Detailed Lesson Plan
Detailed Lesson Plan
II. CONTENT
A. Topic Matter
B. Key Properties of matter can be classified as physical and
Concepts chemical. Physical Properties can be observed without any
changes in its composition such as hardness, brittleness,
flexibility, elasticity, conductivity, malleability, and ductility.
Hardness is the property of an object that makes it
withstand pressure. Metals, wood, and stones are hard.
They are used to make things that need to be sturdy like
construction materials for buildings, bridges, and houses.
Brittleness refers to the ability of an object to be easily
broken or crushed into pieces. Most of the fragile objects
at home are brittle such as glassware and mirrors. Once
these objects fall on to the floor they easily break into
smaller pieces.
Flexibility is the ability of a material to be bent without
breaking. Wires, rubber, cloth, and some plastic are
flexible materials that can be folded, pressed, or stored
Elasticity is the ability of a material to be stretched and
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returned to its original form when released.
Conductivity is the ability to let heat and electricity to
pass through
Malleability is the ability of a metal to be hammered or
beaten flat. Gold, silver, copper is malleable that can be
formed into different pieces of jewelry.
Ductility is the ability of materials to be stretched or
pulled out and be formed into fine thin wires
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Ceramics Insulators and Cover the entire
highly durable exterior of space
shuttle, vases,
figurines, cups, and
mugs.
Plastics Heat insulation, Styrofoam, car
durable, parts, synthetic
lightweight, fibers,
corrosion- toys, and nylon
resistant, and
waterproof
Rubber Flexible, elasticity, Belts, hoses, gaskets,
and electrical shoes,
Resistance slippers, clothing,
Heat Insulator furniture, and toys
Wood Versatile, heat Chairs, tables, cooking
and electrical wares,
resistance and furniture
.
C. Pre-requisite Observing, classifying, identifying
Skills
III. LEARNING
RESOURCES
A. References
DepEd K to 12 Science Curriculum Guide (MELC)
1. Teacher’s Evelyn T. Sarte, Ednaliza R. Garcia, Eliza A. Lopez, Mary Jean G Dela
Guide Pages Cruz, Harold A Arradaza, Lilia M Rabago, PhD. Editor, Science Beyond
Borders, pages 3, 12-13
2. Learner’s
Materials DepEd Learning Module in Grade Five Science
Pages Pages 11-32
Evelyn T. Sarte, Ednaliza R. Garcia, Eliza A. Lopez, Mary Jean G
3. Textbook
Dela Cruz, Harold A Arradaza, Lilia M Rabago, PhD. Editor, pages
Pages
19-25
4. Addition Jocelyn P. Patiluna, Science 5x Properties of Materials
al Contextualized Lesson Plan
Materials Jennifer H. Policarpio, DepEd Learner’s Materials in Science 5,
from pages 1-20
Learning
Resource
(LR)
Portal
B. Other
Learning
Resources
1. Websites
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2. Books/Jo
urnals
C. Materials
IV.
PROCEDURES
ENGAGE Pretest
● Conduct Pre-Test Pls. Refer to the Evaluation Part
Reviewing the
previous lesson Preliminary Classroom Activities
or presenting
the new lesson
Establishing a Review:
purpose for the
lesson Start the lesson with few questions on the things they have
learned about matter in their previous grade.
1. A state of matter that spreads out to fill its container.
A. gas.
B. liquid.
C. mass.
D. solid.
2. Anything that occupies space and has mass and volume.
A. matter
B. volume
C. gravity
D. weight
3. A property of matter that produces a new substance.
A. chemical
B. physical
C. molecule
D. science
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After which let the learners do the first activity. Instruct them
to get three items from their bags. One item at a time. Name,
identify, and describe the items.
Ask:
What is the object made of?
Possible Answer: Plastic, metal, fabric etc.
(answer may vary)
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Photos Credit to J. Patiluna
Ask:
What are the objects made of?
Possible answer: plastics, ceramics, wood, rubber & glass
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EXPLORE
Discussing new
concepts and
practicing new
skills #1
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Discussing new Let us now discover the properties of materials found in our
concepts and respective home and locality that will determine whether they are
practicing new useful or harmful.
skills #2
Activity 1 – “Describe Me”
Materials needed:
Procedure:
1. Look and observe the pictures below
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Possible answer: Hard, durable, shiny
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Guide Questions:
1. Which of these materials are shiny, hard and conductor of
heat?
