Science Fun for a Rainy Day

Its raining today. The kids are home sick, too. They’ll want to get on the computer and play Webkinz or something like that, or they’ll want to watch TV all day. All brain rot, really. They’ll be bored and drive my wife crazy. They need an activity, and a fun one, and why not a brain building one?
Cool Gravity Activities: Fun Science Projects About Balance by James Hopwood is full of fun, simple, and thought provoking science activities. Beginning with some basic instruction on scientific method, the book sets some rules for the activities. Really, they’re hints on what to look for, and set the stage for kids to learn.
Second, there is a two page layout of things the kids can find around the house to use in their experiments. Maybe a hockey stick, or a rake, or a ruler or thread. Get some eggs, metal forks and wooden popsicle sticks. A few more things and you’re ready. I’d skip on the bathroom plunger, though. Yuck! Maybe a kid’s garden shovel, or something like that.
Now to the activities. Each has pointers on what to look for, instructions on performing the experiment, an explanation of the science behind the activity, and a practical application for real life. There’s quick projects like balancing a plunger, or a more suitable substitute, making tops from oddly shaped pieces of paper, or how an uncooked egg spins compared to a hard-boiled egg. Some of these will be fun for your kids to use to show off to their friends. Try balancing two forks and a popsicle stick on one finger!
None of the experiments takes too long and each incorporates writing data and findings in a journal. This writing part is critical. Scientists write down everything and then misplace it. Engineers know where they put everything. If you kid loses his or her notes, you know they’ll be a scientist. If they tidy them up, file them alphabetically and cross-reference them, they’ll be librarians. But if they just keep them organized on a bookshelf, they’ll be engineers.
Related posts:
- Teens Learning Science the Right Way (and for fun and profit, too)
- Science Fair Time – Encourage your kids and get involved
- The Secret Science Behind Movie Stunts & Special Effects by Steve Wolf: Review
- Sneaking Science into the Diet – Kid’s Books that make science interesting.
- Science Book Review: Wild Weather: Floods!, A Hello Reader Science Level 4 book
May 27th, 2009 at 2:32 pm
And if they leave them in a big pile on their desk and tell you not to mess with their pile, they’ll be journalists…..don’t ask me how I know this!
Thanks for stopping by my blog
May 27th, 2009 at 5:21 pm
Ha! It must be from working on all those stories at once. Besides, you can hide that half-sandwich from lunch under there, so your coworkers won’t come and sneak it away when you get up from your desk. I’ve always heard that good journalists have two noses. One for the news and the other for a good pastrami on rye.