Eeap 1 Ps
Eeap 1 Ps
Eeap 1 Ps
LOOKING
AROUND
Tex t book for Class V
2019-20
ISBN 978-81-7450-826-3
First Edition
March 2008 Chaitra 1929 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
q No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or
Reprint Edition transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher.
February 2009 Phalguna 1930
q This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade, be lent,
January 2010 Magha 1931 re-sold, hired out or otherwise disposed of without the publisher’s consent, in any
November 2010 Kartika, 1932 form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published.
January 2012 Magha 1933 q The correct price of this publication is the price printed on this page, Any revised
price indicated by a rubber stamp or by a sticker or by any other means is incorrect
March 2013 Phalguna 1934 and should be unacceptable.
November 2013 Kartika 1935
December 2014 Pausa 1936
November 2017 Agrahayana 1939
December 2018 Agrahayana 1940 OFFICES OF THE PUBLICATION
DIVISION, NCERT
CWC Campus
Opp. Dhankal Bus Stop
Panihati
Kolkata 700 114 Phone : 033-25530454
CWC Complex
Maligaon
Guwahati 781 021 Phone : 0361-2674869
Publication Team
` 60.00
Head, Publication : M. Siraj Anwar
Division
Chief Editor : Shveta Uppal
Chief Business : Gautam Ganguly
Manager
Chief Production : Arun Chitkara
Officer
Production Assistant : Deepak jaiswal
Cover : Kavita Singh Kale
Printed on 80 GSM paper with NCERT
watermark Layout : Preeti Rajwade
2019-20
FOREWORD
The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005, recommends that children’s life at school
must be linked to their life outside the school. This principle marks a departure from the
legacy of bookish learning which continues to shape our system and causes a gap between
the school, home and community. The syllabi and textbooks developed on the basis of NCF
signify an attempt to implement this basic idea. They also attempt to discourage rote learning
and the maintenance of sharp boundaries between different subject areas. We hope these
measures will take us significantly further in the direction of a child-centred system of
education outlined in the National Policy on Education (1986).
The success of this effort depends on what steps that school principals and teachers
will take to encourage children to reflect on their own learning and to pursue imaginative
activities and questions. We must recognise that, given space, time and freedom, children
generate new knowledge by engaging with the information passed on to them by adults.
Treating the prescribed textbook as the sole basis of examination is one of the key reasons
why other resources and sites of learning are ignored. Inculcating creativity and initiative
is possible if we perceive and treat children as participants in learning, not as receivers of
a fixed body of knowledge.
These aims imply considerable change in school routines and mode of functioning.
Flexibility in the daily time-table is as necessary as rigour in implementing the annual
calendar so that the required number of teaching days are actually devoted to teaching.
The methods used for teaching and evaluation will also determine how effective this textbook
proves for making children’s life at school a happy experience, rather than a source of
stress or boredom. Syllabus designers have tried to address the problem of curricular burden
by restructuring and reorienting knowledge at different stages with greater consideration
for child psychology and the time available for teaching. The textbook attempts to enhance
this endeavour by giving higher priority and space to opportunities for contemplation and
wondering, discussion in small groups, and activities requiring hands-on experience.
The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) appreciates the
hard work done by the textbook development committee responsible for this book. We wish
to thank the Chairperson of the Advisory Committee for Textbooks at the the primary level,
Anita Rampal, Professor, CIE, Delhi University, Delhi, Chief Advisor, Farah Farooqi, Reader,
Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, for guiding the work of this committee. Several teachers
contributed to the development of this textbook. We are grateful to their principals for making
this possible. We are indebted to the institutions and organisations which have generously
permitted us to draw upon their resources, material and personnel. We are especially grateful
to the members of the National Monitoring Committee, appointed by the Department of
Secondary and Higher Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development under the
Chairpersonship of Professor Mrinal Miri and Professor G.P. Deshpande, for their valuable
time and contribution.
As an organisation committed to systemic reform and continuous improvement in the
quality of its products, NCERT welcomes comments and suggestions which will enable us
to undertake further revision and refinement.
Director
New Delhi National Council of Educational
30 November 2007 Research and Training
2019-20
A NOTE FOR THE TEACHERS AND PARENTS
The National Curriculum Framework (2005) views Environmental Studies (EVS) in Classes
III to V as a subject which integrates the concepts and issues of science, social science
and environment education. This subject is not there in Classes I and II, but the issues
and concerns related to it are meant to be a part of Language and Mathematics.
