📚 📁⬆

302 Wheels and Wings

302 Wheels and Wings

👩‍🏫 Teacher’s Guide

Objective

Students will describe how wheels reduce friction, explain how wings create lift, compare land and air travel, and evaluate which vehicle is best for different purposes.

Vocabulary

wheel, axle, rotation, friction, aerodynamic, lift, thrust, drag, fuselage, cockpit, engine, landing gear, velocity, hover, glide

Teaching Notes

  • Start with a rolling race using toy cars vs. sliding blocks—observe friction.
  • Show how a wing’s curved shape changes air pressure, creating lift.
  • Demonstrate drag using a flat object vs. a shaped object moved through air.
  • Let students reason: “Which vehicle works best for delivering mail across town? Across the ocean?”
  • Highlight safety: seatbelts, flight checks, trained pilots, signals.

🧒 Student Worksheet

Concept and Helping Material

Definition. Wheels help vehicles travel smoothly by reducing friction, while wings help aircraft rise through lift. Vehicles with wheels travel on land, and vehicles with wings travel through air.

Helping ideas:

  • Wheels + Axle = rolling movement
  • Engine + Wheels = car or bus
  • Wings + Thrust = airplane flight
  • Shape matters: airplanes are aerodynamic to reduce drag
  • Some aircraft (helicopters) use rotating blades instead of fixed wings

Vocabulary and Definition

  • — rod connecting wheels
  • — upward force that helps aircraft rise
  • — force that slows moving objects in air
  • — forward push from an engine
  • — shaped to reduce air resistance

Words to Learn

, , , ,

Sentences to Fill In

1. Airplanes rise because their create lift.

2. Cars move smoothly because wheels reduce .

3. Engines create to move aircraft forward.

4. Good airplane shapes reduce .

5. An connects two wheels.

Think & Respond Q&A

1. Why can't cars fly even though they have engines?

2. How does an airplane take off?

3. Why do trucks need stronger engines than small cars?

4. What is one advantage of air travel?

5. How do wheels help conserve energy?

6. What happens when drag increases?

7. Why are airplane wings curved?

8. Why do helicopters not need long runways?

9. Why do pilots follow strict safety rules?

10. Which vehicle would be best for crossing a river: car, bicycle, or airplane?

Hands-On Experiment or Activities

Activity 1: Drag Test

What You Need: flat paper, folded paper airplane

What You Do: wave each through the air.

Think and Talk:

  • Which moves easier?
  • Why?

Activity 2: Wheel Builder

What You Need: cardboard circles, straw axle

What You Do: build a simple wheeled vehicle.

Think and Talk:

  • What helped it roll well?

Reflection

  • What did you learn about wheels and wings?
Critical Thinking