The water cycle video for kids

Water cycle video

The water cycle video for kids - What is a water cycle ? In this animated video on the water cycle, children will learn the following: information about the water cycle, processes in the water cycle, infiltration, precipitation, runoff, underground water, lakes, facts about the water cycle etc. This activity is suitable for children in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th grades.

The water cycle explained

The water cycle is also referred to as the hydrologic cycle. It entails the repeated movement of water on the Earth’s surface, in the atmosphere and beneath. It functions on the principle that the amount of water available is fixed and only moves from one reservoir (e.g. ocean, atmosphere, rivers etc) to another in different states (solid, liquid or gaseous). The physical processes through which water moves are: evaporation, condensation, precipitation, infiltration, sublimation, runoff and surface flow.
The driving force of the water cycle is the sun which heats up surfaces. These could be directly on oceans, rivers, earth’s surface and trees; in short any surface that contains water and that is exposed to the heat of the sun. When these heat up, water is converted to water vapor through the process of evaporation. Equally, water vapor could originate from sublimation when ice is directly converted to vapor without first melting to liquid. Another source of water vapor in the atmosphere is evapotranspiration. Once water vapor gets into the air, it is carried into the sky by rising winds. It subsequently reaches a very cold area in the atmosphere and condenses into small liquid droplets which become visible as clouds. Condensation is the process whereby water vapor is transformed from gas to liquid when cooling. Water droplets within clouds collide and form larger water bubbles which fall back as precipitation. This could be in the form of rain, hail stone, fog, mist or snow. Water that falls on the Earth might get directly into the ocean, river, fall on trees, bare soil surfaces and any imaginable surface on the Earth. Some water might get underneath the Earth through a process called infiltration. This process is facilitated by tree roots that dig deep into the ground, providing inlets through which water gets underground. Once underground, water might move in a horizontal direction towards lakes, rivers or oceans in a process referred to as percolation. Back to water that fell on the surface as precipitation; some might fall on hard surfaces and flow towards rivers. Such overland flow is referred to as runoff or surface flow. Once more the sun heats up these surfaces and the process begins all over again: evaporation from (liquid to gaseous state) from all surfaces and evapotranspiration from plants. This gets into the atmosphere, condenses, falls back as precipitation and the whole process is similar.
This process has been made visually easy for children to understand through the animated cartoon diagram at the top of this page. This diagram is very colorful and contains all the components of the water cycle which were explained earlier on. It also summarizes the processes with sound effects in real life that kids can connect to. This diagram can be used in the classroom by teachers who wish to teach the water cycle and by kids at home.

How to teach children about the water cycle

First of all teach kids about common daily phenomena which they are used to seeing like rainfall, snow, clouds and runoff. Also teach lessons on the various states of water (gaseous, liquid and solid). With this done, you could use the heat from a stove with water boiling in a test tube or pot above it to show how the sun heats up water and transforms it into vapor. Water vapor could be trapped in a bottle and cooled with tap water to demonstrate condensation. Water could be poured from a bucket on a hard surface to demonstrate runoff. With these done, the animated video could be shown and all the processes that were done practically could be explained. After this exercise, a worksheet containing all the processes of the water cycle could be given for kids to watch and label. Interactive online games on the water cycle could also be used to test several skills learnt. A relevant game on this topic is also available here: Online game about water >>> Hope you found this page useful. Please share ! The water cycle video for kids, what is water cycle ?, Precipitation, evaporation, runoff etc.

Formation of fold and fault

Formation of fold and fault mountains animated video for children

In this video children will learn about fold mountains, fault mountains, fault lines etc. Folding and faulting entails crustal movements within the earth's crust and tend to lead to the formation of fold mountains, fault valleys etc. This is an animated fault video that can be played in class or at home for self practice. For 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grades.

Folding summary

Folding and fold mountains animated video

Animated cartoon video on folding. Watch this animation on how fold mountains are formed and illustrations showing forces of compression working within the earth's crust as expressed in the theory of plate tectonics.

Interactive diagram on folding for children in 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th grade for children learn about folding.

Fold mountain

Fiord

Formation of fiords animated video 

Learn about types of coasts in this case is a fiord (fjord) coast. Learn the processes in the formation of a fiord and the characteristic of fiords in this animated cartoon video. For kids in 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grades.

Earthquakes

Earth quakes animated video for practice

Animated video on earth quake formation for children to learn about how earth quakes begin. This animation shows the focus from where the fault or trigger starts and generates surface waves that are spread over different locations with varying intensity across the earth's surface; the most intense vibrations are felt at the epicenter. From this video, you will also learn to label diagrams that show earth quake formation.

Divergent plate boundary 1

Divergent plate boundaries animated video for children

Learn about divergent plate margins or boundaries in the theory of plate tectonics with this animated video. When continental plates move apart due to forces of convection from within the earth's crust, it learns to the formation of divergent plate margins. These margins are characterized by a rise of molten magma from the earth's crust which leads to the formation of mid-oceanic ridges and subsequently islands.

Divergent plate boundary

Divergent plate boundary video

Development of a longitudinal coast

Development of a longitudinal coast development animated video

Animated video on the formation of a longitudinal coast for children to watch and learn. Learn about coastal land forms by watching this  video.

Development of a Fiord