Thursday, September 27, 2012
Slinky's Defy Gravity
In the 8th grade class we are learning about rebound when it comes to earthquakes. I showed my students a video about how slinky's have a different rebound than rubber bands. With this, I showed the students a video of slinky and how when you let go of it, it does not snap back together; instead, the top part of the slinky holds all the energy and gravity pulls it down to the bottom part before the bottom part of the slinky is effected by gravity. The students thought that this video was fabricated, so we decided to recreate this lab to see if it truly would work. Let me know what you think!
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
7th Grade Parents!
Tonight, the 7th graders have an assignment in science, and it requires your help parents!
The Assignment:
The Assignment:
•With a parent, find
five products
in
your home
that were made
from natural
resources.
• List the resource
or resources
from which
each product was made.
•Label each
resource
as renewable
or nonrenewable.
• Answer the question: What can you do to
help conserve
the resources
you listed?
•Write at least a paragraph (at
least 5 sentences) describing a personal action plan to conserve some
of the
resources you rely on every day.
The reason I want the parents to help the students is because I think it is important for everyone to know and understand all the items/products we use that are renewable and non-renewable.
The students also know that they have to have both, if possible, parents to sign their assignment, so that I know everyone was a part of it!
Monday, September 24, 2012
Earth Song - Save the Earth
Right now, the 7th graders are learning about natural resources and energy. Today we discussed how natural resources are eventually going to run out, and we discussed how many of the resources we use are harming our planet. I feel that it is important to remember that our world was given to us as a precious gift, and we need to take care of it.
One of the things I like to do in my classroom is use a videos to help the students see concepts that I am teaching. Today, I showed the 7th graders a powerful video by Michael Jackson. After we watched this video, I asked the students what they thought of it and how they thought it pertained to our lesson. One of the students told me it made them sad that we treat our earth this way; another student told me they see how this is what is going to happen to our earth if we continue on the path laid before us.
Here is the video that I feel everyone should see. I find it to be very powerful when it comes to how we treat our world.
One of the things I like to do in my classroom is use a videos to help the students see concepts that I am teaching. Today, I showed the 7th graders a powerful video by Michael Jackson. After we watched this video, I asked the students what they thought of it and how they thought it pertained to our lesson. One of the students told me it made them sad that we treat our earth this way; another student told me they see how this is what is going to happen to our earth if we continue on the path laid before us.
Here is the video that I feel everyone should see. I find it to be very powerful when it comes to how we treat our world.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Mentos Lab - 8th Grade
The 8th graders just finished learning about the Layers of the Earth. With this topic, we learned about how stress can build up within the earth and the pressure can become to great that sometimes the earth will explode (i.e. volcanoes). With mentos and pop, there is a similar reaction, so we did performed the mentos lab!
The Experiment: (Provided from http://www.stevespanglerscience.com)
- You’ll need a 2-liter bottle of diet soda (diet doesn’t make a sticky mess) and an outdoor location for your geyser. Select a flat surface on the lawn or driveway to place the bottle.
- Start by tying one end of the string to the trigger pin (the string might already be attached to the pin) on the Geyser Tube.
- Open the bottle of soda and attach the Geyser Tube. Put the trigger pin into the hole at the base of the Geyser Tube.
- Twist off the top cap on the Geyser Tube and drop MENTOS® candies into the tube. The trigger pin will keep the candy from falling into the soda before you’re ready. Replace the twist-on cap.
- Warn everyone to stand back. Countdown… 3-2-1… and pull the trigger. The MENTOS will drop and the soda will go flying into the air!
- Pour out the remaining soda and take a look at the MENTOS®. You can see where the soda has eaten away at the surface of the candy. No need to waste the candy… they still taste great.
The Photos:
Audrey, Brie-anna, and Janessa were getting ready to watch the pop shoot into the air. Janessa was one of the recorders for this lab.
Lindsey was getting ready to pull the plug on the mentos. Sadly, we found that regular coke did not have a major reaction with the mentos.
This is the biggest reaction that we got! It was with Diet Coke. It went so high that I could not get the pop bottle in the shot with it.
Alyssa had a misfire with her pop! Her mentos fell into the pop a little too early, and she got soaked with Sprite!
In the end, all of the students learned a lot and had a lot of fun!
The Explanation: (provided from http://www.stevespanglerscience.com)
But there's more... If you shake the bottle and then open it, the gas is released from the protective hold of the water molecules and escapes with a whoosh, taking some of the soda along with it. What other ways can you cause the gas to escape? Just drop something into a glass of soda and notice how bubbles immediately form on the surface of the object. For example, adding salt to soda causes it to foam up because thousands of little bubbles form on the surface of each grain of salt. Many scientists, including Lee Marek, claim that the Mentos phenomenon is a physical reaction, not a chemical one.
Water molecules strongly attract each other, linking together to form a tight mesh around each bubble of carbon dioxide gas in the soda. In order to form a new bubble, or even to expand a bubble that has already formed, water molecules must push away from each other. It takes extra energy to break this "surface tension." In other words, water "resists" the expansion of bubbles in the soda.
When you drop the Mentos into the soda, the gelatin and gum arabic from the dissolving candy break the surface tension. This disrupts the water mesh, so that it takes less work to expand and form new bubbles. Each Mentos candy has thousands of tiny pits all over the surface. These tiny pits are called nucleation sites - perfect places for carbon dioxide bubbles to form. As soon as the Mentos hit the soda, bubbles form all over the surface of the candy. Couple this with the fact that the Mentos candies are heavy and sink to the bottom of the bottle and you've got a double-whammy. When all this gas is released, it literally pushes all of the liquid up and out of the bottle in an incredible soda blast. You can see a similar effect when potatoes or pasta are lowered into a pot of boiling water. The water will sometimes boil over because organic materials that leach out of the cooking potatoes or pasta disrupt the tight mesh of water molecules at the surface of the water, making it easier for bubbles and foam to form."
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