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Elementary Science Fair Projects Ideas For Teaching Scientific Method- Tell a Story!


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Most parents think of the scientific method as s that annoying thing science teachers made you do back when you were in school. But if you are a parent and really want good elementary science fair projects ideas to use with your children at home then you will have to understand the scientific method. Put simply, it is a method, or the steps you need to take to make an experiment give you results that mean something. It does not matter if you are experimenting with a fast and quick one day science project or a longer complicated high school assignment. You use the same steps. The difference is with how much time you spend on each step.

What are these steps?

The scientific method steps are: Observation, Question, Hypotheses, Experimentation and Results. You always use these steps for science projects that are experiment based. One idea that parents do not realize they can do to help explain these steps is to use a story about an everyday situation that the child can make a connection to. It is easier to remember a story than a list you memorize.

Short, quick and easy science fair projects most likely be finished in one day will probably where you will find the sort of elementary science fair projects ideas that follow the scientific method, so it will be easy to use one of these as the hook and turn it into a story to explain the process.

Say you were looking at melting ice, you could turn it into a story. May-be a young boy took a thermos to day camp in the hottest days of summer, and wants to know what size ice cube lasts the longest.

You create a story about what he thought would work best from what he has seen in the past, and what he thinks might work. Then talk about all the different things he tries to find out what size ice cube worked the best and what his final decision was. Now you have some easy to remember story points that you can use to help learn the steps. When remembering what hypotheses means, you can us the story, and ask, “What did the boy think would work best?”

After awhile you will see that by making up these stories to explain every day things, that people are always using these same steps with every day problem solving. For example, when a flashlight doesn’t work, you question why and figure it is the batteries, and so change them and you will discover if your are right or not. If that does not work, then you need to form new questions, are the connections corroded, is the bulb burnt out or were the batteries put in the right way? How many times have people done these without realizing they are using the scientific method.

If you spend time looking for elementary science fair projects ideas to use at home, you will have some fun with them and have activities you can turn into a story with your child as the star and help them learn about the scientific method.

I maintain a website with information on teacher approved, quick and easy elementary elementary science fair projects ideas that parents and teachers can use for fun and for their annual science fair project.

Posted in Article - Tagged Elementary, Fair, Ideas, Projects, Science, Scientific, Story, Teaching, Tell

The Scientific Method, Why Your Child Should Be Using It Often.


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Article by Chuck Lunsford

The scientific method is not just something that you learn in grade school in order to pass science class. The scientific method is something that all of us use on a daily basis in order to make sense of the world around us. The scientific method is basically the process that we go through in our minds to ask questions and find answers. The scientific method roughly follows the following pattern:

1. The first step is to make an observation and description of a phenomenon or group of phenomena. In other words, you observe a problem or a question and define exactly what the issue is in order to make more sense of it.

2. Formulation of a hypothesis to explain the phenomena. A hypothesis is a theory or an idea of how something can be worked out or how a problem can be solved. Through the process of the scientific method you will work to prove that your hypothesis is in fact true.

3. Use of the hypothesis to predict the existence of other phenomena. In some cases your hypothesis is part of a sequence of events and you are curious to see how altering a specific occurrence will alter the overall result of a process. Your goal is to predict quantitatively (meaning with physical evidence) the results of new observations.

4. Now you take action. You perform a series of experimental tests of the predictions/hypotheses. With more complicated scientific experiments (not necessarily anything that your child will encounter in their schooling) several independent experimenters and properly performed experiments are meticulously planned and carried out. In the case of a child’s science project or simple day-to-day use of the scientific method, the process of experimentation is much cruder. You can test your ideas in a matter of seconds in some cases and many of the testing that we all do is done mentally and in our homes, schools, or workplace, not in a laboratory.

5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 until there are no discrepancies between theory and experiment and/or observation. In other words, ‘If at first you don’t succeed, try again.’ Many times our initial theories or predictions of what might happen in an experiment are wrong. There is no shame in guessing wrong. What is important is that you continue trying to formulate new ideas and solutions until you find a hypothesis that works.

The scientific method is not as complicated as you may think, and it is important that your child be using the basic outline of the scientific principle in his or her daily life. For example, say that your child is drinking juice from a plastic cup and notices that a puddle has formed under the cup. What should your child do? A child without an understanding of the scientific method is stuck and may call on a parent to just solve the problem for them. On the other hand, when a child understands how to solve problems the situation can be controlled without parental intervention. A child with an understanding of the scientific method may follow the following steps:

1. Identify the problem: There is a puddle of juice underneath my cup.

2. Form a hypothesis: Maybe there is a hole or crack in my cup.

3. What other phenomena are present with this hypothesis: If there is a hole or crack in my cup it should still be leaking until the juice is gone.

4. Take action: lift the cup off the table and see where the drips are coming from, find the location of the crack.

5. Repeat the process if hypothesis is not proved: I didn’t see a hole or a crack, maybe it is just water condensing on the outside of the cup.

6. Repeat the process to see if water is in fact forming on the outside of the cup.

Just Science Projects is one of the leading online sources for science projects for kids websites. Visit Just Science Projects for fun elementary and middle school science experiments and science fair guides. Visit Just Science Projects or call 206-498-6502 today!










Posted in Article - Tagged Child, Often., Scientific, Should, Using

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