Water Goes Around and Comes Around
Grades
3 to 5
Subjects
Science, Social Studies, Math
Time
120 minutes
Materials
• large piece of cardboard
• paper towel or bathroom tissue tubes
• straws
• different sizes of pasta (spaghetti, manicotti,etc.)
• glue
• paste or glue sticks
• small boxes (matchboxes, small milk cartons)
Objectives
The student will do the following:
- Build a model of a water system from the source to users;
- Learn to read and interpret a water meter;
- Plan ways of water conservation at the community level.
Background Information
It has been determined that each person in the markers United States uses
about 150 gallons of water construction paper a day. Experts add the number of
people who student sheets (included)
live in a city, town, or community, and multiply teacher sheet (included) that number by 150
to determine how much water is used daily by that community.
People use water for drinking, cooking, bathing, flushing the toilet, laundry, washing cars,
and watering lawns. Factories, farms, stores, public utilities, and homes use millions of
gallons of water daily. It is a big job for water treatment facilities to supply clean drinkable
water to a town, city, or community.
After the water treatment plant cleans the water, it sends it out to the users. As the water
travels through a distribution system, it is diverted down different pathways to homes and
businesses. The diameter of a pipe determines the quantity of water the pipe can hold and
determines the rate the water can travel through the pipe. The volume of water needed for
homes or businesses represents a small portion of the volume leaving the water plant. Therefore,
smaller pipes are needed near the point of distribution, whereas larger pipes are needed
near the treatment plant.
Water treatment plants pump water from a source (lake, river, or groundwater), treat the
water, and pump it to holding tanks or water towers. If the water goes to a water tower,
it flows by gravitational force from the water tower throughout the distribution system.
Otherwise, water distribution is driven by motorized pumps.
Drinkable water is not free. Water treatment facilities and the distribution of drinking
water are costly. Customers are charged according to the amount of water they use. A water
meter is used to measure how many gallons (titers) or cubic feet (cubic meters) a household
or business uses.
Because users pay for water and because there is only so much fresh water available for
use, we must conserve our supplies, using them as wisely and efficiently as possible. We
must not use water wastefully. Many communities have already experienced shortages in water
supplies due to lengthy droughts, growth in population that has outstripped the water system’s
capacity, or other problems. People in these communities have learned to eliminate unnecessary
water uses.
Terms
community water cycle: the distribution of water from the source to user
and back to the source.
water source: a place where water is collected and stored for use.
water meter: a device for measuring and recording the amount of water used.
Advance Preparation
A. Gather materials for constructing the model. (NOTE: You may want to ask
the students to bring in small boxes [matchboxes, milk cartons, etc.] to
represent buildings in the community, or you may choose to use construction
paper to draw and cut ’buildings.’)
- A large sheet of cardboard for each group to build model on.
- Paper towel tubes, straws, and pasta.
- the students may cut a river, stream, or lake from blue construction paper or draw this
on the cardboard.
B. Prepare copies of student sheets and/or transparencies.
Procedure
1. Setting the stage
Ask the students the following questions (which assume your students and school have water
from a water utility):
- How does the water that you drink get to your house? (it is piped from the river to the
treatment plant, to a reservoir or storage tank, then to your homes.)
- How does the water get to your school? (the same process)
- What happens to the water when it leaves your home or school? (It goes to a wastewater
treatment plant, then is discharged back to the river or lake.)
- Where do people get water who do not live near water bodies and do not have city water
systems? (wells) Where does wastewater from homes not connected to sewer systems go? (septic
systems)
- What do all these processes represent? (water cycles created by people)
- Compare/contrast this human created water cycle to the natural water (hydrologic) cycle.
(The human water cycle comes from a lake or river, is distributed through the community,
then goes to a treatment plant and back to the water supply. The hydrologic cycle is the
movement of water from the atmosphere to the earth and its return to the atmosphere. Both
cycles are continuous.)
- Make very simple diagrams on the board to show a community water cycle and the natural
water cycle.
2. Activities
Divide the students into groups of four or five and have each group build a model of your
community water supply system from the source to the user.
- Draw or cut from construction paper a river or lake and glue it to the cardboard.
- Either draw houses and other buildings or construct them from small boxes to represent
the community.
- Show each group the illustration of the model of the water supply system to show them
how to connect the ’pipes’ (paper towel tubes, straws, and pasta) with glue and lay them
on the large piece of cardboard.
- (Optional) The students may also show another set of ’pipes’ going to the wastewater
treatment plant and returning to the source. (Use markers to color the wastewater lines
a dark color.)
Ask the students the following questions:
- How is the amount of water a home, school, or business uses measured? (A water meter
measures the amount of water that is used so the customer can be billed correctly.)
- Who reads the amount of water you use? (a meter reader from the water utility)
- Explain to the students that water is not free and users must pay for its use. Water
is paid for by the gallon (liter) or sometimes it is measured in cubic feet (cubic meters).
What else is measured by the gallon (liter)? (gas, milk, juice)
Distribute the student sheet ’Meet Your Meter’ or you may want to use it
as a transparency. Discuss and explain how to read a water meter. (You can get a meter face
from your local water department. If you wish to concentrate on the meters most common in
your community, call the billing department of your local water utility and ask about the
meters where you live. Some people, like those who live in apartments, do not have individual
meters.. Their rent includes an estimated fee for water usage.)
- The first meter is measured in gallons. Read and record the first meter, that represents
gallons.
- The second meter measures water in cubic feet. Read and record this amount.
- The third meter is read like a digital clock. Read and record this amount.
Ask the students to read the meters on the student sheet ’Meter Reader’ to reinforce the
skill.
The answers are: 1. 136,092 2. 072,150 3. 824,736.
3. Extensions
• Have students complete ’Read Your Meter,’ a take home survey.
- Brainstorm ways to conserve water.
- List these suggestions on the blackboard or overhead projector.
- Check toilets and faucets for leaks.
- Keep a container of drinking water in the refrigerator.
- Turn off the water while you brush your teeth.
- Wash clothes only when you have a full load.
- Wash dishes only when you have a full load.
- Take shorter showers, or get a low flow shower head.
- Discuss the question, ‘Why should we conserve water?’
- Water is a natural resource that we all share.
- Wasting water wastes energy.
- Conservation will save money and make clean water supplies last longer.
- Appoint a water patrol of 3 or 4 students to check bathrooms and water fountains for leaks
or to see if they are left running. Report their findings to the janitor or principal.
- The students may check the newspapers and clip out articles that concern water.
- These maybe placed on the bulletin board.
- Students may write reports on their findings.
Resources
Cobb, V., The Trip of a Drip, Little, Brown and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1986,
Science Demonstration Projects in Drinking Water, Grades K 12, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Washington, DC, 1990.
’The Story of Drinking Water’ (student booklet), American Water Works Association,
Denver, Colorado, 11984,
The Story of Drinking Water: Teacher’s Guide, Intermediate Level, Grades
4, 5, 6,’ 2nd ed., American Water Works Association, Denver, Colorado, 1988, pp. 23
Printed with permission from Michal L. Le Vasseur, 2001
Download:
Water Goes Around and Comes Around (Adobe PDF document)
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