Common Misconceptions in Primary School Science
Common Misconceptions in Primary School Science
Adaptations
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Animals
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Misconception: Male animals are always bigger and stronger than females.
Fact: That may generally be true for human beings, but it is not so for many
animals, e.g. the queen ants and bees are much bigger than the males.
Body systems
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Misconception: The digestive system has two outlets one for faeces and one
for urine.
Fact: The digestive system has one outlet the anus through which
undigested food is discharged from the body.
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Misconception: The gullet and windpipe are one and the same tube which
splits at the end of the stomach and lungs.
Fact: The gullet (oesophagus) and windpipe (trachea) are two different tubes.
The gullet connects the mouth to the stomach while the windpipe leads to the
lungs. A flap called the epiglottis closes the windpipe while food is being
swallowed into the gullet. Clear illustrations or models of the digestive and
respiratory systems may be used to help pupils correct the misconception.
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Misconception: Air is inhaled into the lungs, then exhaled, without links with
the heart and circulatory system.
Fact: Air inhaled into the lungs is circulated to the heart, then to the rest of the
body through the circulatory system.
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Misconception: Air is blown into the straw (which represents the airway) to
inflate the balloon (which represents the lung) in the model of a lung.
Fact: The plastic or rubber sheet representing the diaphragm should be pulled
to inflate the lung.
14.
Misconception: Inability to link the need for oxygen with the use of food.
Fact: Oxygen is needed for aerobic respiration, to release energy from food in
the cells.
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Misconception: There are air tubes linking the lungs and the heart.
Fact: The lungs and the heart are linked by blood vessels.
17.
Misconception: Blood from the lungs to the other parts of the body has only
one gas oxygen.
Fact: Blood from the lungs is rich in oxygen.
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Misconception: Muscles and brain are not involved in the workings of the
digestive, circulatory or respiratory systems.
Fact: The brain controls the workings of these systems and many of the
organs in these systems are made up of muscular tissues.
Cells
1. Misconception: Bigger organisms have bigger cells.
Fact: Bigger organisms have more cells.
2. Misconception: Cells are two dimensional and flat.
Fact: Cells are 3 dimensional.
3. Misconception: All cells have nuclei.
Fact: Not all cells have nuclei, e.g. red blood cells do not have nuclei.
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Fact: Genes are parts of chromosomes which are made up of DNA and
proteins. Genes are responsible for inherited characteristics and are
responsible for the similarities between parents and offspring.
Electricity
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3.
Misconception: The second bulb is less bright than the first bulb in a series
circuit because electric current has been used up by the first bulb in the
circuit.
Fact: Both bulbs are equally bright if they are identical. The current flowing
through both bulbs is the same in a series circuit and depends on the voltage
and total effective resistance of the two bulbs.
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Energy
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Food chains
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Misconception: The bigger the gears (more teeth), the faster it moves.
Fact: The smaller gear with fewer teeth makes one rotation faster.
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3.
Misconception: The fulcrum is always between the effort and load in a lever.
Fact: In second and third class levers, the fulcrum is not between the effort
and the load. Demonstrate this to pupils using levers such as forceps, tongs
and stapler.
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Misconception: Things fall naturally; the person letting go of the thing causes
it to fall.
Fact: A force (gravity) is needed for things to fall.
18.
Misconception: Heavier objects fall faster than lighter objects from the same
height on Earth.
Fact: Heavy and light objects fall at the same rate (acceleration due to gravity,
g, is the same).
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Misconception: The Moon has no gravity; not all planets have gravity.
Fact: Since they have mass, they have gravity.
4. Misconception: Boiling point is not fixed, e.g. the time of boiling and the energy
supply influence the boiling point of a pure liquid (the temperature of water
can be greater than 1000C if heated longer or if the energy supply is increased.
Fact: At constant pressure, boiling point of a substance is fixed.
5. Misconception: Confusion between heat and temperature; increasing the amount
of heat will increase the temperature; heat is hot, but temperature can be cold
or hot; temperature is heat; temperature is a means of measuring heat.
Fact: Heat is a form of energy which flows when there is a temperature
difference. Temperature is the degree of hotness or coldness of a substance. In
Misconception: The first stage of each life cycle is the egg; every life cycle
begins with the egg; Labelling the egg as the first stage.
Fact: The stages in a life cycle are repeated and there is no first or last stage.
2.
Light
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2.
Misconception: Only smooth, shiny objects like mirrors reflect light; dull and
rough objects do not reflect light.
Fact: Dull objects do reflect light, otherwise we would not be able to see
them. Smooth surfaces produce regular reflection while rough surfaces
produce scattered, diffused or irregular reflection.
3.
Misconception: Light travels from the source to both the observer and the
object, but there is no link between the two.
Fact: Light travels from the source to the object; the object reflects the light
from the source into the eyes of the observer; the receptor cells in the
observers retinas detect the light and send the signals to the brain.
4.
Magnets
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Materials
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Matter
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Misconception: Sand and rice take the shape of containers, therefore they are
not solids.
Fact: Each individual grain of sand and rice have definite shape, therefore
they are solids.
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Misconception: Mass is associated with the term massive and thus related to
the size or volume of an object.
Fact: Mass is the amount of matter in an object.
5.
Misconception: The liquid form of a matter is lighter than the same mass of its
solid state, and heavier than its gaseous state.
Fact: All states have the same mass as they have the same amount of matter
although their volumes, and hence their densities, differ.
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Fact: Melting involves only one substance while dissolving involves at least
two substances. Melting takes place at a fixed temperature, but not dissolving.
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Micro-organisms
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Plants
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Misconception: Many flowering plants have been mistaken to be nonflowering plants due to inconspicuous flowers or infrequent flowering.
Fact: Mosses and liverworts, ferns and conifers are non-flowering plants.
Most other plants are flowering plants.
3.
Fact: Non-green plant parts do not have chlorophyll, but they may have
chloroplasts which contain accessory pigments like carotene, which gives
autumn leaves a yellow colour.
4.
Misconception: Minerals in the soil, water and carbon dioxide are food for
plants.
Fact: Plants make their own food. Minerals help in plant growth and health.
Water and carbon dioxide are ingredients for photosynthesis.
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Pollution
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Fact: Some biodegradable materials can release poisons into the soil or water.
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Reproduction
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Fact: Flowering plants produce sexually when the nuclei of pollen grains fuse
with the eggs.
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Solar system
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Water
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Misconception: The mist above the spout of a kettle of boiling water is steam.
Fact: The white mist is made up of tiny droplets of water, which have
condensed from the steam. The steam is not visible.
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Misconception: Ice has a smaller volume than the same mass of liquid water.
Fact: Water expands on freezing, thus ice has a larger volume than the same
mass of liquid water, which explains why ice floats in water. In general,
matter expands when heated and contracts when cooled, but water behaves
differently. For a fixed mass of water, its volume is lowest and its density is
highest at 40C.
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Misconception: Objects with parts above the surface of water are floating;
those which are completely submerged but freely suspended in water, such as
fish and submarines, are not floating.
Fact: Fully immersed objects are floating.
References:
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