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Celestial Bodies Exploration

Science • 80 • 23 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Science
80
23 students
23 February 2026

Teaching Instructions

i want my plan to focus on ES1 earth and space where students will learn about different types of celestial bodies mainly by asking questions and taking down notes. students will then do a research activity where they will go online to find out what planet is being talked about and 5 facts from that planet and then a mix and match task using their chromebooks. constructivist approach should be adapted when possible

Year Group

First Year (12-13 years old)

Duration

80 minutes

Class Size

23 students


Curriculum Link: IE Curriculum - Science - ES1: Earth and Space

  • Explore Earth and Space, focusing on identifying and understanding different celestial bodies
  • Learning outcomes from strand: Earth and Space (ES1)
  • Specific Learning Objectives:
    • Identify various celestial bodies in our solar system including planets, dwarf planets, moons, asteroids, and comets.
    • Explain the characteristics that define a planet versus other celestial bodies.
    • Use questioning and note-taking strategies to explore new scientific knowledge.
    • Apply research skills to gather and summarise scientific information.
    • Develop digital literacy through online research and interactive tasks.

Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Understand the key types of celestial bodies within our solar system.
  • Be able to distinguish between planets, dwarf planets, moons, asteroids, and comets.
  • Learn curiosity-driven questioning as a tool for scientific inquiry.
  • Conduct independent research to identify planets and their characteristics using chromebooks.
  • Complete a mix-and-match task to consolidate their learning about planets and their facts.

Success Criteria

  • I can ask questions about different celestial bodies and take clear, organised notes.
  • I can identify 5 facts about a chosen planet using online research.
  • I can correctly match planets to their key facts during the interactive task.
  • I demonstrate an understanding of what defines a planet compared to other celestial objects.

Materials & Resources

  • Chromebooks (one per student)
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Worksheet for note-taking (Dyslexia-friendly version included)
  • Printed cards for mix-and-match task (planets and facts)
  • Comets, Meteors, Satellites, Galaxies, Big Bang PDF (reference content for teacher use)

LESSON PLAN

1. Engage & Elicit Prior Knowledge (10 minutes)

Method: Whole class discussion & Q&A

  • Begin by asking: What do you already know about planets and other objects in space?
  • Write student answers on the whiteboard under headings: Planets, Moons, Asteroids, Comets, Others.
  • Show keywords and definitions from the reference sheet (e.g., Celestial Object, Planet, Moon etc.) on the board.
  • Prompt students to note down any new terms/questions they have in their notebooks using structured headings with spacing and colour-coded fonts (for dyslexia-friendly reading).

Differentiation:

  • Provide printed keywords and simple definitions for lower literacy learners.
  • Encourage advanced learners to suggest examples or ask ‘why’ and ‘how’ questions about space.

2. Explore - Question and Note-Taking Phase (15 minutes)

Method: Teacher-led inquiry and student note-taking

  • Using guided questions, introduce the 5 main celestial bodies from the Comets, Meteors... PDF:
    • What is a planet? What conditions define a planet?
    • How are dwarf planets different?
    • What are moons and satellites?
    • What are asteroids and where are they found?
    • What are comets and why do they have tails?
  • Use visuals/photos of each body projected or on worksheet.
  • Students write answers/notions in their notebooks; teacher models note-taking by highlighting keywords and organising facts clearly.

Success Criteria: Students record at least one fact per celestial body with correct terminology.

Differentiation:

  • Provide scaffolded note sheets with sentence starters for students needing extra support.
  • Challenge advanced learners to write their own examples or make connections (e.g., compare size or orbit).

3. Research Activity - Discovering Planets (25 minutes)

Method: Individual research using Chromebooks

  • Students will be given a short audio or text description (read aloud for dyslexic learners) describing a planet (without naming it).
  • Task: Identify the planet described and research 5 interesting facts about it using curated child-friendly search portals (pre-selected by teacher, ensuring safe content).
  • Students record the planet name and 5 facts on their worksheet.
  • Examples to include planets like Jupiter (largest planet), Venus (hottest), Mars (red planet), Neptune (coldest), Earth or Mars (humans’ future mission targets).

Differentiation:

  • Pair less confident readers with buddy helpers or oral responses recorded on tablet.
  • Extension: Advanced learners research an additional dwarf planet or one of the gas giants, preparing a mini presentation.

Dyslexia-Friendly:

  • Provide fact-finding grids with visuals; use audio support if needed.

4. Consolidation - Mix and Match Task (20 minutes)

Method: Small group interactive game on Chromebooks

  • Using an interactive quiz or digital drag-and-drop activity (teacher-prepared with Google Slides or similar platform), students match planets to facts they have learned.
  • Students work in groups of 3-4 to encourage discussion and peer teaching.
  • Teacher circulates providing instant feedback and encouragement.

Success Criteria: Students demonstrate correct pairing of planets and facts, explaining their reasoning to peers.


5. Plenary & Reflection (10 minutes)

Method: Class discussion and self-assessment

  • Invite students to share one new fact they found interesting.
  • Ask reflection questions: How did asking questions help you understand better? Which planet would you like to learn more about and why?
  • Students complete a quick self-assessment checklist on their learning intentions and success criteria.

Assessment

  • Formative through observations during questioning and note-taking phases
  • Review of research worksheets for accuracy and depth of facts found
  • Mix-and-match task results serve as informal assessment of knowledge retention

Extension Activities

  • Deep Dive Research Project: Students choose a celestial body (planet, comet, asteroid, moon) to research in more detail over a week and create a presentation/poster.
  • Creative Writing: Write a day-in-the-life story from the perspective of an astronaut visiting one of the planets studied.
  • Space Debate: Discuss “Should humans colonise Mars?” with supporting scientific facts from research.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Scaffold note-taking with structured templates and visual aids
  • Use multi-sensory input: verbal instruction, visual images, interactive activities
  • Pair students heterogeneously for peer support during research and interactive tasks
  • Use clear, dyslexia-friendly fonts (e.g. Open Dyslexic or Arial) and spacing in all printed materials
  • Allow alternative presentation formats: verbal, recorded audio, or written

Teacher Reflection & Tips

  • Encourage ongoing curiosity by modelling questions like “I wonder why...” or “How does this happen?”
  • Build on student answers to deepen conceptual understanding
  • Monitor group work dynamics to ensure all voices are heard and supported
  • Prepare chromebooks and internet safety measures in advance
  • Use real images of planets and their sizes for a concrete grasp of scale

By integrating questioning, note-taking, research, and digital tasks within a constructivist framework, this lesson will promote active student engagement and foster higher-order thinking skills aligned to the IE Curriculum for Science.

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