snow

 

https://www.bbc.com/bitesize/articles/zmqmrj6

What do you see in the picture, what do you think this is? What could this story be about?

Last week some parts of the UK is had lots of snow; billions of snowflakes fell from the sky. 

What is snow, where does it come from?

Snow is made up of tiny water crystals that have frozen in clouds. When the crystals fall from the clouds, they bunch together and form snowflakes.

What is another name for frozen water?

Snow appears to look the same, When we look at snow falling we can't see any differences but in 1885 scientist Wilson Bentley attached a microscope to a camera and closely at snowflakes. William realised that...

What do you think William realised?

William realised that however many snowflakes were captured, none were exactly the same. They were all different.

Why do you think they are all different? (Think about how they are formed)

The shape of a snowflake is formed as it falls through the air. Even if two snow flakes fall side by side, they will be blown through different levels of humidity and vapour; no two journeys are exactly the same so every flake is unique.

What does unique mean?
How are snowflakes like humans? Are humans unique?
If you look at snowflakes you often can't tell they are different. But if you take a closer look you can see there are lots of differences. Why is this like us in our school?

Why is this story about No Outsiders?
Which British value is this about?

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