201 Rain, Snow, and Sun
👩🏫 Teacher’s Guide
Objective
Students will describe how rain, snow, and sunlight are connected to the water cycle, compare how temperature changes water, and explain how weather affects what people do each day.
Vocabulary
weather, climate, water cycle, evaporate, condense, precipitation, rain, snow, hail, sleet, temperature, thermometer, cloud, humidity, shade, forecast
Teaching Notes
- Start by asking: “If you look out the window right now, what is the weather doing?” List student answers: sunny, cloudy, raining, windy, etc.
- Explain that weather is what the air and sky are like in one place at one time. Connect to daily choices: clothes, outdoor plans, recess.
- Use a simple picture or board sketch to show the water cycle:
- The sun heats water and it evaporates (turns into water vapor).
- Water vapor condenses into tiny droplets that form clouds.
- Water falls back to Earth as precipitation such as rain or snow.
- Emphasize the role of temperature:
- Above freezing → rain.
- At or below freezing → snow, sleet, or hail.
- Help students notice patterns: rainy days often feel cooler and cloudier; sunny days feel warmer and brighter.
- Model thinking aloud: “The ground is wet and I see dark clouds. I predict it has rained or will rain soon.” Connect to forecast and evidence.
- If possible, show or describe a simple thermometer and let students practice reading numbers in Celsius or Fahrenheit.
- Encourage critical thinking: ask “How do you know?” and “What clues do you see?” whenever students make a claim about the weather.
---
🧒 Student Worksheet
Concept and Helping Material
Main Concept
Weather changes because the sun heats Earth unevenly and water keeps moving through the water cycle. When water evaporates, condenses into clouds, and falls as precipitation, we see different kinds of weather such as rain, snow, or warm sunshine.
Helping ideas and samples:
- The Water Cycle in Simple Steps
1. Evaporation – The sun warms oceans, lakes, and puddles. Liquid water turns into invisible water vapor and rises into the air.
2. Condensation – Higher in the sky, the air is cooler. Water vapor cools and condenses into tiny drops. These drops group together to form clouds.
3. Precipitation – When cloud droplets join and grow heavy, they fall to Earth as precipitation (rain, snow, sleet, or hail).
4. Water collects again in rivers, lakes, soil, and oceans. The cycle continues.
- Rain
- Forms when air is above freezing.
- Falls as liquid drops.
- Soaks into soil, fills rivers and lakes, and helps plants grow.
- Snow
- Forms when air is below freezing.
- Falls as tiny ice crystals with many shapes.
- Can pile up on the ground and slowly melt when the temperature rises.
- Sunlight
- Warms the ground, air, and water.
- Helps water evaporate.
- Affects what we wear (short sleeves vs. coats) and what we do (play outside or stay in).
Think: How could the same place look different on a rainy day, a snowy day, and a sunny day? What would you see, hear, and feel in each kind of weather?
---
Vocabulary and Definition
- — what the air and sky are like in one place at one time
- — the usual weather in a place over a long time
- — the way water moves from land and water to the air and back again
- — to change from a liquid to a gas
- — to change from a gas to tiny liquid drops
- — water that falls from clouds as rain, snow, sleet, or hail
- — liquid water that falls in drops from clouds
- — ice crystals that fall from clouds when the air is very cold
- — balls of ice that fall during some storms
- — partly frozen rain that feels like tiny ice pellets
- — how hot or cold something is
- — a tool used to measure temperature
- — a group of tiny drops of water or ice crystals in the sky
- — how much water vapor is in the air
- — a cooler, darker area blocked from direct sunlight
- — a prediction of what the weather will be like
---
Words to Learn
, , , , , , , , , , , ,
---
Sentences to Fill In
1. The _____ explains how water moves from Earth’s surface into the air and back again.
2. When the sun warms a puddle and the water slowly disappears into the air, the water has _____.
3. Tiny drops in a cloud form when water vapor _____ high in the sky.
4. Water falling from clouds as rain or snow is called _____.
5. If the air is below freezing, the precipitation is most likely _____.
6. A tool that tells us how hot or cold it is outside is a _____.
7. When you stand under a tree to stay cooler on a hot day, you are using _____.
8. A weather _____ uses clues and tools to make a _____ about future weather.
---
Think & Respond Q&A
1. How does the sun help start the water cycle?
2. Why do we see clouds before it rains?
3. A town has air temperature of 3°C (about 37°F) during a storm. Is it more likely to rain or snow? Why?
4. How would walking to school feel different on a snowy morning compared to a sunny summer morning?
5. Why is precipitation important for plants and people?
6. If the forecast says “hot and sunny,” what might you choose to wear or bring? Explain your thinking.
7. A student says, “It rained yesterday, so it will rain every day this week.” How could you challenge that idea using what you know about weather?
8. How can clouds and weather help you decide whether to pack a coat, umbrella, or sunglasses?
9. What might happen to a snowman when the sun comes out and the temperature rises above freezing?
10. Why is it helpful for communities to keep weather records over many years?
---
Hands-On Experiment or Activities
Activity 1: Mini Water Cycle in a Bag
What You Need:
- Clear plastic zipper bag
- Small amount of water (about 2–3 tablespoons)
- Permanent marker
- Tape
What You Do:
1. Use the marker to draw a sun at the top of the bag and waves of water at the bottom.
2. Pour a little water into the bag and seal it tightly.
3. Tape the bag to a sunny window and leave it for several hours.
4. Observe tiny drops that appear on the inside of the bag above the water line.
Think and Talk:
- What changed?
- What stayed the same?
---
Activity 2: Sun and Shade Temperature Check
What You Need:
- Two simple outdoor thermometers
- Paper and pencil for a data table
What You Do:
1. Place one thermometer in direct sunlight and one in a shady spot, as close together as possible.
2. Wait several minutes, then read and record the temperature on each thermometer.
3. Check again after 10–15 minutes.
Think and Talk:
- What difference do you see between the sun and shade temperatures?
- How might this affect where you choose to sit or play on a hot day?
---
Reflection
- What did you learn about how the water cycle connects rain, snow, and the sun?
- How can knowing about temperature help you predict the kind of precipitation you will get?
- Which kind of weather do you like best—rainy, snowy, or sunny—and why?
- How can being a “weather thinker” help you in your daily life?