Teach Junkie

Rocks for Kids – 15 Fun Activities and Ideas

Teaching rocks for kids can be fun, interactive and even yummy with these creative ideas. These 15 activities and ideas are perfect for teaching science about rocks that includes the rock cycle , the types of rocks and more!

Rocks for Kids - 15 Fun Activities and Ideas

You’ll even love how these ideas integrate food {yum!}, creativity and songs to meet all learners.

Rocks for Kids

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rock Formations Worksheet

1.  Rock Formations Worksheet  – Students can take what they know about rocks and use them creatively to create rock formations. This is a more artistic way to work with rocks for kids and makes a great display next to a classroom anchor chart. {Free download}

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - How to Make Edible Rocks {A Rock Buffet}

2.  How to Make Edible Rocks {A Rock Buffet}  – This idea had my mouth watering as I explored the fun ways that students can illustrate how rocks are made by using rice krispie ingredients. This is perfect for introducing the three observable properties of minerals before moving onto the three basic types of rocks . Yum! You’ll also love the video connection.

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - About Rocks Anchor Chart

3. About Rocks Anchor Chart – When you’re working on beginning a rock science investigation in the classroom, you’ll most likely begin a new list of vocabulary words.

The place to start is with the words the students want to use to describe the rocks when they are observing them. What a great way to make their words become part of the investigation.

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - How to Make a Rock

4.  How to Make a Rock – Use ingredients that are easy to have on hand. All you need are cups, glue, sand, pebbles and a disposable cup.

This activity is a great one to have students record in their science journals and to have their own material to keep. What a fun and neat way to make science come alive!

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rocks for Kindergarten Science Journals

5.  Rocks for Kindergarten Science Journals – A great unit for kindergarten students that takes them on an exploration of rocks and soil with ideas on investigation, experimenting, observing and getting all of these ideas down into their science journals.

You’ll love the simplicity and thoroughness of the pictures that’ll make this feel like a teacher tutorial that is easy to do. {Free download}

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Comparing Soil Investigation

6.  Comparing Soil Investigation – Here is a great way to wrap up a rock unit. Bring in the scientific method to help students explore which type of soil is best for planting and putting what they know to the test. This is great for first graders! {Free download}

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Guess My Rock Activity

7.  Guess My Rock Activity – This activity is great for older students. They can use gathered rocks and create the questions for a partner or a display in which they list the description or properties of the rock.

It’s a great way for them to apply what they know to found rocks. Turn it into a rock hunt to make it fun!

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas -

8.  The Rock Cycle Diagram and Song – Here is a sure-fire way to help students see the connections between igneous rock, metamorphic rock and sedimentary rock .

They can create a diagram that illustrates the cycle and use this nifty song to the tune of “We Will Rock You” that is sure to have them hooked.

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rocks by Characteristic

9. Rocks by Characteristic – In kindergarten, students can learn to sort rocks by different categories. Here is a great example of how students can learn to be problem solvers to organize their data and then explore the concept of sorting using various categories like size, texture, color, etc.

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rock Definition Worksheet

10.  Rock Definition Worksheet – If you just need a quick worksheet to practice the definitions for sedimentary, metamorphic and igneous rocks, then this one will do it.

Students can trace, define and color a picture to match. {Free download}

It also helps reinforce that characteristics of each as well as the word “ geology ” perhaps just the thing you need to reach a different style of learner when teaching rocks for kids.

12.  Pebbles, Sand and Silt Module from Foss – This website includes and activity for students to find the materials that came from the Earth, images, audio stories and movies.

Have your class generated a question and needs to ask a scientist. They can do that on the website. What a great collection of ideas and resources.

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - My Pet Rock Worksheets

13.  My Pet Rock Worksheets – If you like to bring in pet rocks into your unit, here are 3 free worksheets. Students can weigh, measure and illustrate their pet rock. What a fun and creative way to wrap up a unit and take some learning home. {Free download}

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rock Research Literacy and Math Activities

14.  Rock Research Literacy and Math Activities – Here is a great set of literacy and lath activities that will all incorporate rocks for kids soil.

Students can use the included worksheet to research a rock and keep tabs on various experiments that can do like a vinegar test, sink/float, magnetic, scratch or brightness. {Free download}

Teach Junkie: Rocks for Kids - 15 Activities and Ideas - Rock Cycle Stations

15.  Rock Cycle Stations – Take students through the cycle of a rock by setting up stations (for grades 3-6) and color coded stations.

