood, cotton
and wool.
Renewable resources
Are natural materials that can be replaced after they have been used up.
For example: wood from trees, cotton from cotton plants and wool from sheep.
Non-renewable resources
Natural materials that cannot be replaced after they have been used up.
For example: coal, crude oil and natural gas. These materials take hundred thousand
years to form and we use them faster than nature can replace them. We need to be
careful in the way we use this materials.
Are materials made by a chemical processes. They are made by humans and are made
from natural materials. For example: steel, glass, plastic and paper. Papers are made
from wood, glass from sand, plastic from oil and steel from iron.
Activity
Complete the table below
product Natural material or What the product is
human made made from
material
Oshiwambo
traditional basket
Leather belt
Mirror
Plastic mat
Recycling materials
Identify objects in their environment which are reused items or are made
from recycled materials such soda bottles, oil drums and papers
Example
FORCES
A force is a push or pull that comes from one object interacting with one another.
Identify forces in everyday life.
Pushing forces: They push objects away from each other. They are called forces of
repulsion.
Pulling forces: They pull objects towards each other. They are called forces of attraction.
Activity
The effects of pushing and pulling forces
Name five effects of pushing & pulling forces (repulsion and attraction)
Contact forces
Forces that occur when two objects are in physical contact with each other.
e.g force of friction: it occurs when the surface of one object moves against a surface
of another object.
Non-contact forces
Forces that occur when two objects are not in physical contact with each other.
Eg. force of gravity (weight): it occurs when object are pulled downwards towards the
centre of earth.
Magnetic force: two magnets can attract or repel each other without touching each
other.
Electrostatic
Revise the water cycle and explain the importance of the phases
Water can change from one phase to another as a result of heating or cooling by the following
process:
The movement of water between the air, land and living organisms of the earth.
-In the water cycle, water changes from a liquid state to a gas state and back to a liquid state.
This change of water in the water cycle happen because of repeated condensation and
evaporation that occurs.
The main stages in the water cycle as shown in the picture above:
Water falls from the atmosphere to the ground as rain. Some of the rain water drains
into dams, rivers, and seas, and some sinks into the ground.
As the sun heats the surface water and the ground, some of the water evaporates and
moves as water vapour back into the atmosphere.
As the sun heats plants, water evaporates from the surfaces of their leaves. This
process is called Transpiration.
Water vapour in the atmosphere rises and cools. This causes it to condense into tiny
water droplets, which form clouds.
When the air is saturated, the water droplets fall to the ground as rain and the water
cycle begin again.
When the temperature in the clouds become so low that the water droplets freeze into
solid ice particles. Theses frozen droplets fall to the ground in the form of snow or
hail.
Properties of water
Evaporation
When evaporation occurs, water changes from a liquid to a gas (water vapour)
Surface tension
Compare and describe the rate of water in containers holding the same
volume of water but with different surface areas.
The following activity shows how you can compare the rate of evaporation of water in
containers with different surface area.
Evaporation needs heat energy to take place. Therefore the greater the surface area,
the faster the evaporation will be.
Water evaporates fast from the container with the large opening and slow from the
container with the small opening.
Water evaporates more quickly from the large shallow pools of the oshanas, this is
because more water is exposed to the sun’s energy and the drying effect of wind.
Water also evaporates more quickly from dams with a larger surface area than those
with a small surface area.
Explain that the evaporation of perspiration cools the body and keeps it at
a safe temperature.
The human body uses the cooling effect of evaporation to stay cool. The body needs
to stay at a temperature of about 37°c.
On a hot day or after exercise, the body sweats or perspires. As the sweat evaporates,
it takes heat from your skin and cools down the body down.
Drink water to replace the water that the body loses through sweating.
Ways that other animals (dogs, cattles, cats, birds) cool themselves.
Investigate ways that other animals ( dogs, cattle, cats, birds) cool
themselves
Dogs
Cattles
They keep cool through sweating and stay in the shade during the day to keep
themselves cool.
Cats
They pant, lick themselves and lie in the shade and on a cool surface in order to keep
cool.
Birds
They open their beaks and spread their wings to keep cool.
Show and explain how water and steam can be used as a source of energy
(falling water/running water/hydro-electricity, e.g Ruacana
3. Hydro – electricity
Electrical energy is generated in a hydro-electric power station.
The hydro-electric power station at Ruacana falls in Namibia uses water falling from
great height to turn the turbines that power the generator. The generator then
generates electricity.
How to build a water wheel
Activity
COLUMN A COLUMN B
Generator a. Electricity generated by falling/ running water
Hydro-electric power b. Electricity
Turbine c. Machine that converts mechanical energy into electric
energy
Electrical energy d. Wheel that makes a generator turn
Water as a solvent
Solution
A solution is a mixture formed when a solute mixed with the right solvent.
Solvent
Solubility
Insolubility
Dissolved substance
Saturated solution
Unsaturated solution
Unsaturated solution is a solution that can still absorb more of a soluble substance.
