By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Distinguish between an object and the material it is made of
  • 2Group materials based on properties: lustre, hardness, transparency, solubility
  • 3Classify materials as transparent, translucent, or opaque
  • 4Test whether a material is soluble or insoluble in water
  • 5Define mass and volume and understand their difference
  • 6Recognize that matter is anything with mass and volume
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Why this chapter matters
Understanding materials and their properties is fundamental to chemistry, engineering, and everyday decision-making. The ability to classify materials by hardness, transparency, solubility, and lustre builds the observation and categorization skills essential for all scientific inquiry.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Materials Around Us — Class 6 Science (Curiosity)

1. About This Chapter

In Chapter 6, Ghulan and Sheeta explore their classroom and discover that every object is made of some material. Their teacher, Madam Vidya, introduces the concept that objects and materials are different — a chair is an object, but wood is the material. The chapter explores properties of materials, how to group them, and the ancient Indian tradition of pottery.


2. Objects and Materials

Everything we use is made of some material:

  • Paper
  • Wood
  • Cloth
  • Glass
  • Metal
  • Plastic
  • Clay

An object is a thing we use (chair, book, bottle). A material is what the object is made of (wood, paper, plastic). The same material can be used to make different objects, and the same object can sometimes be made from different materials.


3. Grouping Materials

Scientists group materials based on common properties. This helps in organizing and understanding them better.

Properties for Grouping:

  • Shape
  • Colour
  • Hardness
  • Softness
  • Shine (Lustre)

Ancient Indian pottery techniques are discussed as an example of how understanding material properties enabled craftsmanship — choosing the right clay, shaping it, and firing it to create strong, useful pots.


4. Properties of Materials

Lustre (Shininess)

  • Lustrous materials — have shiny surfaces (usually metals like gold, silver, iron)
  • Non-lustrous materials — do not shine (wood, rubber, paper)

Hardness

  • Hard materials — difficult to compress or scratch (stone, iron, diamond)
  • Soft materials — easy to compress or scratch (eraser, sponge, cotton)

5. Transparency

Materials can be classified by how much light passes through them:

TypeLight PassageExamples
TransparentLight passes clearly, can see throughGlass, clean water, air
TranslucentSome light passes, cannot see clearlyFrosted glass, butter paper, oily paper
OpaqueNo light passes throughWood, stone, metal, cardboard

6. Solubility

Some materials dissolve in water, others do not:

  • Soluble — dissolves in water (salt, sugar)
  • Insoluble — does not dissolve (sand, chalk powder, oil)

Activities help students observe the behaviour of different substances in water. Not everything that disappears in water has dissolved — some things just mix (suspension) and settle later.


7. Mass and Volume

Mass

  • Mass is the amount of matter in an object
  • Measured in grams (g) and kilograms (kg)
  • Mass is measured using a balance

Volume

  • Volume is the amount of space an object occupies
  • Liquids measured in litres (L) and millilitres (mL)
  • Volume can be measured using measuring cylinders

8. Matter and Classification

The chapter concludes by defining matter:

  • Anything that occupies space and has mass is matter
  • Materials are types of matter used to create objects
  • Classification based on properties helps in organizing and understanding materials

Historical perspectives on classification — such as those in Ayurveda — are also mentioned, showing that Indians have been classifying materials (medicinal plants, minerals) for thousands of years.


9. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDescription
ObjectA thing we use (made of materials)
MaterialThe substance an object is made of
LustreShininess of a material
TransparentAllows light to pass clearly
OpaqueBlocks all light
SolubleDissolves in water
MassAmount of matter (g, kg)
VolumeAmount of space occupied (L, mL)

10. Important Vocabulary

  • Material: The substance from which an object is made
  • Lustre: The shine or gloss of a material's surface
  • Transparent: Allowing light to pass through clearly
  • Opaque: Not allowing any light to pass through
  • Soluble: Capable of dissolving in a liquid
  • Mass: The quantity of matter in an object
  • Volume: The amount of space an object occupies
  • Matter: Anything that has mass and occupies space

11. Worked Questions

Q: Is a shiny material always a metal? Not necessarily. While most metals are lustrous (shiny), some non-metals like graphite and iodine crystals also appear shiny. However, most shiny everyday objects you encounter are likely metals.

Q: A material allows some light through but you can't clearly see objects on the other side. What is it? It is translucent. Examples: frosted glass, butter paper, oily paper.

Q: How is mass different from volume? Mass is the amount of matter (measured in grams/kilograms). Volume is the amount of space (measured in litres/millilitres). A cotton ball has large volume but small mass.


12. Conclusion

Materials Around Us teaches students to look at everyday objects with scientific eyes — not just seeing a chair, but recognizing the wood it's made of; not just using a glass, but understanding transparency. Classification based on properties is a fundamental scientific skill that applies to chemistry, biology, and every experimental science.

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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

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Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
Classify these as transparent, translucent, or opaque: glass window, wooden door, frosted bathroom window, clean water, brick wall.
Show solution
Transparent: glass window, clean water. Translucent: frosted bathroom window. Opaque: wooden door, brick wall.
Q2MEDIUM
Salt disappears when added to water. Has it been destroyed?
Show solution
No, salt has dissolved in water. It's still present — you can taste it. If you evaporate the water, the salt will be left behind. Dissolving is a physical change, not destruction.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Object = thing (chair). Material = substance (wood)
  • Lustrous (shiny): metals. Non-lustrous: wood, rubber
  • Transparent: glass, water. Translucent: frosted glass. Opaque: wood, stone
  • Soluble: salt, sugar. Insoluble: sand, chalk, oil
  • Mass = matter amount (g, kg). Volume = space (L, mL)
  • Matter = anything with mass and volume

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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