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CBSE - Class 06 - Science (OLD) - CBSE Syllabus

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CBSE Syllabus for Class 06 Science (OLD)

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CBSE Syllabus Class 6 Science

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Latest CBSE Syllabus for Class 6 Science

Latest CBSE Syllabus for Class 6 Science

CBSE syllabus for class 6 Science 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 as per cbse.nic.in new curriculum. CBSE syllabus is available for free download in PDF format. Download latest CBSE syllabus of 6th Science as PDF format. Science syllabus for cbse class 6 is also available in myCBSEguide app, the best app for CBSE students. 

CBSE Academics Unit - Curriculum Syllabus

CBSE has special academics unit to design curriculum and syllabus. The syllabus for CBSE class 6 Science is published by cbse.nic.in Central Board of Secondary Education, Head Office in New Delhi. The latest syllabus for class 6 Science includes list of topics and chapters in Science. CBSE question papers are designed as per the syllabus prescribed for current session. 

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CSBE CLASS VI
CBSE Syllabus
SCIENCE

Questions

Key concepts

Resources

Activities / Processes

1. Food
Sources of food
What are the various sources of our food? What do other animals eat?

Plant parts and animal products as sources of food; herbivores, carnivores, omnivores.

Examples of food from different parts of plants and of food from animal’s sources.

(Periods - 20)

Germination of seeds such as mung, chick pea etc.; preparing a chart on food habits of animals and food culture of different regions of India.

Components of food What is our food made up of? Why do we eat a variety of food?

Carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, minerals, fibers, their sources and significance for human health; balanced diet; diseases and disabilities due to food deficiencies.

Mid-Day Meal; Charts, pictures/films of children suffering from food deficiencies and disabilities.

Studying the variety of food in different regions in India; preparing a menu of balanced diet in the context of the diversity of foods eaten in different parts of the country. Classifying foods according to food components; test for starch, sugars, proteins and fats

Cleaning food
How do we separate the grains after harvesting the wheat /rice crop?

Threshing, winnowing, hand picking, sedimentation, filtration.

Talking to some elders about practices after harvesting the crop; kit materials.

Discussion on threshing, winnowing, handpicking; experiments on sedimentation, filtration. Separating mixture of salt and sand.

2. Materials
Materials of daily use What are our clothes
Made of? How did people manage when there were no clothes?

Different types of cloth Materials – cotton, wool, silk and synthetics. Development of clothing materials

Sharing of prior Knowledge with parents and community. Archaeological and historical accounts

(Periods - 26)
Whole class discussion.
Simple activities to distinguish among different types of cloth.

Are some of our clothes made of materials obtained from plants? In what kinds of places do these plants grow? Which parts of the plants are used for making clothes?

Plant fiber, especially cotton and jute; production of cotton, jute and other locally available plant fibers; types of soil required for the growth of different fibrous plants.

Sharing of prior knowledge with parents and community.

Whole class discussion. Field survey/ collecting information on locally available plant fibres (coconut, silk cotton, etc.)

Different kinds of materials
What kinds of things do we see around us?

Grouping things on the basis of common properties

Materials, kit items.

Collecting and grouping things on the basis of gross properties e.g. roughness, luster, transparency, solubility, sinking/floating using prior knowledge, through experiments.

How things change/ react with one another In what ways do things change on being heated? Do they change back on being cooled? Why does a burning candle get shorter?

Some changes can be reversed and others cannot be reversed.

Prior knowledge, kit items.

Experiments involving heating of air, wax, paper, metal, water to highlight effects like burning, expansion/compression, change of state. Discussion on other changes which cannot be reversed – growing up, opening of a bud, ripening of fruit, curdling of milk.

How much salt can be dissolved in a cup of water?

Solubility, saturated solutions. Amount of substance dissolving varies with temperature. At the same temperature amounts of different substances that dissolve varies.

Salt, sugar and other common substances, kit items.

Experiments for testing the solubility of commonly available substances. Experiments on the effect of heating and cooling on solubility. Comparison of solubility’s of different substances using nonstandard units (eg. spoon, paper cone).

3.The World of the Living
Things around us
Are all things around us living? What is the difference between living and non-living? Are all living things similar? Do all living things move? Where do plants and animals live? Can we grow plants in the dark?

Living/non-living characteristics; habitat; biotic, abiotic (light, temperature, water, air, soil, fire)

Recollection of diversity of living organisms and the habitat where they live.

(Periods - 36)
Listing of things around us, listing of characteristics after making observations say on size, color, shape etc., categorization; observations on habitat; observing germination of seeds, also observing under dark conditions; growth and development of domestic animals, hatching of birds’ eggs etc., developing drawing skills.

The habitat of the living
How does habitat affect plants and animals? How do fish live in water?

Habitat varies – aquatic, deserts, mountains etc. – plants and animals show adaptation; other plant part modifications like tendrils, thorns etc. Animals in deserts and water.

Potted plants or seeds, pots, etc.; thermometer, any water plants, any xerophytic plants, Information on desert and aquatic plants and animals.

Listing the diverse set of living organisms around us; prepare herbarium specimens of different leaves, plants; studying modifications in plants and animals; observing how different environmental factors (water availability, temperature) affect living organisms;

Plants – form and function
What is the structure and function of various parts of the plants - stem, leaf and roots? How do different flowers differ from one another? How does one study flowers?