Students will love the concept of rolling to see what happens to them as they, a rock, continue on their journey. It’s a great way to have them live out the cycle and compare experiences.

You may also totally dig this science collection: Clouds Science for Kids: 23 Smart Ideas for the Classroom

Clouds for Kids 23 Smart Ideas for the Classroom - Teach Junkie

Thanks to these teachers for their free downloads and creative lesson ideas.  Your activities are fantastic! Feel free to grab the “ I’m a Featured Teach Junkie ” blog button as your ideas are definitely worth the shout out.

More Science Lesson Ideas:

  • 19 Fun Ideas & Resources for Force and Motion
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Rocks for Kids - 15 Fun Activities and Ideas {all free}

Teach Junkie

Leslie {aka the original Teach Junkie} loves learning new things to make teaching easier and more effective. She enjoys featuring creative classroom fun when she's not designing teacher shirts, making kindergarten lesson plans or planning her family's next trip to Disney World.

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Rocks: rocks and fossils

Produced by the Hamilton Trust, these resources give details of eight lessons on rocks and soils. This includes lesson plans, practical activities and all student materials. Students find out about what is under their feet. Students are always fascinated by rocks and, in this strand, they describe rocks and compare their properties after tackling some exciting activities. They discover how soil is formed from rocks and investigate the permeability of different soils. The lessons are: * Rock detectives * Under our feet * Rock investigations * Exploring rocks further * Properties of soil * Soil investigation * Volcanoes * Fossils

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Please be aware that resources have been published on the website in the form that they were originally supplied. This means that procedures reflect general practice and standards applicable at the time resources were produced and cannot be assumed to be acceptable today. Website users are fully responsible for ensuring that any activity, including practical work, which they carry out is in accordance with current regulations related to health and safety and that an appropriate risk assessment has been carried out.

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Sedimentary Rocks

Sedimentary Rocks introduces students to a more in-depth look at this type of rock. Students will discover that there are many kinds of rock that fall into the sedimentary rock category. They will learn specific characteristics of several of these rocks. They will learn about limestone, dolomites, conglomerates, and more.

There are several different ideas in the “Options for Lesson” section that you may want to use in your lesson. For instance, you could gather some sedimentary rocks and have students guess the type of rock. You could also invite a geologist to come talk to the class about sedimentary rocks.

Description

Additional information, what our sedimentary rocks lesson plan includes.

Lesson Objectives and Overview: Sedimentary Rocks dives deeper into this type of rock and how it forms during the rock cycle. Students will learn which rocks fall into this category. They will see many examples and learn about their traits. By the end of the lesson, students will be able to identify sedimentary rocks easily. This lesson is for students in 4th grade, 5th grade, and 6th grade.

Classroom Procedure

Every lesson plan provides you with a classroom procedure page that outlines a step-by-step guide to follow. You do not have to follow the guide exactly. The guide helps you organize the lesson and details when to hand out worksheets. It also lists information in the yellow box that you might find useful. You will find the lesson objectives, state standards, and number of class sessions the lesson should take to complete in this area. In addition, it describes the supplies you will need as well as what and how you need to prepare beforehand.

Options for Lesson

There are many suggestions in the “Options for Lesson” section that you could incorporate into the lesson if you have time or want to extend or adjust it. One suggestion is for students to write poems or stories about the formation of a sedimentary rock from the perspective of a piece of sediment. Another idea is to obtain different rocks and have students identify each one based on what they observe and what they learned. You could also plan a “Rock Week” during which you teach about all the types of rocks, including this lesson. One other option is to invite a geologist or rock collect to speak with the class and answer their questions.

Teacher Notes

The paragraph on this page provides a little more information on what to expect out of this lesson plan. It suggests teaching this lesson in conjunction with others that relate to rocks or geology in general. The blank lines on the page are for you to write down your thoughts as you prepare.

SEDIMENTARY ROCKS LESSON PLAN CONTENT PAGES

What are sedimentary rocks.