Possible Answer: Metals
2. Which of these materials are hard, durable, and shiny?
Possible Answer: Wood
3. Which of these materials are transparent, brittle, and shiny?
Possible Answer: Glass
4. Which of these materials are elastic, stretchable, and
waterproof?
Possible Answer: Rubber
5. Which of these materials are flexible, absorbent, and soft?
Possible Answer: Fabric
6. What property of the materials that can easily absorb water?
Possible Answer: absorbent
7. What properties of materials can be easily broken?
Possible Answer: glass
8. What property of materials allow heat to pass through?
Possible Answer: conductor of heat
9. Why do we use an umbrella or raincoat during rainy days?
Possible Answer: because umbrellas and raincoats are
waterproofs
10. Based on the activity results all the products are useful.
When do you consider these materials harmful?
Possible Answer: These materials can harm us when not
used and disposed properly.
Tell the learners that succeeding activities will help them to identify
the properties of materials after applying specific action. Remind
the children to observe safety precautions in handling the materials
or doing the activity.
Objective:
Describe the properties of materials as to brittleness
flexibility, malleability. Elasticity, transparency, ductility
and conductivity.
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Materials Needed
● chalk
● paper clip
● tin can
● balloon
● rubber band
● rubber gloves
● clear plastic envelope
● electrical wires
● metal spoon
Procedure:
1. Drop the chalk into the floor. Describe what happened to the
chalk.
Possible Answer: The chalk breaks into small pieces.
Ask:
What property of matter does the paper clip show?
Possible Answer:
The paper clip has the ability to bent without breaking, it
is flexible.
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Remove the conductivity
electrical rubber-coated in
wires the wire
malleability
tin cans Hammer several
times
metal spoon Dip it in a boiling Conductivity
water
Gasoline which
is used as fuel in
cars, is a highly
combustible and
flammable
material as well
as the alcohol
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you how to determine biodegradable materials, the materials that
can be decompose or decay through bacteria and other organism.
Materials:
● Dried leaves
● Fruit Peelings/leftover foods
● Styrofoam
● Cans
● Glasses
● Plastic bottles
● paper
Procedure:
1. From the materials that you have prepared, identify which is
biodegradable and nonbiodegradable.
Possible Answer: Dried leaves, fruit peelings and leftover
Food and paper
2. Determine which among these biodegradable materials can be
burn or decay easily. What method you used to come up with a
conclusion.
Possible Answer: Styrofoam cans, plastic, and bottles
Guide Questions:
1. What do the nonbiodegradable have in common?
Possible answer: Nonbiodegradable materials are materials
that do not rot or decompose easily.
2. What do the biodegradable materials have in common?
Possible answer: Biodegradable materials are materials that
can be decomposed by bacteria or other living things.
3. Why do you think biodegradable materials burn and decay easily
compared to nonbiodegradable materials?
Possible answer:
Biodegradable materials are safe to the environment, it can
be used again as organic fertilizer or even reused and
recycled again while nonbiodegradable materials are
poisonous and toxic materials or harmful to the
environment
when not disposed properly.
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Some example of non-biodegradable materials (Toxic and
Poisonous materials)
Materials:
Activity sheet, pen, or pencil
Procedure:
1. Have a tour inside your home
2. Visit your (kitchen, comfort room, dining and living room
3. List down twenty (20) materials you have seen while in you
journey.
4. Classify the materials in the table below. Write the materials
under useful and harmful.
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Guide Questions:
1. How did you classify the materials?
Possible Answer: We classify the materials according to
their uses.
2. Why do we need to know which materials are useful and
harmful?
Possible Answer: We need to know to properly use the
materials and to avoid harm and accidents.
EXPLAIN
Presentation of output.
Developing Allow learners to discover properties of materials in
mastery (leads every product we use every day in life.
to Formative
Assessment 3)
Give emphasis on the following ideas to supplement the video.
►Materials are considered useful when it serves a
purpose. These materials may have properties such as
durability, resistance to water, heat or acid, flexibility,
elasticity, and hardness. Some useful materials can also
be reused, take for example a container of solid or liquid
materials (milk can or juice jar) when it is already empty,
it can still be used for other purposes. Whether it is made
of glass or plastic it has a property that makes it
reusable.
