In this lesson, students will understand how magnets can be used to find directions and learn their properties (poles, attraction, repulsion).
Students will be able to:
Reference: NCERT Book Alignment
The lesson is aligned with the NCERT Grade 6 Science Textbook, Chapter 4: Exploring Magnets, Section 4.3 – Finding Directions.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
In this session, students will learn how a magnet always points north-south when suspended, and how this property is used in a magnetic compass for navigation.
| Title | Approximate Duration | Procedure | Reference Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engage | 5 | Ask: “How did people navigate without GPS?” and “Why does a suspended magnet always point in one direction?” | Slides |
| Explore | 10 | Activity: Suspend bar magnet vs iron bar → compare orientation. Introduce magnetic field using simple observations. | Slides |
| Explain | 10 | Explain poles, attraction/repulsion, Earth as a magnet, compass working, DIY compass. Students now visualise magnetic field lines, compass alignment, attraction–repulsion through the Virtual Lab demonstration (teacher-guided). | Slides and Virtual Lab |
| Evaluate | 10 | Students attempt the Self-Evaluation task on the LMS. | Virtual Lab |
| Extend | 5 | Think–Pair–Share: “How have magnetic compasses evolved over time?” | Slides |
In this session, you will learn how magnets help us find directions. They will explore how a freely suspended magnet aligns itself in the north-south direction, and how this property is used to make navigation compasses.
Why Use Magnets to Find Directions?
When we need to know directions outdoors, looking at the rising Sun gives an idea of East, but magnets provide a scientific and accurate way. Magnets have a special property – when freely suspended, they always rest along the north-south direction because Earth itself behaves like a giant magnet.
What is a Magnet’s Directional Property?
Magnetic Field
The Magnetic Compass
A magnetic compass is a small box with a needle that can rotate freely. The needle always points north-south, and by aligning the dial with it, we can easily find all directions. This invention has been used for centuries in navigation at sea. Ancient Indians used a device called Matsya-yantra, a fish-shaped magnetized piece floating in oil, to find directions.
Activity 1 – Suspending a Bar Magnet
When you hang a bar magnet with a thread and let it rotate freely, it always comes to rest along the north-south direction. This property helps in testing magnets and finding directions.
Activity 2 – Making a Compass
By rubbing a needle with a magnet (in one direction 30–40 times), it becomes magnetized. Fix the needle in a cork and float it in water. The needle always aligns itself in the north-south direction, creating a simple magnetic compass.
Do You Know?
Applications / Why is it Useful?
This is the list of vocabulary terms used throughout the lesson.
Welcome to the Magnetic Field VR Lab! In this interactive experience, you will explore how magnetic fields work, their relationship with the Earth’s magnetic field, and how they affect objects around us. You’ll navigate through different sections that explain the concepts behind magnetic fields and interact with simulations of magnets, compasses, and more.
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