Chapter 1 The Ever-Evolving World of Science Revision Notes Class 7 Science Curiosity

NCERT Notes of The Ever-Evolving World of Science for Class 7 Science Textbook Curiosity is available on this page of studyrankers website. This chapter is from Class 7 Science NCERT Textbook named Curiosity. This textbook is published by NCERT (National Council of Educational Research and Training). Chapter 1 The Ever-Evolving World of Science Notes is very helpful in understanding the chapter clearly and in easy manner. We have covered all the important points and topics of the The Ever-Evolving World of Science chapter of class 7 Science ncert textbook. Students can also find all the questions answers of The Ever-Evolving World of Science chapter which is in the textbook updated to latest pattern of cbse and ncert.

NCERT Notes for Chapter 1 The Ever-Evolving World of Science Class 7 Science

Science is everywhere, from the tiny cells inside a leaf to the grand movements of the sun and stars, inviting you to test materials at home and uncover how water flows underground.

  • Each chapter is a new adventure, designed to challenge your thinking, expand your knowledge, and turn you into a little explorer making your own discoveries.
  • Simple observations spark big ideas just like paper planes led to real scientific studies of flight, your everyday experiments can inspire future discoveries.

Science as an Adventure

  • Exploring the World: Science helps us understand both small and big things. For example, we can study tiny cells inside a leaf or the way the sun and stars move in the sky.
  • Asking Questions: Science starts with curiosity. When you wonder “why” or “how” something happens, you’re thinking like a scientist.
  • Doing Experiments: Experiments let you see how things work. For example, testing materials at home can teach you about their properties.
  • Learning Takes Flight: The textbook compares learning to a butterfly fluttering or a paper plane flying. Just like a paper plane inspired scientists to study flight (like how bird wings led to airplanes), your curiosity can lead to new discoveries.
  • Imagination is Key: As you read this book, let your imagination soar. Each page is a chance to explore new ideas and find wonders in the world.


Exploring Science

To answer all the above questions, it’s important to step beyond the classroom and experience the world through activities and experiments. These hands-on experiences help build a deeper understanding of our environment and our place on Earth.

Science is not just about discovery; it’s also about responsibility. As young explorers, you will see how human activities affect the natural world and our society. You will learn how science can help solve environmental challenges and contribute to a sustainable future.


Science as a Way of Thinking

Science is a process—a way of thinking that encourages curiosity, asks questions, and stays open to the unknown. Exploration is not just about discovering new facts or learning about nature.

In Grade 7, the focus will be on asking deeper questions like:

  • How do things work?
  • Why do events happen the way they do?
  • What can we learn from patterns in nature?


Step Outside the Book

To understand science, you need to explore the world. Doing experiments and observing nature helps you learn better than just reading.

Science is always growing. Every discovery leads to new questions, making it an ongoing adventure.


Responsibility to Nature

Science shows how human actions affect the environment. For example, pollution can harm nature, but science can help us find ways to protect the planet and make it more sustainable (better for the future).

What we do affects the world, and science helps us understand our role in keeping nature and society balanced.


Exploring Substances 

We often interact with various materials in our daily lives—fruits, clothes, spices, utensils—without stopping to think why they behave the way they do. Science encourages us to observe, question, and understand these common occurrences by studying the properties of materials. Let’s look at a couple of everyday examples and the science behind them:

  • Why are some fruits sour?
  • What happens when we wash a haldi (turmeric) stain from our uniform?
  • These simple questions are not just curiosities—they are gateways into deeper scientific ideas. By investigating the familiar, we begin to understand important concepts in chemistry and develop a scientific way of thinking.


Exploring Properties of Materials

After studying basic properties of everyday materials, the book moves on to experiments with electric batteries, wires, and lamps.

  • Objective: To discover what kinds of materials allow current to pass and make a lamp glow.
Bulb glowing

This exploration helps us to:

  • Classify materials based on their properties (like conductivity).
  • Enter the study of metals and non-metals.
    Metals and Non-metals examples

We also observe that devices like torch batteries eventually stop working.

This leads to the study of changes in materials.

What are Changes?: The world is always changing. Some changes we can see, like ice melting, and some we can’t, like water moving underground.

These changes differ in nature:
  1. Some are physical (like melting ice)
  2. Some are chemical (like ripening of fruits or battery discharge)
  3. Some happen quickly (melting), others are slow (weathering of rocks)
Some changes are reversible (e.g., melting ice). Others are irreversible (e.g., cooking food or a used battery
reversible and irreversible changes


Understanding Changes and the role of Heat

Heat makes things change: it can melt ice into water or boil water into steam, showing how energy moves into materials.

By exploring these changes, you’ll discover how heat helps in everyday activities like cooking and how it powers machines.

 1. We observe many changes around us in daily life, such as:
  • Ice melting into water
  • Fruits ripening
  • Rocks breaking into pebbles

2. Role of Heat in Causing Changes

Heat often causes or speeds up changes in materials.

Examples:

  • Ice cube melting on a warm day
  • Massive glaciers slowly melting over years
  • These examples show how heat affects the state and structure of materials.

