Forces in Water
Year Level
Year 7 – Stage 4 (Physical World & Chemical World, Australian Curriculum)
Curriculum Links
Science Understanding
- ACSSU117: Change to an object’s motion is caused by unbalanced forces acting on the object.
- ACSSU151: The properties of the different states of matter can be explained in terms of the motion and arrangement of particles.
NSW Syllabus Outcomes
- SC4-PW1: Describes the action of unbalanced forces in everyday situations.
- SC4-PW2: The action of forces that act at a distance may be observed and related to everyday situations.
- SC4-CW1: Compares physical states of matter and explains their properties in terms of the motion and arrangement of particles.
Lesson Duration
60 minutes
Class Size
25 students
WALT (We Are Learning To):
- Understand that any object placed into water loses weight due to an upward force called buoyancy.
- Represent buoyancy and weight forces using appropriate force arrows.
- Predict how unbalanced forces affect motion in everyday contexts, especially when in fluids (water).
Success Criteria:
- ✅ I can describe how weight changes in water.
- ✅ I can draw accurate force arrows showing buoyancy and weight.
- ✅ I can explain how these two forces interact when an object floats or sinks.
Resources Required:
- Clear plastic tubs filled with water
- Spring scales (Newton meters)
- Range of objects (wooden blocks, metal bolts, plastic containers, rubber balls)
- Worksheets with diagrams for annotation
- Whiteboard and markers
- Printed force-arrow guides (dyslexia-friendly fonts)
- Stopwatch
- Towels or cloths for drying hands/objects
- Laptops or tablets (optional, for extension)
Lesson Sequence
1. Kickstart: Predict & Wonder (10 mins)
Hook Question (on board):
"What happens to the weight of something when you put it in water?"
- Begin with a short class discussion.
- Show a metal bolt suspended on a spring scale in the air. Record the weight.
- Lower it slowly into a tub of water without touching the sides/bottom and show the reduced reading.
- Ask: “Has it lost mass? Why is it now ‘lighter’?”
Think-Pair-Share:
Students predict why the weight changes when submerged.
WALT Connection:
Explain today we’re learning about the force that makes things seem lighter in water — buoyancy.
2. Core Activity: Measuring Buoyancy (25 mins)
Station Rotation – 3 Stations (8 mins each)
Split the class into 3 groups of 8–9 students. Each station has differentiated instructions and scaffolds.
Station 1 – Spring Scale Science
- Measure object weight in air and water
- Record difference
- Predict and explain using scaffolded worksheet
Station 2 – Diagram Labelling Task
- Use diagrams showing floating/sinking objects
- Students add force arrows for weight (down) and buoyancy (up)
- Arrows differentiated into small/medium/large thickness for Level 1–3 complexity
Station 3 – Everyday Object Analysis
- Given objects (e.g., life jacket, boat model, pebble), students sort into 3 categories:
- Floats easily
- Floats with effort
- Sinks
- Then discuss why each behaves the way it does in water
Extra Support (Differentiation):
- Use visuals and scaffolding page with sentence starters
- Colour-coded instructions
- Dyslexia-friendly fonts and printed diagrams
- Peer buddy systems set up for performing each task
Extension (Advanced Learners):
- Calculate approximate buoyant force (Weight in air – Weight in water = Buoyant force)
- Explore concept of water displacement using Archimedes’ Principle (simplified prompt provided on worksheet)
- Design a mini experiment: How does shape affect buoyancy? Option to compare spherical vs cuboid submerged items
3. Consolidation: Whole Class Reflection (10 mins)
Force Diagram (Teacher-led):
Draw a boat floating in water on the board. Invite students to help draw force arrows for:
- Downward weight
- Upward buoyant force
Discuss: “When are these forces balanced? When are they unbalanced?”
Mini Whiteboards (Formative Assessment):
Write or draw:
- One thing you learned
- One thing you’re wondering about
(Individual reflection, shared in pairs)
4. Exit Ticket (5 mins)
Distribute small slips of paper with the sentence starter:
“I now understand that buoyancy is…”
“I still have a question about…”
Collect on exit – used for informal assessment and next lesson planning.
Differentiation Strategies
| Learner Type | Strategy |
|---|
| EAL/D Learners | Visual aids, labelled diagrams, bilingual word banks where appropriate. |
| Students with Dyslexia | Use OpenDyslexic font worksheets, paired reading tasks, colour-coded notes. |
| Kinesthetic Learners | Hands-on practical stations, manipulating real-world items. |
| Advanced Learners | Extension tasks related to Archimedes’ Principle and complex predictions. |
| Visual Learners | Illustrated process cards, digital simulations (optional). |
Assessment Opportunities
- Observation during activities and discussions
- Accuracy of force arrows and explanation on worksheets
- Exit ticket reflections
- Formative feedback through mini whiteboard responses
Follow-Up Ideas
Next lesson:
- Design Challenge: Create a foil boat that can hold the most marbles before sinking – apply knowledge of buoyancy, shape, displacement.
- Introduce connection to density and particle arrangement in solids, liquids, and gases (CW1 link).
Keywords for Vocabulary Wall
- Force
- Buoyancy
- Weight
- Upthrust
- Balanced / Unbalanced Forces
- Float / Sink
- Arrow notation
Teacher Reflection Prompt
After lesson, consider:
- Which activities allowed students to show deep understanding?
- Did all students engage meaningfully with the hands-on stations?
- What misconceptions about forces in water arose that need to be addressed next lesson?
This lesson is fully aligned with Australian Science Curriculum (ACSSU117 / ACSSU151) and Stage 4 Physical and Chemical World outcomes, accentuating inquiry, hands-on learning, visual scaffolds, and deep conceptual understanding—all in a format ready to wow your students and colleagues alike.