State factors which influence the solubility of a substance.
a. Stirring
b. Particles size
c. Temperature
The following activity shows how you can investigate the effects of these three factors on the
rate of dissolving.
1. Stirring
Questions:
2. Particles’ size
o Temperature
-Increasing temperature increases the rate of dissolving. When you heat a substance,
the particles move faster, this allows particles of solute and solvent to mix faster.
o Particle size
-The smaller the solute particles, the faster they dissolve in a solvent. The smaller the
solute particles, the greater the surface area that the water molecules can reach to
dissolve the solute particles.
o Stirring
-stirring increases the rate of dissolving. E.g. stirring moves the salt and water
particles around and allow them to move between each other quickly to form a
solution.
the solutes can be separated from the solvent of a solution by the process of
crystallisation. Crystallisation can be achieved by heating a solution so that the
solvent evaporates, leaving crystals of the solute behind.
Importance of sufficient clean water.
Discuss that the scarcity of clean water could lead to health problems of
the eyes, skin and scalp.
A lack of clean water or not bathing regularly can cause health problems such as:
1. Skin infections
2. Eye infections
3. Scalp
Scabies is a common skin infection in children caused by mites which tunnel under
the skin and cause itchy and bumps.
Conjunctivitis (pink eye) is an infection in the eye that causes redness, pus and a mild
burning.
If you don’t bath regularly or bath with dirty water develop death cells (scale) in the
head.
Suggest why pit latrines should be built downhill from water sources
A rubbish pit must be far away from home, well and rivers.
A rubbish pit will keep flies away from home and stop the spread of diseases.
We need water:
Planting plants that do not need lots of water e.g indigenous plants.
Keep lawn areas as small as possible.
Use shade cloth or netting over vegetable beds to prevent water evaporation.
Remove weeds regularly.
Water when it is cool such as early in the morning or in the evening.
Mulch between plants.
Fix leaks
Close taps
Re-use water
Explain the importance of conserving water
It is important to conserve water because Namibia is a dry country with little rainfall
and droughts often occur.
Distinguish between clean/pure water and polluted and examine pure and
polluted water under the microscope.
There are different techniques used to purify or remove the impurities from water. More than
one technique is usually needed to remove all the impurities. (decanting, filtering and
distilling of water)
Decanting: is useful for removing heavy solids such as sand and stones from water.
Filtering: means to separate solid impurities from a liquid by passing it through a filter. The
solid impurities that are larger than the holes in the filter remain behind, while the liquid
passes through.
Distillation: means to separates pure water from almost any impurities it may contain,
including solids, dissolved chemicals and metals and it also kills any living organisms in the
water.
Investigate and record how the local municipality uses the process of filtering
At the municipal waterworks, water is cleaned and purified to destroy the germs (bacteria,
algae and fungi) that could make animals and humans sick.
Fertilizers
Pesticides
Oil spills from ships
Litter
Human waste
Industrial and mining waste
Use appropriate techniques and handle with due regard to safety the
following equipment: glass beaker, funnel, filter paper, spirit burner, Liebig
condenser, flat-bottomed jar.
PRACTICAL INVESTIGATIONS
1. Investigate and describe the process of decanting whereby water is carefully poured
into a second beaker, leaving behind the sediment or insoluble impurities.
2. Investigate and describe the process of filtration whereby water is filtered resulting in
a clear filtrate.
3. Study the uses of filtration (eg. Municipalities that use large sand filters)
Is the electricity that does not flow but can discharge, positive and negative charges
are produced when objects are rubbed to each other.
Lightning
PRACTICAL INVESTIGATION
Observe what occurs when they rub plastic combs with a dry cloth & then attract
small pieces of papers to the comb.
Observe what happens when an air-filled balloon is rubbed on a lean chalk board.
State that objects are either charged or uncharged.
Protons have positive charge (+) and Electron charge have negative charge (-).
Electrons can move from one object to another. Example when you comb your hair
some electrons move from your hair to the comb. This give the comb negative charge
and leaves your hair with positive charge.
If an object has the same number of positive, negative charges, the charge cancel each other
out and the object is an overall neutral charge.
Explain the spark that jumps from finger to a metal objective when the air
is dry:
It is a static discharge
When you rubbed the metal, electrons moved from the metal leaving the metal with a
positive charge. This flow of electrics charge is called static discharge. It is visible
as a spark, the same thing happen when the air is dry and you touch a metal object
with your finger.
Lightning is huge static discharge from cloud, the top of cloud become positive
charged and the bottom of cloud become negative charged. If the electrical charge in
the cloud is big enough the electrons will flow from the cloud to the ground, or to
another cloud in huge static discharge.
Circuit symbols:
___________ Wires/Connectors
Cells
Bulbs
PRACTICAL INVESTIGATION:
Investigate the building of a simple flashlight by constructing a simple closed circuit which
contains a single cell bulb and a switch