
Amplify Earth, Moon, & Sun
Authored by Katherine Yu
Science
6th - 8th Grade
NGSS covered
Used 808+ times

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About
This quiz comprehensively covers the Earth-Moon-Sun system, focusing specifically on lunar phases, orbital mechanics, and the relationship between the Sun's illumination and Moon's appearance from Earth. Designed for middle school students in grades 6-8, the assessment requires students to understand that the Moon does not produce its own light but reflects sunlight, that the Moon's orbital position determines which portion of its illuminated half is visible from Earth, and that lunar phases follow a predictable monthly cycle. Students must apply spatial reasoning skills to interpret diagrams showing top-view perspectives of the Earth-Moon system, understand that light travels in straight lines, and differentiate between the Moon's actual illumination (always half-lit by the Sun) and its apparent phases as observed from Earth. The questions also assess understanding of lunar eclipses as distinct phenomena caused by Earth's shadow, the concept of orbital patterns, and proper use of astronomical vocabulary including crescent, gibbous, waxing, waning, and terminator. Created by Katherine Yu, a Science teacher in the US who teaches grades 6 and 8. This quiz serves as an excellent formative assessment tool for teachers implementing the Amplify Science curriculum, allowing educators to gauge student understanding of fundamental astronomical concepts before, during, or after instruction on the Earth-Moon-Sun system. Teachers can deploy this assessment as a pre-unit diagnostic to identify misconceptions, use individual questions as warm-up activities to begin class discussions, or assign it as homework to reinforce learning after hands-on modeling activities. The mix of conceptual understanding questions and vocabulary matching makes it ideal for differentiated instruction and review sessions. This assessment aligns with NGSS 5-ESS1-2 (representing data to reveal patterns in daily changes) and MS-ESS1-1 (developing models of Earth-sun-moon system), while the vocabulary section supports scientific literacy development essential for middle school earth science standards.
Content View
Student View
35 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
Leticia is a space scientist who made this diagram of the Moon and Earth as seen from above (top view), with sunlight coming from the left, as shown by the arrows.
Why does Leticia’s diagram show that it’s brighter on the left half of the Moon?
Because half of the Moon that is facing the sun is lit by the sun, and the other half is dark.
Because the Moon has some lighter-colored rock and some darker-colored rock, and Leticia’s diagram is showing that the half of the Moon with the lighter-colored rock has rotated to the left.
Because as the Moon gets closer to the sun more of it is lit by the sun, so Leticia’s diagram is showing sunlight on half of the Moon.
Because there is a shadow from Earth falling on half of the Moon, and Leticia’s diagram is showing that shadow on the right half of the Moon.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
Tania went outside and made two observations of the Moon that were several days apart. Her observations are shown in the diagram above. The light part of the Moon appeared to get larger over time.
Why did the light part of the Moon appear to get larger over time?
Between observations, the Moon moved so that Tania was able to see more of the half that faces the sun.
Between observations, the Moon moved closer to the sun so more sunlight reached the Moon’s surface.
Between observations, the Moon rotated so that more of the light-colored rock on the Moon’s surface faced Earth.
Between observations, Earth moved so its shadow was blocking less of the Moon so Tania was able to see more of it.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
The diagrams above show Earth and the Moon in different positions, as seen from above (top view). Sunlight is coming from the left, but these diagrams do not show what parts of Earth or the Moon are light or dark.
Could the half of the Moon that faces Earth ever be completely dark in any of these diagrams?
No, the Moon is always lit by the sun.
Yes, always in Diagrams 2 and 3, but never in Diagram 1.
Yes, always in Diagram 2, but never in Diagrams 1 or 3.
Yes, always in Diagram 2 and sometimes in Diagram 3.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
Shira looked up one night and saw a full moon. How long will it be before she can see a full moon again?
About one week.
About one month.
There is no way to tell because the Moon’s pattern is always changing.
It could be two weeks or a month, depending on what time of year it is.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
Three students made the diagrams above to show what they think the Moon looks like when it is seen from above (top view). In these diagrams, the sunlight is coming from the left, as shown by the arrows.
Which diagram is accurate and why?
Diagram A is accurate.
Diagram B is accurate.
Diagram C is accurate
All three diagrams are sometimes accurate
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
A student astronomer went out and took photographs of the Moon that were several days apart. Images that look like her photographs are shown above. The light part of the Moon appeared to get smaller over time.
Why did the light part of the moon appear to get smaller over time?
Between the photographs, the Moon moved farther away from the sun so less sunlight reached the Moon’s surface.
Between the photographs, Earth moved so its shadow was blocking more of the Moon so the student astronomer was able to see less of it.
Between the photographs, the Moon rotated so that less of the light-colored rock on the Moon’s surface faced Earth.
Between the photographs, the Moon moved so that the student astronomer was able to see less of the half that faces the sun.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
15 mins • 1 pt
The diagrams show Earth and the Moon in different positions, as seen from above (top view). Sunlight is coming from the left, but these diagrams do not show what parts of Earth or the Moon are light or dark.
Could the half of the Moon that faces Earth ever be completely dark in any of these diagrams?
No, the Moon is always lit by the sun.
Yes, always in Diagrams 1 and 2, but never in Diagram 3.
Yes, always in Diagram 2, but never in Diagrams 1 or 3.
Yes, always in Diagram 2 and sometimes in Diagram 1.
Tags
NGSS.MS-ESS1-1
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