This textbook is child centred, so that children get a lot of space to explore and are not
compelled to learn by rote. There is no place for definitions and mere information in this
book. The real challenge is to provide children with opportunities to express, learn by doing,
ask questions and experiment. The language used in the book is not formal but that spoken
by children. Children see a page of a book as a holistic ‘visual text’ and not separately as
words and illustrations. Pages have been developed keeping this in mind. The textbook is
not the only source of knowledge, but should support children to construct knowledge through
all sources around them, such as people, their environment, newspapers, etc.
The chapters in this book contain real life incidents, everyday challenges and live
contemporary issues – related to petrol, fuel, water, forests, protection of animals, pollution,
etc. There are ample opportunities for children to freely debate, engage with and develop a
sensitive understanding about these. The writing team views not just children but teachers
too as people who construct knowledge and expand their experiences. Thus teachers also
need to use this book as a teaching-learning resource.
The new syllabus consists of six themes – (1) Family and Friends, which consists of
four subthemes – (1.1) Relationships, (1.2) Work and Play, (1.3) Animals and (1.4) Plants.
Others are – (2) Food; (3) Water; (4) Shelter; (5) Travel and (6) Things We Make and Do.
What do we understand by a syllabus? The list of chapters in the textbook is often
mistaken to be a syllabus. If we look at the NCERT syllabus, we find that an attempt has
been made to develop a deep and inter-related understanding of each theme . Each theme
begins with key questions in a language suitable for children. The whole syllabus is available
on the NCERT website www.ncert.nic.in. Also try to get the printed version. On reading it
you will enjoy teaching the subject with a deeper understanding.
Theme 2 – Food
The theme on ‘Food’ integrates all these – tasting, digesting, cooking, preserving techniques,
farmers and hunger. Chapter 3 does not contain information about the digestive system,
but children’s experiences have been used to build an understanding that the process of
digestion begins in the mouth itself. This chapter also includes an amazing real story through
which the world first came to know about the role of the stomach in digestion. Later in the
chapter, through a description of the food habits of two children – one who doesn’t get enough
food to eat, and the other who takes only chips and cold drinks, the chapter tries to raise
questions about what is ‘good food’. Also, why do people who grow crops not get enough to eat?
iv
2019-20
In chapter 4, through the story of mamidi tandra, children understand the technique and
skills involved in preservation and cooking. The story of a bajra seed (chapter 19) addresses
some questions of the syllabus again, like how changes in farming are linked to the changes
and difficulties in the lives of farmers. Later you will see how the theme (2) on Food is linked
with the subtheme on Plants (1.4).
How do we taste food? What Tasting food; chapati/ Children’s earlier Tasting activity
happens in the mouth to the rice becomes sweeter experiences; samples of – action of
food we eat? Why do we give on chewing; digestion food items; story of saliva on rice/
glucose to patients? What is begins in the mouth; someone on a glucose chapati.
glucose? glucose is a sugar. drip.
2019-20
of ‘water cycle’ and ‘condensation’ in a traditional manner, everyday experiences of children
have been used to suggest how a mirror becomes hazy when we blow on it. Chapter 16
stresses on the dignity of labour and that no work is clean or dirty. Also, why do certain
communities continue to do scavenging through generations and do not get opportunities
to make their own choice? Chapter 17, ‘Across the Wall,’ consists of a real story of a girls’
basketball team, presented in their own words, on the issue of gender.
Subtheme (1.3) – Animals
Chapter 1 sensitises children to the amazing world of animals – how they hear and see,
smell and sleep. They also have the right to live and are pained on not getting food.
Chapter 2, by raising issues related to the life of snakecharmers, look at the close
relationship between animals and humans beings.
Subtheme (1.4) – Plants
Chapter 5 has experiments on germination the idea of seed dispersal and shows
how some plants have come from far off countries but today we cannot imagine
our food without them. Chapter 20 depicts the life of tribals, through the real story of
Suryamani in Jharkhand and Jhoom farming of Mizoram. It also addresses some popular
perceptions and biases about tribal communities.
Theme 3 – Water
Chapter 6 gives a glimpse of traditional sources and the techniques of water arrangements
in Rajasthan. It uses a recent example of a village doing water management by taking
inspiration from history. Chapter 7 has experiments with water which are related to our
everyday life. Real dialogues of children are used in chapter 8 to bring out the relationship
between stagnant water, mosquitoes, malaria, blood testing, etc.
Theme 4 – Shelter
Using Gaurav Jani’s amazing journey to the Himalayas, Chapter 13 shows variations in
the types of shelters in one state, and also how food habits, living conditions, language
and clothes differ. In chapter 14 through narratives of calamities like a flood or
earthquake, an understanding is developed about why people live in
neighbourhoods and which agencies are responsible in such times.
