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States of Matter Identification Worksheet
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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).
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Description
What It Is:
A simple and engaging states of matter worksheet where students identify whether everyday materials—such as ice, soy sauce, coffee, honey, sharpener, wind, car smoke, phone, and oil—are solids, liquids, or gases. Each item includes a picture and a blank line for students to write the correct state.
Why Use It:
Perfect for reinforcing basic physical science concepts, this worksheet helps students practice classification skills and understand how different materials exist as solids, liquids, or gases. The picture-based format supports visual learners and makes the activity accessible for early grades.
How to Use It:
• Use during a science lesson on matter for guided or independent practice.
• Add to learning centers, small-group activities, or science notebooks.
• Assign as a quick assessment to check student understanding.
• Pair with hands-on demonstrations involving ice, liquids, and air movement.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for Grades K–2.
• Great for early elementary science units on states of matter.
• Useful for ESL learners who benefit from visual classification tasks.
Target Users:
Elementary teachers, homeschooling parents, science tutors, and young students learning about solids, liquids, and gases.
A simple and engaging states of matter worksheet where students identify whether everyday materials—such as ice, soy sauce, coffee, honey, sharpener, wind, car smoke, phone, and oil—are solids, liquids, or gases. Each item includes a picture and a blank line for students to write the correct state.
Why Use It:
Perfect for reinforcing basic physical science concepts, this worksheet helps students practice classification skills and understand how different materials exist as solids, liquids, or gases. The picture-based format supports visual learners and makes the activity accessible for early grades.
How to Use It:
• Use during a science lesson on matter for guided or independent practice.
• Add to learning centers, small-group activities, or science notebooks.
• Assign as a quick assessment to check student understanding.
• Pair with hands-on demonstrations involving ice, liquids, and air movement.
Grade Suitability:
Best suited for Grades K–2.
• Great for early elementary science units on states of matter.
• Useful for ESL learners who benefit from visual classification tasks.
Target Users:
Elementary teachers, homeschooling parents, science tutors, and young students learning about solids, liquids, and gases.