►Some useful materials may also bring hazards. For
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instance, a broken glass jar can cause cuts or injury.
Toxic substances may also be present in the things you
commonly used such as paints, cleaners, fumes, gels, or
powder. These materials may bring harm to your health,
environment, and other organisms when not used
properly. The precautionary measure is highly
recommended in handling these materials.
►Aside from the materials given other materials like
varnish, busted light bulb, defective electronic materials
appliances, and broken/displaced glass are considered
harmful when inhaled or ingested, can cause injuries
when not handled with caution and small parts of
defective electronic devices can be a choking hazard to
children, respectively.
►These materials can be brought in waste processing
centers like school and barangay MRF (Materials
Recovery Facility), it can be repaired, recycled, and
recovered.
Note: (This may be presented in PowerPoint if F2F is possible)
ELABORATE Generalization
A. Let us Recall
Finding Below are statements which describe properties of some
practical materials we use in our locality.
applications of Match the description in Column A with the word in Column B
concepts and Column A Column B
skills in daily 1. ability to burn a. biodegradability
living
2. ability to bend without breaking b. brittleness
3. ability to be stretched and return c. combustibility
to its original shape d. conductivity
4. ability to let heat and electricity e. ductility
To pass through f. elasticity
5. ability to be decomposed by g. flammability
Microorganism h. volume
6. ability to catch fire easily l. hardness
7. ability to be drawn into thin wires j. malleability
8. ability to be hammered into k. flexibility
thin sheets
9. ability to resist pressure that may
cause deformation
10. ability to break easily
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Possible answer:
1. c 6. g
2. k 7. e
3. f 8. j
4. d 9. i
5. a 10. b
Another Try:
Write down at least five differences between useful and
Making harmful materials in tabular form.
generalizations Useful Materials Harmful Materials
and
abstractions
about the
lesson
Possible Answer:
Useful Materials Harmful Materials
A material that serves its Materials that are toxic to us
purpose
Can be used for other Materials that can cause cuts
purposes or injury
Can be recycled Materials that cannot be
dumped straight into a landfill
Can be dumped straight into Can pollute environment
a landfill
Something can be recovered Take too much time to
from the material decompose
Life Application/Reflection:
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recovered.
2. You have plenty of mayonnaise jar in your home? What can you
do to make it useful?
Possible Answer: Make the mayonnaise jar into a useful
product like flower vase.
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B. Read and answer the question properly. Encircle the letter of the
correct answer.
9. What properties of matter does this tin can possess that make
it reusable and useful again?
A. brittle
B. malleable
C. elastic and flexible
D. hard and durable
10.What does rubber bands possess that makes them useful to
vendors in tying their vegetable?
A. breakable
B. elastic
C. hard
D. ductile
ELABORATE
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(Extend/ for Extending your learning try identifying and describe the property of
enrichment or the materials whether they are useful or harmful. If there is harmful
remediation) effect, write on the appropriate column.
Additional
activities for
application or
remediation Material Harmful
Property Effect Useful or harmful
tires
electric
wire
firewood
Wood
kerosene
glass
window
cooking
pans
V. REMARKS
VI.
REFLECTION
A. A number
of learners who
earned 80% in
the evaluation.
B. The
number of
learners who
require
additional
activities for
remediation
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who scored
below 80%.
C. Did the
remedial
lessons
work? The
number of
learners who
have caught
up with the
lesson.
D. Number of
learners who
continue to
require
remediation
E. Which of
my teaching
strategies
worked well?
Why did this
work?
F. What
difficulties did
I encounter
which my
principal or
supervisor can
help me solve?
G. What
innovation or
localized
materials did I
use/discover
which I wish
to share with
other
teachers?
Prepared by:
JENNIFER H. POLICARPIO
MT-I- Writer
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NERISSA A. ALFAFARA EDILBERT A. REYES, Ph.
Education Program Supervisor Division Science Coordinator
Evaluated by:
SALLY A. PALOMO
Education Program Supervisor-LRMDS
APPROVED:
JULIET F. LASTIMOSA
Chief-Curriculum Implementation Division
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