The Water Cycle

The same water has been on Earth for billions of years — moving in a never-ending circle. This 90-second narrated lesson teaches kids the five steps of the water cycle and ties them all together. Includes a quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🌧️ The Water Cycle
Where does rain come from?Same water that fell yesterday will fall again tomorrow.

When it rains, where does the water come from? And after rain stops, where does the water go? Surprise — the same water that fell yesterday is what falls again tomorrow. It's all part of one giant journey, called the water cycle.

What is the water cycle?

The water cycle is the continuous journey water makes around our planet. It moves between oceans, the atmosphere, and the land — never stopping. The total amount of water on Earth doesn't change; it just keeps recycling through the same five steps, over and over.

The five steps

  1. Sun heats the water — solar energy warms the surface of seas, lakes, rivers and even puddles
  2. Evaporation — heated water rises as invisible water vapour into the sky
  3. Condensation — high in the cool atmosphere, vapour condenses into tiny water droplets that gather as clouds
  4. Precipitation — when droplets get heavy enough, they fall back to Earth as rain, snow, sleet, or hail
  5. Collection — water flows along the surface or seeps into the ground, eventually reaching rivers and making its way back to the sea

Why the water cycle matters

  • Fresh water — almost all the fresh water we drink (rivers, lakes, groundwater) comes from rain, which comes from the cycle
  • Climate — the cycle moves heat around the planet, balancing temperatures
  • Plants and animals — every living thing depends on rain returning regularly
  • Farming — Indian farmers especially rely on the monsoon, a giant seasonal pulse of the water cycle

Same water, billions of years

Earth's water hasn't changed since the planet formed — about 4.5 billion years ago. The drop you drink today might have been a dinosaur's drink, an ocean wave during the ice age, a glacier that fed the Ganga, or a cloud over the Pacific. The water cycle keeps the same drops in motion, forever.

How humans affect it

The cycle itself is huge and self-balancing — but humans can speed up or slow down parts of it. Cutting forests means fewer trees release vapour back to the air. Polluting rivers means dirty water in the cycle. Building dams holds water in one place. Climate change is shifting where and when rain falls. Understanding the cycle is the first step to taking care of it.

Frequently asked questions

Why doesn't the sea run dry from all the evaporation?

Because rain keeps replacing what evaporates. Globally, evaporation and rainfall balance out exactly. Local areas may be wetter or drier, but Earth as a whole keeps the same total water.

Why is the monsoon so important in India?

About 70% of India's annual rainfall happens during the four-month monsoon (June–September). Most agriculture depends on it. The monsoon is essentially the water cycle on a grand seasonal scale, driven by warm air rising over the Indian subcontinent.

Where does most of Earth's fresh water come from?

From rain. Rivers, lakes and groundwater are all topped up by rain. Even bottled water is just rainwater that fell years ago and seeped into the ground.

Does the water cycle exist on other planets?

Earth has the only known active water cycle in our solar system. Mars had one billions of years ago — there's evidence of dried-up rivers. Some moons of Jupiter and Saturn have ice cycles, but no liquid water on the surface.

How can kids help protect the water cycle?

Save water at home (close taps, take shorter showers). Plant trees — trees release vapour and bring rain. Don't pollute rivers and ponds. Learn about your local water source. Small habits multiplied across millions of people make a real difference.

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