The Sedimentary Rocks lesson plan contains four pages of content. Students will discover that rocks formed from sediment account for nearly 80% of the earth’s crust. This is largely because deposits of sediment tend to accumulate close to or on top of the earth’s surface. Sediment can include pieces of rock, sand, dead animals, plants, microorganisms, and other matter that falls to the bottom of oceans and lakes. It may also include inorganic chemicals. Eventually, sediment compresses and gradually transforms or changes into a rock.

Geologists that study the various kinds of this specific rock are sedimentologists, which means the study of these rocks is sedimentology. Sedimentary rocks often appear in layers, such as those you can see in cliffs. The layers form when sediment deposits in the area and becomes rock over the course of thousands of years.

Through the process of consolidation, each layer gets squeezed and compressed over time and becomes solid. Cementation is another process that occurs after consolidation. This process happens when dissolved mineral components deposit in the spaces between the different layers of sediment. As a result, the sediment sticks together, forming the rocks that eventually create the layers.

The lesson explains that many quarries of unconsolidated deposits exist, where people remove sand and pebbles for use in the construction industry. Consolidated sand can transform into one type of very hard sedimentary rock that we call sandstone. All sedimentary rocks can further change due to water, heat, or extreme pressure.

Kinds of Rocks

Students will next learn about the three kinds of sedimentary rocks. Geologists classify the rocks according to the different processes involved in how they formed. One process occurs when solid sediment sweep down from the land. Then wind and water move the weathered and eroded pieces away through transportation.

Another process happens as wind and water deposit sand grains in water or when pieces of shell or other materials sink to the bottom of a body of water. The last process involves chemicals. The chemicals in a solution, such as acid rain or other precipitation, dissolve materials. Geologists classify the three kinds of sedimentary rocks—clastic, chemical, organic—according to these processes. Clastic rocks form from mechanical weathering debris. Chemical rocks from from dissolved materials from precipitation. Organic rocks form from the accumulation of plant and animal debris.

The lesson outlines several of the most common rocks in the sedimentary class. These include shale, sandstone, conglomerate, limestone, iron ore, dolomite, and coal. Students will learn what these rocks consist of and look like, as well as some of their common uses. The lesson provides a chart that outlines each kind of rock.

Example Stones

Sandstone, for instance, is clastic and comprises mostly sand-sized grains of mineral, rock, or organic materials. They can sometimes contain silt or clay particles as well that occupy the spaces between the grains of sand. Besides construction, people use sandstone as an aquifer for groundwater or as a reservoir for oil and natural gas.

Another common stone is limestone. This type of rock is usually organic, but it can be chemical as well. It comes from shell, coral, algae, and waste and forms in clear, shallow, and marine waters. If chemical, it forms by precipitation of calcium carbonate. Most limestone exists in shallow waters, such as the Caribbean Sea, Indian Ocean, or Gulf of Mexico. People generally use it as construction material or as a road base.

Another cool rock is iron ore. This is a chemical rock that forms when chemical reactions combine iron and oxygen in fresh and salt waters. Iron ore contains two iron oxides: hematite and magnetite. Nearly all major deposits are in rocks that formed over 1.8 billion years ago. Its primary use relates to the production of iron and steel for cars, furniture, tools, bicycles, and much more.

Coal is another common organic sedimentary rock that forms from the accumulation and preservation of plant materials. Students will discover that they would most often find coal in a swamp-like environment. Coal is a combustible rock and accounts for one of the three most important fossil fuels. It provides a source of heat and energy, and people most often use it to process various products.

Here is a list of the vocabulary words students will learn in this lesson plan:

  • Sediment—pieces of rock, sand, dead animals, plants, and other matter that fall to the bottom of oceans and lakes
  • Sedimentology—the study of sedimentary rocks
  • Sedimentologist—a geologist who studies sedimentology
  • Consolidation—a process by which different layers of rock squeeze and compress over time and become solid
  • Cementation—a process that occurs when dissolved mineral components deposit in the spaces between different layers of sediment and end up sticking together
  • Clastic rock—a rock that forms from mechanical weathering debris
  • Chemical rock—a rock that forms from dissolved materials from precipitation
  • Organic rock—a rock that forms from the accumulation of plant and animal debris

SEDIMENTARY ROCKS LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS

The Sedimentary Rocks lesson plan includes three worksheets: an activity worksheet, a practice worksheet, and a homework assignment. Each of these helps solidify students’ grasp of the material and content they learned throughout the lesson. You can refer to the guidelines on the classroom procedure page, which outline when to hand out each worksheet.