Morphological structure and function of root, stem and leaves. Structure of the flower, differences.

Plants, flowers, blade, hand lens.

Studying plant parts – types of stems, roots, leaves, seeds; experiment to show conduction by stem, activity to show anchorage by roots, absorption by roots. Study of any flower, counting number of parts, names of parts, cutting sections of ovary to observe ovules.

Animals – form and function
What is inside our bodies? How do animals move? Do all animals have bones in their bodies? How do fishes move? And birds fly? What about snakes, snails, earthworms?

Structure and functions of the animal body; Human skeletal system, some other animals e.g. fish, bird, cockroach, snail.

Observation of nature; model of skeleton, X-rays of arms or legs, chest, hips, jaws, vertebral column (could be given in the textbook).

Activities to study X-rays, find out the direction in which joints bend, feel the ribs, backbone etc. Observation/ discussion on movement and skeletal system in other animals.

4. Moving Things, People and Ideas Moving
How did people travel from one place to another in earlier times? How did they know how far they had travelled? How do we know that something is moving? How do we know how far it has moved?

Need to measure distance (length). Measurement of length. Motion as change in position with time.

Everyday experience; equipment (scale etc.) to measure length. Stories for developing contexts for measuring distances.

(Periods - 12)
Measuring lengths and distances. Observation of different types of moving objects on land, in air, water and space. Identification and discrimination of various types of motion. Demonstrating objects having more than one type of movement (screw motion, bicycle wheel, fan, top etc.) Observing the periodic motion in hands of a clock / watch, sun, moon, earth.

5. How things work Electric current and circuits
How does a torch work?

Electric current: Electric circuit (current flows only when a cell and other components are connected in an unbroken loop)

Torch: cell, bulb or led, wires, key.

(Periods - 28)
Activity using a bulb, cell and key and connecting wire to show flow of current and identify closed and open circuits. Making a switch. Opening up a dry cell.

Do all materials allow current to flow through them?

Conductor, Insulator.

Mica, paper, rubber, plastic, wood, glass metal clip, water, pencil (graphite), etc.

Experiment to show that some objects (conductors) allow current to flow and others (insulators) do not.

Magnets
What is a magnet?

Magnet.

Magnet, iron pieces.

Demonstrating how things are attracted by a magnet. Classification of objects into magnetic/ non-magnetic classes.

Where on a magnet do things stick?

Poles of a magnet.

Magnet, iron pieces, iron filings, paper

Activity to locate poles of a magnet; activity with iron filings and paper.

How is a magnet used to find direction?

A freely suspended magnet always aligns in a particular direction. North and South poles.

Bar magnet, stand, thread, compass.

Activities with suspended bar magnet and with compass needle.

How do two magnets behave when brought close to each other?

Like poles repel and unlike poles attract each other.

Two bar magnets, thread, stand.

Activities to show that like poles repel and unlike poles attract.

6. Natural Phenomena
Rain, thunder and lightning
Where does rain come from? How do clouds form?

Evaporation and condensation, water in different states. Water cycle.

Everyday experience; kit items.

Condensation on outside of a glass containing cold water; activity of boiling water and condensation of steam on a spoon. Simple model of water cycle. Discussion on three states of water.

Light
Which are the things we can see through?

Classification of various materials in terms of transparent, translucent and opaque.

Previous experience, candle/torch/lamp, white paper, cardboard box, black paper.

(Periods - 26)
Discussion, observation; looking across different materials at a source of light.

When are shadows formed? Do you get a shadow at night – when there is no light in the room, no moonlight or other source of light? What colour is a shadow?

A shadow is formed only when there is a source of light and an opaque material obstructs a source it. A shadow is black irrespective of the colour of the object.

Child’s own experience, candle/torch/lamp, white paper, black paper, coloured objects.

Discussion; observing shadow formation of various objects of different shapes, and of same shape and different colours; playing and forming shadows with the hands in sunlight, in candle light, and in a well lit region during daytime; making a pinhole camera and observing static and moving objects.

On what kinds of surfaces can we see images?

Reflecting surfaces; images are different from shadows.

Experience, objects with polished surfaces, mirror etc.

Observing differences between the image and the shadow of the same object.

7. Natural Resources Importance of water What will happen to soil, people, domestic animals, rivers, ponds and plants and animals if it does not rain this year?
What will happen to soil, people, domestic animals, plants and animals living in rivers and ponds, if it rains heavily?

Importance of water, dependence of the living on water. Droughts and floods.

Experience, newspaper reports.

Estimation of water used by a family in one day, one month, one year. Difference between need and availability. Discussion. Activity: plant growth in normal, deficient and excess water conditions.

Importance of air
Why do earthworms come out of the soil when it rains?

Some animals and plants live in water; some live on land and some live in upper layers of soil; but all need air to breath/to respire.

Experience.

Discussion.

Waste
Do you throw away fruit and vegetable peels and cuttings? Can these be reused? If we dump them anywhere, will it harm the surroundings? What if we throw them in plastic bags?

Waste; recycling of waste products; things that rot and things that don’t. Rotting is supported by animals/animal and plant products.

Observation and experience.

Survey of solid waste generation by households; estimation of waste accumulated (by a house/ village/colony etc.) in a day, in a year; discussion on ‘what is waste’; Activity to show that materials rot in soil, this is affected by wrapping in plastics.

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