Please select a subject first
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How old was it? How did you know?
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Were there any special kind of designs on the old building? Draw them in your notebook.
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Who used to live there in the olden days?
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What kinds of activities took place there?
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Do some people still live there?
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- What kinds of work are people doing?
- How many men and women are working?
- See, how they are taking the huge pillar up along the slope?
- Is it easier to lift a heavy thing straight up or along a slope?
- Were you able to see the man carrying water in a Mashak (leather bag)?
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Sangeeta thinks it is useless to keep old things in a museum. How would you convince her that it is important to have a museum?
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Why do you think the chapter is named, ‘Walls Tell Stories’?
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What do you think the earth looks like? Make a drawing of the earth in your notebook. On your drawing show where you are. Take a look at your friends’ drawings too.
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If the earth is round like a globe, how is it that we do not fall off?
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Do the people in Argentina stand upside down?
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Can you think why Sunita’s hair was standing?
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Look at Sunita’s photographs and the dates written on each of them. Write what all is happening and when?
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Close your eyes. Imagine that your class is a spaceship. Zooo...m – in 10 minutes you have entered space. Your spaceship is now going around the earth. Now say:
- Are you able to sit in one place?
- What about your hair?
- Oh, look … where are your bags and books going?
- what is your teacher doing? Where is her chalk?
- How did you eat your food during the break? How did you drink water? What happened to the ball that you threw up?
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Can you now say why Sunita’s hair kept standing?
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Think why water flows downwards on any slope. On mountains, water flows downwards, not upwards.
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Take a 5 rupee coin and a small piece of paper. The paper should be about one-fourth the size of the coin.
- Hold the coin in one hand and the paper in the other. Drop them at the same time. What happened?
- Now place the tiny paper on the coin and drop them. What happened this time? Surprised!
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To play this you will need a small stone, a bigger stone (lemon-sized), a thick roll of paper (which can be made with layers of paper), a mouse, and an elephant made of paper.

- Take a string about 2 feet long.
- At one end of the string tie the small stone. Stick or tie the mouse to the stone. - Put the string into the roll of paper.
- At the other end of the string tie the bigger stone and stick the elephant.
- Hold the roll of paper and move your hand to rotate the small stone.
- Who is pulling whom? You will be surprised! The mouse lifts the elephant! How did this magic happen?
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