Grouping Materials

Not all materials are alike. This 90-second narrated lesson teaches kids how to group everyday materials by their properties — hard or soft, shiny or dull, rough or smooth — and why these properties decide which material we use for which job. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🧱 Grouping Materials
Everything is made of a material.Iron nailWoodGlassRubberCottonWe can group them by their properties.

Look around you. The chair, the window, your clothes, a rubber eraser — everything is made of something. Scientists call these substances 'materials'. And just like we group animals or plants, we can group materials too — by their properties.

What is a material?

A material is the substance something is made of. Your chair might be made of wood or plastic. Your water bottle might be glass or steel. Your eraser is rubber. Scientists group these materials by their physical properties — measurable characteristics that describe how a material looks, feels, and behaves.

Hard and soft materials

Hardness tells us how much a material resists being scratched or pressed. Hard materials — like iron, stone, and glass — keep their shape under pressure. Soft materials — like cotton, rubber, and sponge — change shape when pressed and return to their original form.

  • Hard: iron, steel, stone, wood, glass
  • Soft: cotton, sponge, rubber, wax, clay

We use hard materials for things that need to withstand force — hammers, bridges, floors. We use soft materials for comfort — cushions, erasers, shoe soles.

Shiny and dull materials

Some materials reflect light brightly — we call them lustrous or shiny. Metals like gold, silver, and polished steel are shiny. Most materials are dull or non-lustrous — they absorb most of the light that hits them. Wood, clay, rubber, and paper are all dull.

Lustre is why metals are used in jewellery, mirrors, and decorative items. A freshly cut piece of iron shines, but when it rusts, it turns dull — the surface has changed.

Rough and smooth materials

The texture of a material — rough or smooth — affects how it grips and how it feels. Rough materials like sandpaper, brick, and tree bark have tiny bumps on the surface. Smooth materials like glass, marble, and polished metal feel even when you run a finger across them.

We use rough materials where grip matters — the soles of shoes, grips on handles, road surfaces. We use smooth materials where low friction is needed — glass lenses, ball bearings, slippery slides.

Other important properties

Materials are also grouped by:

  • Transparency — glass and water let light through; wood and metal do not.
  • Solubility — salt and sugar dissolve in water; sand and chalk do not.
  • Density — iron is heavy for its size; cork and foam are light.
  • Flexibility — rubber bends without breaking; glass does not.

Every material we choose for a job is chosen because of exactly these properties.

Frequently asked questions

What are the properties used to group materials?

Common properties include hardness (hard/soft), lustre (shiny/dull), texture (rough/smooth), transparency, solubility in water, and density (heavy/light).

Why is glass used for windows but not for floors?

Glass is transparent, which makes it ideal for windows. But it is brittle — it breaks under heavy weight — so it's not suitable for floors. Tiles or wood are hard and strong enough for floors.

Is all metal shiny?

Freshly cut or polished metals are shiny. But after exposure to air and moisture, many metals rust or oxidise — which makes their surface dull. Iron rusts, silver tarnishes, and copper turns green.

Can a material be both hard AND soft?

Not at the same time, but some materials behave differently under different conditions. Wax is hard at room temperature but soft when warm. Rubber is soft but harder than cotton.

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