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The Solar System

Science • Year 2 • 30 • 20 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Science
2Year 2
30
20 students
12 March 2025

Teaching Instructions

I would like to focus on the topic of earth and space. It needs to include at least 10 science specific texts, an LO, prior knowledge, challenges, role of TA aswel as the teacher, child activity, teaching points.

The Solar System

Curriculum Area

Subject: Science
Topic: Earth and Space
Year Group: Year 2
National Curriculum Link:

  • Working Scientifically: Observing changes over time, asking and answering scientific questions.
  • Earth and Space: Understanding the movement of Earth and other planets in relation to the Sun.

Learning Objective (LO)

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Identify and name planets in the Solar System.
  • Understand that Earth orbits the Sun.
  • Recognise that the Moon orbits Earth.

Prior Knowledge

Before beginning the lesson, pupils should:

  • Know that Earth is a planet.
  • Recognise that the Sun appears during the day and the Moon at night.
  • Understand that stars exist in the night sky.

Potential Misconceptions:

  • Thinking the Sun moves around Earth.
  • Believing space is "just empty".
  • Assuming planets stay still rather than orbit.

Resources Required

  • A large inflatable Sun, Earth, and Moon (or printed images).
  • Printed diagrams of the Solar System.
  • Flashcards with planet names.
  • Mini torches (for an extension activity).
  • A carpet space to simulate orbits.

Key Scientific Vocabulary

  1. Planet - A large object that orbits a star.
  2. Orbit - The path a planet takes around a star or moon around a planet.
  3. Star - A burning ball of gas that gives off light (e.g., the Sun).
  4. Gravity - An invisible force that pulls objects towards each other.
  5. Solar System - The Sun and all the planets that orbit it.
  6. Sun - The star at the centre of our Solar System.
  7. Moon - A natural satellite that orbits a planet.
  8. Astronomer - A scientist who studies space.
  9. Space - The vast area beyond Earth's atmosphere.
  10. Rotation - When a planet spins on its axis (causing day and night).

Lesson Structure (30 minutes)

1. Starter – 5 minutes

  • Teacher holds up an inflatable Sun. "What is this?" (Allow responses.)
  • Place the Earth next to it. "This is us! Do we think the Sun moves around Earth, or does Earth move?"
  • Briefly discuss any misconceptions.
  • Show a quick action: The teacher slowly spins Earth around the Sun while also spinning itself.

2. Main Activity – 15 minutes

Teacher Demonstration (5 mins)

  1. Stand in the middle of the carpet as the "Sun."
  2. Ask a TA (Teaching Assistant) to be "Earth" and walk around the teacher in a circle.
  3. Then, ask another child to be the "Moon" and orbit Earth while it moves around the "Sun."
  4. Stop and explain: "This is how our Solar System works—Earth moves around the Sun, and the Moon moves around Earth!"

Group Activity (10 mins)

  • Pupils will be divided into small groups and each given a planet card.
  • They will read a fact about their planet to the class (e.g., Mars is red because of its iron-rich soil).
  • As they share, the teacher places the planets in order from the Sun.
  • Class repeats the planets using mnemonic (e.g., "My Very Eager Mother Just Served Us Nachos" for Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune).

3. Plenary – 5 minutes

  • Quick-fire questions:
    • “Where does Earth move?” (Around the Sun).
    • “What moves around Earth?” (The Moon).
    • “Is the Sun a planet or a star?” (A star!).
  • End with a class role-play: All students become planets and orbit around the "Sun" (teacher).

Role of Teaching Assistant (TA)

  • Support children who may struggle with reading facts.
  • Work with children with additional needs to ensure engagement.
  • Help manage behaviour during the orbit demonstration.

Challenges & Differentiation

For Higher Ability:

  • Introduce the idea of day and night using torches—when the Sun "shines" on one side of Earth, it's daytime there and night on the other side.

For Lower Ability:

  • Provide simpler facts for planet cards.
  • Use visuals (e.g., colour-coded planets) to reinforce learning.

Teaching Points

  • Use misconception-busting strategies such as physical movements to show the planet orbits.
  • Keep discussions interactive—asking lots of why and how questions.
  • Reinforce vocabulary using repetition and sentence stems (e.g., "Earth moves around the…").

Assessment Opportunities

✅ Can pupils name at least 3 planets?
✅ Do they understand that Earth orbits the Sun?
✅ Can they explain why the Moon moves around Earth?


Final Thought (Teacher Reflection)

Consider:

  • Were children able to grasp the core concept?
  • Did the hands-on activity help engagement?
  • Were there common misconceptions that need revisiting?

Closing Notes

This lesson delivers scientific discovery in an interactive way, making Earth and Space relatable for young learners. By physically representing planetary movement, pupils gain a deeper understanding of orbits, solidifying key concepts naturally! 🚀✨

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