Properties of Materials
Explore observable properties—texture, hardness, flexibility, absorbency, transparency, magnetism—and use them to describe and sort materials.
Content
Texture: smooth and rough
Versions:
Watch & Learn
AI-discovered learning video
Sign in to watch the learning video for this topic.
Texture: Smooth and Rough — A Grade 1 Science Guide
Hook: A tiny mystery in your hands
Have you ever closed your eyes, touched two things, and been able to tell which one is which just by feel? That is the tiny superpower scientists call texture. Today we build on our detective work from Materials Around Us — you already know about fabrics, plastics, and metals. Now we will use touch to learn more about how those materials behave.
What is texture? (Simple definition)
Texture is how something feels when you touch it. For our lesson we will focus on two big words:
- Smooth — surfaces that feel even and slippery to the fingers, like the surface of a spoon.
- Rough — surfaces that feel bumpy or scratchy, like a rock or sandpaper.
Micro explanation
Think of smooth as a calm pond and rough as a bumpy road. Both are useful — one is not better than the other, they just do different jobs.
Why texture matters (real-life reasons kids can feel)
- Safety: Rough surfaces can stop slips. Playground steps and shoe soles are rough so we don’t fall.
- Comfort: Clothes with smooth textures can feel soft on skin; rough textures might itch.
- Function: Smooth surfaces can be easier to clean (like a plastic table), while rough surfaces might help you grip things (like the handle of a toy hammer).
This is the moment where the concept finally clicks: texture helps us choose the right material for the right job.
Connect to things you already learned
We talked before about different materials: fabrics and textiles, plastics, and metals. Now use texture to tell them apart:
- Fabrics: some are smooth (silk-like) and some are rough (coarse wool).
- Plastics: most classroom plastics are smooth, which makes them easy to wipe clean. But some hard plastics used for grips are made a bit rough.
- Metals: many metals are smooth and shiny, but when they rust or get scratched they can become rough.
This helps you be a better material detective — texture is another clue, like color or weight.
Classroom activities: Touch, sort, and report
Texture Detective Walk (10 minutes)
- Give each child a small paper bag and ask them to find 5 items in the classroom with different textures.
- Back at the circle, each child describes an item without naming it, and classmates guess smooth or rough.
Smooth vs Rough Sorting Game
- Make two hoops on the floor labeled SMOOTH and ROUGH. Place mixed items in the center. Kids take turns feeling an item and placing it in the right hoop.
Crayon Rubbing Art (quiet table work)
- Place a thin paper over objects (coin, leaf, textured fabric) and gently rub with a crayon. The texture will show through!
- Talk: which textures showed up best? Why?
Texture Collage
- Provide fabric scraps (silk-like, cotton, wool), a piece of sandpaper, a plastic lid, and a small metal strip (safe edges). Let children glue pieces on paper to make a texture map and label smooth or rough.
Teacher demo: What happens when we add water?
- Wet a smooth and a rough surface (plastic spoon and pumice stone). Ask: does water change how it feels? (Good talking point about perception.)
Guided questions for discussion
Use these prompts to push thinking and language:
- How would you describe that texture to a friend who is not touching it? (Encourages vocabulary)
- Which material would you choose for a bath toy, and why? (Applies knowledge)
- Can something be both smooth and rough? Where? (Nuance: parts can differ)
Quick assessment: 3-minute check
Give each child a picture sheet with 6 items and two boxes labeled SMOOTH and ROUGH. Ask them to draw a line from the item to the correct box. This checks understanding without pressure.
Common misunderstandings and how to fix them
- Kids might say shiny means smooth. Ask them to touch objects that are shiny but rough (eg, glittery paper feels rough) to show the difference.
- They may assume all plastics are smooth. Let them handle textured plastic grips to show exceptions.
Why do people keep misunderstanding this? Because our eyes sometimes trick us. Touch is the best sense to learn texture, so encourage touching safe samples.
Teacher tips and safety notes
- Always check items for sharp edges or small parts. Use safe, classroom-friendly samples.
- Model vocabulary: smooth, slippery, silky, glossy, rough, bumpy, scratchy, coarse. Use simple synonyms.
- Use pair-sharing: kids describe textures while partners guess.
Closing: Key takeaways
- Texture is how something feels. Today we learned two main words: smooth and rough.
- Texture helps us choose materials for comfort, safety, and use.
- Touch is a scientist’s tool. Encourage careful, safe touching to learn more than eyes alone can tell.
Memorable tiny chant to remember it by
Smooth and slick, rough and prick — touch it once, you'll know it quick!
Extension idea for curious kids
Make a texture journal: each week add a drawing and a sticker for a new texture found at home or on the way to school. Watch how many different textures the world has — it is a lot, and they are all doing important jobs.
Happy exploring, tiny detectives. Your fingers are your best tools today.
Comments (0)
Please sign in to leave a comment.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!