3. Introduction to Heat Transfer

To understand how these changes occur, we explore the concept of heat transfer:

  • Heat always flows from a hotter object to a colder one
  • This flow of heat leads to changes in temperature and state of substances
4. Heat and the Water Cycle

The Water Cycle is a perfect example of how heat drives natural processes:

  • Evaporation: Heat from the Sun causes water in oceans, lakes, and rivers to evaporate
  • Condensation: Water vapor cools in the atmosphere and forms clouds
  • Precipitation: Water falls as rain
  • Infiltration: Rainwater seeps into the ground and continues the cycle


Changes in Living Things

Not all changes are in materials—our bodies also undergo changes, especially during middle-school years (puberty).

1. Life Processes: Staying Alive

Living things carry out certain vital activities called life processes, which help them survive which includes:

  • Eating (nutrition)
  • Breathing (respiration)
  • Blood circulation
  • Growth and reproduction
Life Process

2. Plants Also Undergo Life Processes

Life processes are not limited to animals:

  • Plants also need food to grow (they make their own through photosynthesis).
  • They undergo respiration, though differently from animals.
  • They also grow, reproduce, and respond to changes in their surroundings.
Seed Germination

3. The Bigger Picture
  • Over millions of years, life on Earth has evolved into complex, interdependent systems.
  • These systems are balanced, ensuring survival for a wide variety of organisms.
  • Understanding life processes helps us:
     1. Know how our bodies work
    2. Stay healthy and aware of changes
    3. Appreciate how all living things—plants, animals, and humans—are connected through nature’s systems


Measuring Time

Time helps us organize our day, like knowing when to go to school or sleep.

How We Measure Time?

  • Today, we use clocks and watches to tell time.
  • Long ago, people used the sun’s shadows to measure time. 
  • For example, they looked at how shadows moved as the sun changed position in the sky.

Time in Daily Life

Time affects when we wake up, eat, or sleep, and it’s connected to nature, like day and night.

Why it Matters?

Understanding time helps us plan our lives and learn how nature works, like how day and night happen.


Light and Shadows

Importance of Light:

  • Light helps us see the world around us.
  • We use light to do things like read at night or play with shadows (like making shadow puppets).

Shadows in Nature:

  • Shadows happen when something blocks light.
  • The Earth and Moon can cast shadows, causing eclipses (when the sun or moon is blocked).
  • Examples:
    1. Long ago, people used shadows to tell time by watching how they moved.
    2. Today, we use light in many ways, like in bulbs or lasers.


Earth’s Movements

How the Earth Moves?

  • Rotation: The Earth spins on its axis (an imaginary line through its center) once every 24 hours, causing day and night.
    Rotation of Earth
  • Revolution: The Earth moves around the Sun once every year, causing seasons.
    Revolution of Earth

Moon’s Movement

The Moon goes around the Earth, which affects things like tides and how we see the Moon’s phases.

Effects on Life:

  • Day and night happen because the Earth rotates, giving us time to work and rest.
  • Seasons (like summer or winter) happen because of the Earth’s revolution around the Sun.
  • Eclipses happen when the Earth or Moon blocks sunlight, creating shadows in space.


Points to Remember

  • Science is an adventure where you ask questions, do experiments, and explore the world.
  • Science is a process of thinking, observing patterns, and being curious about how things work.
  • All sciences (physics, chemistry, biology, earth sciences) are connected, and ideas from one help us understand others.
  • Materials have different properties, like conducting electricity, and we group them as metals or non-metals.
  • Changes can be reversible (like ice melting) or irreversible (like a fruit ripening).
  • Heat causes or speeds up changes, like melting ice or evaporating water in the water cycle.
  • Living things (humans, animals, plants) go through changes and need processes like eating and breathing to survive.
  • Time is measured with clocks today, but long ago, people used shadows from the sun.
  • Light helps us see and understand the universe, and shadows cause eclipses.
  • The Earth’s rotation causes day and night, its revolution causes seasons, and the Moon’s movement affects tides and eclipses.


Difficult Words

  • Curiosity: Wanting to know or learn more about something, like wondering why the sky is blue.
  • Properties: The qualities of something, like whether it’s hard, soft, or conducts electricity.
  • Classifying: Sorting things into groups based on what they’re like, such as grouping materials as metals or non-metals.
  • Reversible: A change that can go back to its original form, like water freezing into ice and melting back into water.
  • Irreversible: A change that cannot go back, like a fruit becoming ripe.
  • Evaporates: When a liquid, like water, turns into a gas and rises into the air, like water disappearing from a puddle.
  • Nutrients: Things in food that help living things grow and stay healthy, like vitamins or proteins.
  • Eclipses: When one object in space blocks light from another, like the Moon blocking the Sun during a solar eclipse.
  • Rotation: When something spins around a center point, like the Earth spinning to cause day and night.
  • Revolution: When something moves in a circle around another object, like the Earth moving around the Sun.
  • Sustainable: Doing things in a way that keeps the environment healthy for the future, like using less plastic.
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