ACROSTIC POEM ACTIVITY

Students must create an acrostic using the letters of the word “sedimentary” for the activity portion. First they will think of a word for each letter and put it on a poster board. Next, they will add color and images to the poster as well. They can either draw the pictures or find them online or in other resources. Tell them to be creative!

FILL IN THE BLANKS PRACTICE WORKSHEET

The practice worksheet provides a word bank of vocabulary words and a list of 15 statements. Students must fill in the blanks with the correct term based on the lesson. Then they have to answer two more questions at the bottom of the page.

SEDIMENTARY ROCKS HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT

For the homework assignment, students must match statements to the rock they describe. The options are the seven kinds of rock that they learned about during the lesson. There are 21 total statements. Students will use each type of rock more than once.

Worksheet Answer Keys

The last couple pages of the lesson plan document are answers keys for both the practice and homework worksheets. The correct responses are in red so that it is easy to compare them with students’ responses. If you choose to administer the lesson pages to your students via PDF, you will need to save a new file that omits these pages. Otherwise, you can simply print out the applicable pages and keep these as reference for yourself when grading assignments.

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Types of Rocks: Metamorphic: formed when igneous or sedimentary rocks are put under heat and/or pressure in the Earth's crust. Igneous: Formed when crystallized through melting and cooling. Sedimentary: Formed through the accumulation of sediment. Compaction - process by which overlying pressure from rocks and soil reduces the size or volume of sediments. Rock cycle - the continental process by which rocks can be changed into different types.

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  1. Types of Rocks

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  2. science fair display on rocks and minerals

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  3. Science Homework Help: Rocks and Soils

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  4. Identify Types of Rocks Worksheet

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  5. Science Rocks Display Banner (teacher made)

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  6. Worksheet Science Rocks Grade 3

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COMMENTS

  1. Rocks for Kids

    1. Rock Formations Worksheet - Students can take what they know about rocks and use them creatively to create rock formations. This is a more artistic way to work with rocks for kids and makes a great display next to a classroom anchor chart. {Free download} source: shenanigansinsecond.blogspot.com 2.

  2. Year 3: Rocks

    Year 3: Rocks This list consists of lesson plans, activities and video clips to support the teaching of rocks in Year Three. It contains tips on using the resources, suggestions for further use and background subject knowledge. Possible misconceptions are highlighted so that teachers may plan lessons to facilitate correct conceptual understanding.

  3. Earth Science for Kids: Rocks, Rock Cycle, and Formation

    Melted rock or magma is sent to the earth's surface by a volcano. It cools and forms an igneous rock. 2. Next the weather, or a river, and other events will slowly break up this rock into small pieces of sediment. 3. As sediment builds up and hardens over years, a sedimentary rock is formed. 4.

  4. Rocks: rocks and fossils

    Produced by the Hamilton Trust, these resources give details of eight lessons on rocks and soils. This includes lesson plans, practical activities and all student materials. Students find out about what is under their feet. Students are always fascinated by rocks and, in this strand, they describe rocks and compare their properties after tackling some exciting activities.

  5. Science: Rocks Year 3 Unit Home Learning Tasks

    3 reviews Science Year Three Rocks How does this resource excite and engage children's learning? These are the home learning tasks to go along with the PlanIt Year 3 Science 'Rocks' unit. Show more Related Searches year 3 rocks rocks year 3 rocks word search rocks fossils powerpoint year 3 division Ratings & Reviews Curriculum Links Make a Request

  6. Rock Cycle, Free PDF Download

    Erosion—the process of moving weathered rock or sediment from one place to another by wind, ice, water, and gravity; ROCK CYCLE LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS. The Rock Cycle lesson plan includes three worksheets: an activity worksheet, a practice worksheet, and a homework assignment. Each one helps reinforce students' comprehension of the lesson ...

  7. Igneous Rocks, Free PDF Download

    Types of Rocks. There are over 700 identified types of igneous rocks. The lesson describes several specific types of igneous rocks in a chart. Some of the most common intrusive rocks include diorite, gabbro, granite, pegmatite, and peridotite. The most common extrusive include basalt, obsidian, pumice, and rhyolite.

