LEAP SCIENCE REVIEW

LEAP SCIENCE REVIEW

5th Grade

14 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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LEAP SCIENCE REVIEW

LEAP SCIENCE REVIEW

Assessment

Quiz

Science

5th Grade

Hard

NGSS
5-PS1-2, 5-PS1-1, 5-PS1-3

+8

Standards-aligned

Created by

Kala Poche

Used 334+ times

FREE Resource

14 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

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Question 1: Soccer Ball

Coach Vance coaches the 5th grade soccer team at Caddo Lake Elementary. He asks two students to help him prepare for practice and inflate the soccer ball to at least 420 grams but no more than 450 grams. The two students measure the mass of the ball when it was deflated and when it was inflated.


Part A: Which model best demonstrates the particles of matter in the inflated soccer ball?

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Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-1

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Question 1: Soccer Ball

Coach Vance coaches the 5th grade soccer team at Caddo Lake Elementary. He asks two students to help him prepare for practice and inflate the soccer ball to at least 420 grams but no more than 450 grams. The two students measure the mass of the ball when it was deflated and when it was inflated.


Part B: Which of the following best describes the particles of matter in the inflated soccer ball?

The soccer ball changes shape and the different shape causes the ball to have more mass.

The outside of the soccer ball is thicker, has more mass, and is made of solid particles.

The air that is added to the soccer ball is made of unseen particles that move and fill the space inside of the soccer ball. This causes the soccer ball to have more mass.

The air that is added to the soccer ball is made of unseen particles that become very large and remain in a fixed position. This causes the soccer ball to have more mass.

Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-1

NGSS.5-PS1-2

3.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Question 2: Gas Particles

Angela studies three different types of matter in her science class. She claims that air is a gas made of particles too small to be seen. Which two examples provide evidence to support Angela’s claim that gases are made of particles too small to be seen?

Select the two correct answers.

Bubbles in boiling water

Ice cream melting in a bowl

Snow forming in clouds

Melted lava hardening into rock

A kite floating in the sky

Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-1

4.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Question 4: Burning Wood

A chemistry class burned wood in a fume hood in their science laboratory to better understand how the materials would change when burned. Before conducting the experiment, the students measured the mass of the wood in the fume hood. After the experiment, the students measured the mass of the burned wood, the ashes, and the gases in the fume hood.


Which graph best represents the mass of all of the materials before and after burning?

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Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-2

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Question 5: Mixing Substances

In science class, Marvin studies the effects of mixing substances together. Marvin and his partner measure and collect 450 mL of warm water and 50 mL of salt in a large, glass beaker. They measure the mass of each substance and record the results in the table below.


Part A: Marvin and his partner measured the mass of a large, glass beaker. They mix the two substances together in the beaker. They observed a slight color change in the water and that much of the salt disappeared after mixing the two substances. Then, they measured the mixture and subtracted the mass of the beaker so they could record the mass of the substances after they mixed them together.

Which estimate is the mass of the mixture?

450 grams

909.2 grams

454.6 grams

445.4 grams

Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-2

NGSS.5-PS1-4

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Question 5: Mixing Substances


In science class, Marvin studies the effects of mixing substances together. Marvin and his partner measure and collect 450 mL of warm water and 50 mL of salt in a large, glass beaker. They measure the mass of each substance and record the results in the table below.


Part B: Which statement best explains Part A?

The water was warm and made some of the salt dissolve. When salt dissolves, it loses its mass.

Marvin and his partner mixed the water and the salt. This made the mass of both substances double.

The water was warm and made some of the salt dissolve. Both substances lost a little mass because they were mixed together.

Marvin and his partner combined the water and the salt. The total mass of each substance did not change even though they were mixed together.

Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-2

NGSS.5-PS1-4

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

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Question 6: Water Quality

Lamar is studying water quality in his science class. He learns that salt water is seeping into his neighboring town’s water supply and makes the water dangerous to drink. Lamar’s teacher challenges his class to investigate ways to identify salt water without tasting it.


Part A: Lamar has one glass of pure water and one glass of salt and water. The two liquids look exactly alike. What investigation can Lamar perform, without tasting the water, to find out which glass contains the salt water?

Lamar couldn’t do it. A chemical change has taken place.

Lamar could evaporate the water to see which cup leaves salt behind.

Lamar couldn’t do it. It is not possible to identify clear liquids without tasting them.

Lamar could shine a light into the water and check for salt conductivity.

Tags

NGSS.5-PS1-3

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