Area: Social Studies
Theme: Energy, atmosphere, and
ecosystems
Grade: 6th grade
Estimated time: ⏱️ 2 classes
👁️ Observation · 🔍 Investigation

Letter to the User
Guided Learning – Inspire Universe
Welcome to Inspire Universe's Guided Learning.
The Guided Learning tracks were created to help you organize your studies, deepen your understanding of the content, and turn scientific concepts into hands-on learning experiences.
Each track brings together structured activities, experiments, challenges, reflections, and investigative tasks that can be used in two ways:
Here, learning goes beyond watching or reading: you are invited to observe, test, measure, compare, calculate, reflect, and connect ideas — developing essential scientific skills such as critical thinking, curiosity, and intellectual independence.
The activities were organized into thematic tracks, written in clear, accessible language, and designed to accompany you at every stage of your learning path, from your first contact with the topic to mastering the content.
At the end of each track, we invite you to keep exploring:
About the Use of This Material
This material is made available exclusively for educational use within the Inspire Universe platform.
Reproduction, distribution, commercialization, or sharing of this content, in whole or in part, by any means, without express authorization, is prohibited.
The responsible use of this material ensures that the educational, editorial, and scientific work involved in its creation is properly valued and allows us to continue developing new tracks, content, and learning experiences for you.
Evobooks Team
What will you learn?
You will learn about the atmosphere, how it forms, how it is arranged into layers, and why Earth's gaseous layer is necessary for life on the planet.
Even though it is invisible, the atmosphere protects the planet, allows living beings to breathe, regulates temperature, and influences natural phenomena such as climate, clouds, and rain. Understanding its structure allows us to comprehend how the planet functions as a whole.

Open the Inspire Universe app and look at the Earth’s representation, noticing the layer that surrounds the entire planet. Use the zoom option to see how Earth relates to its outside structures.
Think about it:
💡 Teacher's tip:
Encourage students to connect the atmosphere to everyday experiences, such as breathing, feeling the wind, or looking up at the sky.

Source: NASA.
Description: Image of Earth as seen from space, showing the blue outline of the atmosphere.
Credit: NASA / ISS (International Space Station)
Now, in groups or individually, research:
Research tip: Use keywords such as "composition of Earth's atmosphere."
(After research) The atmosphere is made up primarily of nitrogen and oxygen, along with small amounts of argon, carbon dioxide, and other gases. Nitrogen is the most abundant, accounting for approximately 78% of its total composition.
💡 Teacher's tip:
Use this moment to discuss reliable sources of scientific information and to work with percentages in a simple, accessible way.
The atmosphere is not made up of a single layer. It is organized into distinct regions.

Open the app and identify:
The atmosphere is the gaseous layer that covers planets. The Earth's atmosphere is made up of numerous gases held in place by gravity and the planet's magnetic field.
The troposphere is the layer that stretches from the Earth’s surface to the stratosphere's base. It makes up around 80% of the total atmospheric mass and is the only layer in which living things can breathe properly. Its average thickness is approximately 12 kilometers (7.5 miles). Almost all weather occurrences happen within this stratum.
The stratosphere begins at roughly 7 to 17 kilometers (4.5–10.5 miles) above the surface and extends to about 50 kilometers. It is characterized by horizontal air motion, low water vapor concentrations, and a gradual rise in temperature with altitude, reaching its upper boundary at the stratopause.
The mesosphere extends from approximately 50 to 80–85 kilometers (31–50/53 miles) above the surface and is the layer where the most significant temperature drop occurs, reaching as low as −90 °C (-130 °F) at its upper boundary. It is also where meteoroids burn up upon entry into the atmosphere.
Think about it:

💡 Teacher's tip:
Help students understand that the layers are not rigid divisions, but regions with distinct characteristics.
Based on what you have learned, answer:

Source: NASA / NOAA
Type: Meteorological satellite image
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory
💡 Teacher's tip:
If needed, lead the discussion as a whole-class activity, connecting temperature, altitude, and gas concentration.
Now, reflect:
In the previous step, you learned that the atmosphere protects Earth like a shield. But this shield can be weakened.
Human activity can affect the atmosphere:
A weakened atmosphere would mean:
Now choose a way to show what you have learned — a drawing, a diagram, a collage, or a short explanation in your own words. What does Earth look like with its shield? What would it look like without it?
💡 Teacher's tip:
Value different forms of expression and encourage explanations grounded in what was observed and investigated.

The International Space Station orbiting Earth, with the planet's curvature visible in the background.
Fonte: NASA
Crédito: NASA / International Space Station (ISS)
Artificial satellites do not "hover in the sky." They orbit Earth at different altitudes, each serving a different purpose:

Image courtesy of the European Space Agency.
Note: The debris field shown in the image is an artistic representation based on real data. However, the debris objects are depicted at an exaggerated scale to make them visible at the resolution shown.
Many of the images we see in weather forecasts come from meteorological satellites. From up there, they observe clouds, hurricanes, storms, cold fronts, and climate patterns, enabling weather forecasting, monitoring extreme events, and studying the atmosphere on a global scale.
Did you know?
Rockets travel through Earth’s layers to reach space, where astronauts live and work aboard the International Space Station. Even from up there, many studies remain focused on understanding and protecting Earth.
Now that you have a deeper understanding of how the atmosphere works, can you see how essential it is to life on Earth?
👉 Want to keep learning?
Access the quizzes in the app and deepen your knowledge about Earth and its structures on Inspire Universe.
This material is protected by copyright. Reproduction, distribution, or sharing, in whole or in part, without authorization from Inspire Universe, is prohibited under Brazilian Copyright Law (Law No. 9,610/1998).
Copyright © 2025 | Universo Inspira