What is Science?

A free 90-second interactive lesson that answers 'what is science?' for Class 6 students. Explore how scientists ask questions, observe the world, and test ideas. Based on the NCERT Class 6 Chapter 1 — Wonderful World of Science.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🔭 What is Science?
Why do things happen?🧊Why doesice float?🌤️Why is thesky blue?🍂Why doleaves fall?Science is the search for answers.

Why does ice float? Why is the sky blue? Why do leaves change colour in autumn? Humans have always asked questions like these. Science is our organised way of finding the answers — and it starts with nothing more than curiosity.

What is science?

Science is a way of understanding the natural world through careful observation, asking questions, and testing ideas with experiments. The word comes from the Latin scientia, meaning knowledge — but science isn't just a collection of facts. It's a method of thinking.

A scientist looks at the world and asks: Why does this happen? What would happen if I changed this? Can I prove my idea? Science turns curiosity into reliable knowledge.

Why is science important?

Every technology you use — your phone, the medicines you take, the clean water from your tap — exists because of science. Science gave us vaccines that stopped deadly diseases, satellites that let us navigate, and materials strong enough to build bridges.

More importantly, science teaches us how to think carefully — to question, to test, and to change our mind when the evidence says we're wrong.

What do scientists actually do?

Scientists work in many different fields:

  • Biologists study living things — plants, animals, cells.
  • Physicists study matter, energy, and forces.
  • Chemists study substances and how they react.
  • Astronomers study stars, planets, and the universe.
  • Geologists study rocks and the Earth's structure.

But all of them share the same approach: observe, question, test, and conclude.

Frequently asked questions

What is science in simple words?

Science is the study of the natural world using careful observation and experiments. It is a way of asking questions and finding reliable answers.

What is the difference between an observation and an inference?

An observation is something you notice directly with your senses — 'the liquid turned blue'. An inference is a conclusion you draw from that observation — 'it contains starch'.

Why do scientists repeat experiments?

To check if results are reliable. A single result could be a coincidence. If you repeat the experiment many times and get the same result, you can be confident the conclusion is correct.

What is NCERT Class 6 Science Chapter 1 about?

Chapter 1 of NCERT Class 6 Science — Wonderful World of Science — introduces students to what science is, how scientists think, and why science matters in everyday life.

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