Theme 5 – Travel
Some important questions of the syllabus related to this theme are:
vi
2019-20
‘shape of the earth’ and ‘gravitation’ using children’s intuitive ideas. Chapter 12 presents
debates around the burning issue of why petrol and diesel are limited. The theme ‘Travel’ is
not limited to ‘transport’ but is presented in a wider and more interesting perspective.
Theme 6: Things We Make and Do
This theme is integrated with all the other themes and emphasises processes and
techinques. Wherever there are experiments in a chapter or things to make and do, children
need to be given opportunities and space to engage with them.
What will Children Learn in EVS?
In this book there is a separate section ‘What we have learnt’ at the end of each chapter.
These questions suggest how children’s learning can be assessed after doing a chapter
and also in the examinations. Answers should not be assessed in terms of only ‘right/
wrong’. Childrens’ ideas, observation reports, expression of their experiences, process of
experiments, etc. are all opportunities for qualitatively assessing children's learning. This
list of indicators for assessment in EVS can be used to record how children are learning.
Indicators for Assessment in EVS
1. Observation and Recording – Reporting, narrating and drawing; picture-reading, making
pictures, tables and maps.
2. Discussion – Listening, talking, expressing opinions, finding out from other people.
3. Expression – Drawing, body movements, creative writing, sculpting, etc.
4. Explanation – Reasoning, making logical connections.
5. Classification – Categorising, grouping, contrasting and comparing.
6. Questioning – Expressing curiosity, critical thinking, developing good questions.
7. Analysis – Predicting, making hypotheses and inferences
8. Experimentation – Improvisation, making things and doing experiments.
9. Concern for Justice and Equality – Sensitivity towards the disadvantaged and differently
abled.
10. Cooperation – Taking responsibility and initiative, sharing and working together.
Based on these indicators, teachers can observe 3-5 children everday and record their
comments in order to better understand children’s abilities and to encourage them accordingly.
For better understanding on assessment practices and procedures in EVS, NCERT has
developed a sourcebook on this area for primary stage. It will be useful if you go through
this document as well.
The following are applicable to all the maps of India used in this book:
© Government of India, Copyright 2006
1. The responsibility for the correctness of internal details rests with the publisher.
2. The territorial waters of India extend into the sea to a distance of twelve nautical miles measured
from the appropriate base line.
3. The administrative headquarters of Chandigarh, Haryana and Punjab are at Chandigarh.
4. The interstate boundaries amongst Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Meghalaya shown on this map are
as interpreted from the “North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act.1971,” but have yet to be verified.
5. The external boundaries and coastlines of India agree with the Record/Master Copy certified by
Survey of India.
6. The state boundaries between Uttarakhand & Uttar Pradesh, Bihar & Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh &
Madhya Pradesh have not been verified by the Governments concerned.
7. The spellings of names in this map, have been taken from various sources.
vii
2019-20
TEXTBOOK DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
CHIEF ADVISOR
Farah Farooqi, Reader, Faculty of Education, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi
MEMBERS
Smriti Sharma, Lecturer, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, Delhi University, Delhi.
MEMBER-COORDINATOR
2019-20
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The NCERT thanks the authors, poets and organisations for their cooperation in
developing this book and also for permitting the use of their work –
Lesson – 3 ‘From Tasting to Digesting’ – A poem written by Rajesh Utsahi and a
story written by Anita Rampal, courtesy Chakmak. P. Sainath, Mumbai
(Photo-Kalahandi). Phool Chandra Jain, Teekamgarh, (suggestions
for language)
Lesson – 4 ‘Mangoes Round the Year’ – Rajeshwari Namgiri, C.E.E., Ahmedabad
(Recipe of Mamidi Tandra).
Lesson – 5 ‘Seeds and Seeds’ – A poem written by Rajesh Utsahi, courtesy
Chakmak.
Lesson – 6 ‘Every Drop Counts’ – Aaj Bhi Khare Hain Talab, a book written by
Anupam Mishra and published by Gandhi Shanti Pratishthan, Delhi
(reference material). Chaar Gaon Ki Katha, published by Tarun Bharat
Sangh (reference and photo of Dadki Mai). India – Al Biruni, edited by
Qeyamauddin Ahmad and published by National Book Trust
(reference material). People Science Institute, Dehradoon (Jal Sanskriti
Project – photo and information). Rashmi Paliwal, Eklavya,
Hoshangabad (reference material).
