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States of Matter Revision Worksheet | Grade 4 Essential
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This comprehensive science revision worksheet provides students with a rigorous review of matter and its various transformations. By identifying the specific properties of solids, liquids, and gases, learners develop a concrete understanding of how substances behave under different thermal conditions. This resource ensures students can distinguish between physical processes like sublimation and deposition while mastering standard units of measurement.
At a Glance
- Grade: 4 · Subject: Science
- Standard:
5-PS1-1— Describe that matter is made of particles too small to be seen- Skill Focus: States of matter and phase changes
- Format: 2 pages · 18 problems · Answer key included · PDF
- Best For: Quick assessment or emergency sub plans
- Time: 20–30 minutes
What's Inside: This two-page PDF features 18 carefully crafted multiple-choice questions designed to test both vocabulary and conceptual application. The worksheet covers the four states of matter, including plasma, and explores phase changes such as evaporation, condensation, and melting. Additionally, it includes questions on scientific units for mass, volume, and temperature, providing a well-rounded review of physical science fundamentals. A full answer key is provided for rapid grading.
Zero-Prep Workflow
- Print (30 Seconds): Simply select the two pages and print enough copies for your class; no additional materials or lab equipment are required.
- Distribute (1 Minute): Hand out the worksheets as a quiet bell-ringer activity or a formal mid-unit quiz to gauge student progress.
- Review (10 Minutes): Use the included answer key to conduct a whole-class review, allowing students to self-correct and discuss the reasoning behind phase change definitions.
This streamlined process makes the resource an ideal choice for busy educators or as a high-quality component of a substitute teacher folder.
Standards Alignment
The primary focus is 5-PS1-1: "Develop a model to describe that matter is made of particles too small to be seen." While the worksheet focuses on observable phase changes, it builds the necessary vocabulary for particle-level modeling. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.
How to Use It
This worksheet is best utilized as a formative assessment following direct instruction on the properties of matter. Assign it during the "You Do" phase of a lesson to verify that students can independently identify units like Kilograms and Celsius. Teachers should observe if students struggle with the distinction between sublimation and evaporation, using those insights to guide the next day's review. Expect completion within 25 minutes.
Who It's For
This resource is designed for 4th-grade students but serves as an excellent challenge for 3rd graders or a necessary review for 5th graders. It is particularly helpful for ESL/ELL students who need to practice scientific academic vocabulary in a structured multiple-choice format. Pair this with a states-of-matter anchor chart for maximum instructional impact.
According to Fisher & Frey (2014), structured retrieval practice is vital for moving scientific concepts into long-term memory. This 18-question revision exercise utilizes multiple-choice formatting to reduce cognitive load while focusing student attention on critical distinctions between states of matter and their transitions. By aligning with the 5-PS1-1 standard, the worksheet ensures students are not merely memorizing terms but building a foundation for understanding the particle nature of matter. Research from the NAEP indicates that students who master scientific measurement units and phase change vocabulary early demonstrate higher proficiency in middle school physical science labs. This resource provides the repetition and clarity required for mastery, offering a reliable tool for teachers to assess student readiness for complex thermodynamic concepts. It serves as a high-utility asset for any science curriculum focused on physical properties.




