The Pizza Experiment for Dinner?
For most parents, the thought of putting kids, and the hot surfaces and sharp edges of cooking, in the same room is a nightmare. When safety is observed, the kitchen can be the best laboratory!
Teaching your kids good safety habits in your home will translate to safety in their science class. [...]
Sometimes what looks like clean water isn’t clean at all. If it looks dirty because there are some minerals in it it may not taste good but might be perfectly OK to drink. It might also be poisonous even when completely clear and odor free.
To clear this up (pun intended) Rick got a lesson in water quality from Michael Christophetes from The Granite Inspection Group (http://www.gigrp.com/). Mike is a home inspector and tests people’s drinking water often. In this short video he explain’s to Rick the what, where and how of what he usually finds out along the way… and then Rick drinks something that looks nasty.
Don’t do that at home unless you have professional water testing equipment! -Enjoy!
Jupiter, Saturn, Mars, Venus and Mercury are all very easy to spot with the naked eye -IF you know where to find them. Using a little know-how and maybe the use of some tools found on the web you can walk outside and point right at these planets. It’s quite easy.
Do you think you can stop water from falling from a glass held upside down with only a porous net used to hold potatoes in a grocery store? Yes friends, it is possible to stop water from falling from a glass just by using a plastic screen -if you’re utilizing the property of surface tension.
This week we answer a question from David in North Carolina, USA.
He asks, “Why do bugs flay around the lite outside on my porch?
Amanda explains on video…
ZOT! Experiment time!
We use electricity to power our lamps. How about generating your own electricity to power the lamp? Electrical charge ise transferred from one body to another while rubbing the two bodies. This can be seen when bits of paper are lifted in the air by a comb rubbed onto dry hair.
Electrons are relatively [...]
The Periodic Table of Elements is a method of displaying and organizing the chemical elements such as oxygen, nitrogen, and neon. However, the periodic table is much more than simply a list of elements.
The periodic table allows for people to make predictions about many physical and chemical properties. The periodic table is a framework for [...]
I’ve been getting a few questions about what our “Daily E-Mail” program for our members is all about. Here’s a quick explanation of how it works.
Members will receive six e-mails a week. Each e-mail will be one of three things.
Some of our e-mails will be small lessons or additional information relating to the main topic [...]
Quite often I get asked if there is a simple thing that you can do to keep a child’s interest in science and learning going. It’s an issue many parents and even some teachers have to deal with regularly. Don’t fret! It may not always be easy but maintaining a child’s thirst for knowledge is simple.
At SuperFunScience.com our mission is clear:
We are more interested in bringing you more knowledge than creating something flashy. The idea that people need flashiness to be interested in something is a weak argument as far as we are concerned. We’ve found through our experience that what keeps people focused on something is not [...]
I randomly came across this video today and I thought I would share it with you guys.
It’s a camera zooming in 20 MILLION times magnitude.
That means it’s magnified so much that something 20 million miles away would look regular sized… except it’s concrete.
I’m glad they didn’t do it with something gross.
Free E-Book
Six Steps Toward Simple Science is an ebook about how to get your
children
intereseted in learning more about how the wonderful world around them
works. It explains how you, as a parent, can show your children the way
that science is part of every day life -regardless of wheather you
yourself are knowledgable
about science.