This MCQ module is based on: Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation
Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation
8.7 The Water Cycle — Water's Big Journey
The water we drink today is the same water that was here millions of years ago — it just keeps travelling in a loop! This never-ending journey is called the water cycle (also called the hydrological cycle).
The Five Main Steps
- Evaporation: The Sun's heat warms the water in oceans, rivers and lakes. Water evaporates and rises as invisible water vapour. Plants also release water vapour through their leaves — called transpiration.
- Condensation: Higher up, the air is cold. The water vapour cools and condenses into tiny droplets — these droplets together form clouds.
- Precipitation: When the drops grow heavy, they fall back to Earth as rain, or as snow and hail in cold places.
- Collection: The fallen water flows over land into rivers, lakes and oceans. Some seeps into the ground to become groundwater.
- Repeat! The Sun heats this water again, and the cycle starts once more.
You need: a clean transparent plastic bottle with cap, a little warm water, sunlight.
- Pour about 2–3 cm of warm water into the bottle.
- Close the cap tightly.
- Place the bottle in bright sunlight for 15 minutes.
- Observe the sides of the bottle and the cap closely.
8.8 Humidity — Water Vapour in the Air
Humidity tells us how much invisible water vapour is floating in the air around us.
A hygrometer is the instrument used by weather scientists to measure humidity.
8.9 Atmospheric Water Generators — Water from Thin Air
In dry places where people cannot easily get drinking water, scientists have built amazing machines called Atmospheric Water Generators (AWG). These pull water vapour from the air and condense it into clean, drinkable water!
How does an AWG work? It is just the condensation step of the water cycle, done by a machine:
- A fan pulls in warm, humid air.
- The air is cooled inside the machine.
- Water vapour condenses into drops on cold coils.
- The drops are collected, filtered, and stored as safe drinking water.
8.10 Why Must We Save Water?
Water covers most of our planet — but almost all of it is salty ocean water. Out of every 100 drops of water on Earth:
- About 97 drops are salty (oceans and seas) — we cannot drink them.
- Only about 3 drops are fresh — and most of that is frozen in ice caps and glaciers.
- Less than 1 drop is actually available to us as rivers, lakes and groundwater!
Simple Ways to Save Water — At Home, School & Community
- Turn off the tap while brushing your teeth or soaping your hands.
- Fix leaky taps quickly — a single dripping tap can waste many buckets a month.
- Reuse water cleverly — water used for washing vegetables or mopping the floor can water plants.
- Take shorter showers and use a bucket-bath when possible.
- Rainwater harvesting: collect rainwater from rooftops into a tank or pit for later use.
- At school: report dripping taps, help clean drinking-water coolers, and remind friends.
You need: a notebook, your classmates.
- In groups of four, list all the ways your family uses water in a day — from cooking to flushing.
- For each, think of one smart change that saves water.
- Write your group's "Water Pledge" with 5 promises. Example: "I will close the tap while brushing."
- Decorate the pledge and put it up in your classroom.
Interactive: Save a Drop — Habits Sorter L4
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. Name the main stages of the water cycle in order. L1
Q2. What does a hygrometer reading of 85% mean for Aavi's day? L2
Q3. How does an Atmospheric Water Generator (AWG) make drinking water? L2
Q4. Of all the water on Earth, how much is directly available to us for drinking? Why is it important to save it? L4
Q5. Suggest three water-saving actions Aavi's school can take during its campaign. L6
Assertion – Reason
Assertion (A): Clouds are made of frozen rocks floating in the sky.
Reason (R): Water vapour condenses into tiny water droplets when it cools.
Assertion (A): Clothes dry slowly on humid monsoon days.
Reason (R): Humid air already contains lots of water vapour, so it accepts less from the wet clothes.
Assertion (A): Rainwater harvesting is a way to save water.
Reason (R): It collects rain that would otherwise flow away and allows us to use it later.
Frequently Asked Questions — Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation
What does the topic 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' cover in Class 6 Science?
The topic 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' is part of NCERT Class 6 Science Chapter 8 — A Journey through States of Water. It covers the key ideas of water cycle, evaporation, condensation, precipitation, humidity, water conservation, rainwater, explained through everyday examples, labelled diagrams and hands-on activities from the NCERT Curiosity textbook. Class 6 students learn simple definitions, see why each idea matters in daily life, and try short experiments and observations. The lesson uses easy language, colourful pictures and small questions so that young learners build a strong base for higher classes and for competency-based questions in CBSE school tests.
Why is 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' important for Class 6 NCERT Science?
'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' is important because it builds the first ideas of science that Class 6 students will use again in Class 7, 8 and beyond. NCERT Chapter 8 — A Journey through States of Water — introduces water cycle and connects it to things children already see at home, at school and in nature. Learning this topic helps students ask better questions, understand simple news about science, and score well in CBSE tests that use competency-based questions. The chapter also supports NEP 2020 by encouraging curiosity, observation and learning by doing rather than only reading and memorising.
What are the key ideas students should remember from Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation?
The key ideas in 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' for Class 6 Science are: water cycle, evaporation, condensation, precipitation, humidity, water conservation, rainwater. Students should be able to say each term in their own words, give one or two easy examples from daily life, and draw a small labelled diagram where needed. A good way to revise is to make flashcards, write a short note in the science notebook, and solve the NCERT in-text and exercise questions of Chapter 8. Linking every idea to something seen at home or school — in the kitchen, garden, playground or sky — makes these ideas easy to remember for unit tests and the annual CBSE examination.
How is Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation taught using activities in NCERT Curiosity Class 6?
NCERT Curiosity Class 6 Science teaches 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' through an inquiry-based approach using Predict–Observe–Explain activities. Students first make a guess, then try a small experiment with safe, easily available materials, and finally explain what happened and why. This matches the NEP 2020 focus on learning by doing. For Chapter 8 — A Journey through States of Water — the textbook has hands-on tasks, labelled pictures and thinking questions built for Bloom's Taxonomy Levels 1 to 6. Teachers use these activities, along with competency-based questions (CBQs) and assertion–reason items, to check real understanding instead of only rote learning.
What real-life examples of water cycle can Class 6 students see at home?
Class 6 students can see water cycle at home in many simple ways linked to 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation'. Kitchens, school bags, playgrounds, the garden and the night sky are full of examples that match NCERT Chapter 8 — A Journey through States of Water. For example, students can look at food labels, watch changes while cooking, try safe activities with water, magnets or shadows, and observe the Sun, Moon and weather each day. Keeping a small science diary — with the date, what was observed and a quick drawing — turns daily life into a mini science lab. These real-life links make concepts easy to remember and help in answering competency-based questions in CBSE Class 6 Science.
How does 'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' connect to other chapters of Class 6 Science?
'Water Cycle, Humidity and Water Conservation' connects to many other chapters in NCERT Class 6 Science Curiosity. The ideas of water cycle come back when students study related topics like diversity in the living world, food, magnets, measurement, materials, temperature, water, separation, habitats, natural resources and the solar system. For example, what students learn here helps them build mental pictures for later chapters and for Class 7 and Class 8 Science. Teachers often ask cross-chapter questions in CBSE exams to check if students can use what they learned in Chapter 8 — A Journey through States of Water — in new situations. This linked approach matches the NEP 2020 and NCF 2023 focus on holistic, competency-based learning.