  8. Sedimentary Rocks, Free PDF Download

    Chemical rock—a rock that forms from dissolved materials from precipitation; Organic rock—a rock that forms from the accumulation of plant and animal debris; SEDIMENTARY ROCKS LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS. The Sedimentary Rocks lesson plan includes three worksheets: an activity worksheet, a practice worksheet, and a homework assignment.

  9. Rocks. 8th Grade Science Worksheets and Answer key, Study Guides and

    Explain how sedimentary rock buried deep enough may be reformed by pressure and heat and these reformed rock layers may be forced up again to become land surface and even mountains. Rocks. 8th Grade Science Worksheets and Answer key, Vocabulary Sets. Covers the following skills: Rocks cycle. Metamorphic, Igneous, Sedimentary rocks.

  10. Science Homework Help: Rocks and Soils

    1) As a result of weathering and erosion, bits of rock end up in lakes and rivers. Rivers transport bits of rock and deposit them on the bottom of the sea. This process is called sedimentation. 2) With time, more layers (strata) pile up and press down on the lower layers of rock. This process is called compaction.

  11. Free Science worksheets, Games and Projects

    Free Science worksheets, Games and Projects for preschool, kindergarten, 1st grade, 2nd grade, 3rd grade, 4th grade and 5th grade kids. Toggle navigation. Pre-K; Kindergarten; ... Rocks Rocks Rocks Quiz Rocks Word Scramble Game Rocks ABC Order Rocks Word Search Game Rocks Word Search Worksheet Rocks Word Scramble Worksheet Fossil Fuels

  12. Science Quiz: Earth Science: Rocks

    10 Question Quiz. For webquest or practice, print a copy of this quiz at the Earth Science: Rocks webquest print page. About this quiz: All the questions on this quiz are based on information that can be found at Earth Science: Rocks . Kids take a quiz on Earth Science: Rocks. Practice science problems online test and questions for students and ...

  13. PDF Unit Guide: Rock Transformations

    Welcome to Rock Transformations Chapter 1: The storyline begins Chapter 2: The storyline builds Chapter 3: The storyline gets more complex Chapter 4: Application to a new context All students. All standards. 3-D Statements 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Welcome to Rock Transformations

  14. Earth Science: Homework Help Resource

    Get the help you need on your tough earth science homework assignments with the interactive video lessons and quizzes in this course. ... Minerals and Rocks: Homework Help Ch. 7 Igneous Rocks ...

  15. PDF ROCKS AND THE ROCK CYCLE HOMEWORK PROJECT

    1. Rock types - Find out what the main type of rock in Newhaven is and why. 2. Rocks from outer space - When is the next meteor shower going to happen? 3. Sliding rocks of racetrack playa - Is there any evidence to suggest any of the theories is correct?

  16. The Rock Cycle Worksheet

    KS2 Science: Rocks: Types of Rocks Year 3 Lesson Pack 1. KS3 Geography: The Rock Cycle Poster. Rocks and Soils Fact Sheets. Igneous Rocks Cloze Activity. ... KS3 Weathering Homework Worksheet. Rocks Fact File and Quiz. Rocks and Minerals Differentiated Reading Comprehension. The Rock Cycle Colouring Sheet. Year 4 Science Rocks Unit Pack.

  17. Minerals and Rocks: Homework Help Chapter Exam

    Science Courses / High School Physical Science: Homework Help Resource Course / Physical Science - Minerals and Rocks: Homework Help Chapter

  18. ESC1000C_Rocks_LabExploration_AnswerTemplate_Summer2023_v1 ...

    Florida SouthWestern College Introduction to Earth Science Exercise 3: Rocks Answer Template Directions: Although you can work together as a group, each individual student should compose their own well-conceived and articulate answers on the RockLab_AnswerTemplate.docx (see Rock Exploration Activity page). Please submit the .docx AnswerTemplate to the Rock Exploration Assignment page.

  19. Rocks Homework (docx)

    Rocks Homework Name: Mirta Parra 1. Give a short explanation of the rock cycle in your own words. The rock cycle demonstrates the 3 major rock types which are igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary and how it is broke down by either heat or pressure. For example, if a volcanic eruption occurred, an igneous rock formed then became a sediment, then a sedimentary rock then go through the cycle ...

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