Lesson – 7 ‘Experiments with Water’ – A poem written by Shishir Shobhan
Asthana, courtesy Chakmak.
Lesson – 10 ‘Walls Tell Stories’ – Special thanks to these resource persons without
whose cooperation this chapter could not have been developed –
Professor Neeladri Bhattacharya (Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi), Professor Narayani Gupta (INTACH, New Delhi),
Professor Monica Juneja (Emory University, Atlanta), Professor Irfan
Habib (Aligarh Muslim University), Professor Azizuddin (Jamia Millia
Islamia); Geeti Sen’s book Paintings from the Akbarnama, published
by Lustre press and Rupa (miniature painting). Rajeev Singh
(photographs of Golconda). S.P. Shorey, (Chief Town Planner,
Hyderabad, Map of Golconda).
Lesson – 11 ‘Sunita in Space’ – A poem written by Anware Islam, courtesy
Chakmak. Kendriya Vidyalaya, NCERT (photograph – page 100).
NASA (part of Sunita William’s interview and photographs).
Lesson – 12 ‘What if it Finishes...?’ – TERI (reference material), Petroleum
Conservation Research Association (reference - poster).
Lesson – 13 ‘A Shelter so High!’ – Gaurav Jani’s documentary film, Riding Solo to
the Top of the World, Dirt Track Productions (excerpts from this film).
Nighat Pandit, Srinagar (photographs and information on Jammu &
Kashmir). M.K. Raina, Delhi and INTACH, Jammu & Kashmir
(reference material ).
2019-20
Lesson – 15 ‘Blow Hot, Blow Cold’ – A story written by Dr. Zakir Husain ‘Blowing
hot, Blowing cold,’ published by Young Zubaan and Pratham Books.
Lesson – 16 ‘Who will do this Work?’ – Children of a Bombay Municipal Corporation
School – Priya Narbahadur Kunwar, Sandeep Shivprasad Sharma,
Manisha Madhavdas Dharuk, Sonu Shivalal Pasi and Mehejabeen
M. Ansari – courtesy Avehi Abacus (drawings for page – 150).
Sant – Charan – Raja Sevitam Sahaja, a book written by Narayan
Bhai Desai in Gujarati (excerpts from this book). India Untouched, a
documentary film by Stalin K., Drishti and Navasarjan Production
(photos and excerpts of interviews from this film).
Lesson – 17 ‘Across the Wall’ – This chapter is based on interviews of a girls’ team
of Nagapada Basketball Association, Mumbai and their coach Noor
Khan, Afzal Khan, Fazal Khan, Kutubuddin Sheikh, Nagapada
Neighbourhood House (interview).
Lesson – 20 ‘Whose Forests?’ – ‘Girl Stars’ a project of ‘Going to school,’ supported
by UNICEF, (true story documented by the organisation). The Last
Frontier – People and Forests in Mizoram, a book written by Daman
Singh and published by TERI (reference material).
Published material of Avehi Abacus, Mumbai and Centre for Environment
Education, Ahmedabad (in the form of reference material).
The heads of the following organisations and institutions who contributed to
this book by deputing their experts. They are - Delhi University, Delhi; Jamia
Millia Islamia, New Delhi; Lady Shri Ram College; Gargi College; Kendriya Vidyalaya,
Shalimar Bagh, Delhi; Kendriya Vidyalaya, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh.; Sarvodaya
Vidyalaya, Janakpuri, New Delhi.
The first draft of the English version was prepared by Mamta Pandaya, CEE,
Ahmedabad. Later other team members of the EVS group worked on it. The final
editing was done by Professor Anita Rampal. The poems given in the book were
translated by Anupa Lal.
We thank Deepa Balsawar for coordinating the artwork and lay out of this
book with care and responsibility.
We are specially grateful to K.K. Vashishtha, Professor and Head, Department
of Elementary Education, NCERT who has extended every possible help in
developing this book. The contribution of Shakamber Dutt, Incharge Computer
Station, DEE; Vijay Kaushal and Inder Kumar, DTP Operators; Shashi Devi, Proof
Reader is commendable in shaping the book. The efforts of the Publication
Department, NCERT in bringing out this publication are also appreciated.
NCERT is grateful to all the persons for devoting their valuable time and
cooperation directly or indirectly in the process of developing this book.
2019-20
C ONTENTS
Foreword iii
A Note for the Teachers and Parents v
1. Super Senses 1
9. Up You Go! 76
xi
2019-20
14. When the Earth Shook! 131
xii
2019-20