View allAll Photos Tagged scienceexperiments
Images of teacher training workshop "Developing Criticial Thinking Skills via Exploring Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Education concepts conducted by Dr. Diana Wehrell-Grabowski. Teacher conducted hands-on-minds-on inquiry and standards-based explorations to investigate STEM education concepts. Image - teachers design and construct bridges from simple materials.
Too small here... only works big on black
If you have some time and haven't seen it yet.... my set at ****contrasted gallery or straight to the slideshow here
This massive 884-page book contains a large collection of scientific amusements, including natural history; physics (including automata); gases; water; heat; light (including optical illusions, the thaumatrope, phenokistoscope, zoetrope, and the praxinoscope, ghost illusions, the stereoscope, telescope and microscope, photography, dissolving views, spectroscopy); acoustics; electricity (with electrical machines); galvanism; magnetism; applied electricity (including the telephone and phonograph); aeronautics; chemistry; mineralogy; new forms of transport; angles and the measurement of angles; astronomy and the solar system; geography and geology; meteorology; botany; zoology; games (including the magic top and the gyroscope), illustrated with over 900 engravings of equipment and diagrams.
Images of teacher training workshop "Developing Criticial Thinking Skills via Exploring Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Education concepts conducted by Dr. Diana Wehrell-Grabowski. Teacher conducted hands-on-minds-on inquiry and standards-based explorations to investigate STEM education concepts. Image- teachers building 3D architectural structures with simple materials.
Vinegar and red cabbage juice indicator in 24 ounce bottle.
References:
Red cabbage juice indicator can easily be reconstituted from "jiffy red cabbage indicator" concentrate:
www.teachersource.com/Chemistry/pHIndicatorsAndThermomete...
Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/52678
This image was scanned from a photograph in the University's historical photographic collection held by Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
If you have any information about this photograph, or would like a higher resolution copy, please contact us.
Audiences will be amazed in this event as they experience the effects of very hot and very cold temperatures and what affects they can create with our friend Eggbert and in a show-stopping exothermic reaction. Volunteers will get to see matter transform from one state to another by tasting a fizzing Mad Science “burp” potion, and taking a Mad Science bubble bath and shower. They will also be in a scary movie scene using dry ice special effects!
Battelle/PNNL researchers participated in the 2nd annual Celebration of Science at John Dam Plaza in Richland. The event is festival-style, showcasing the amazing contributions of science-based industries in our community.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
Over 200 kids in Salvation Army youth programs across Indiana gathered in Indianapolis for a day of "May Science" fun at the annual Youth Rally on March 14, 2015.
Lucas's experiment for this year's science fair is a measurement of the effectiveness of combustion in a changu changu moto stove compared to a three stone fire. More at www.youtube.com/watch?v=vG22AUx8FrY
Middle school students learn about the effects of a type of alcohol on permanent markers during a NCATS chromatography science experiment at Frontiers in Science and Medicine event on Oct. 27, 2017.
Credit: National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Dr. Diana Wehrell-Grabowski introduces keypoints that will introduced during the interactive STEM keynote workshop for parents during the Expanding Your Horizons Conference held at University of North Florida Feb. 2011.
Images of teacher training workshop "Developing Criticial Thinking Skills via Exploring Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Education concepts conducted by Dr. Diana Wehrell-Grabowski. Teacher conducted hands-on-minds-on inquiry and standards-based explorations to investigate STEM education concepts. Image- teachers design and construct geodesic domes with simple materials.
A small electric generator is contained in a box beside the driver within easy reach of his hand. The reins contain a wire, one end of which terminates in the horse’s bit and the other is attached to the electric generator. When put into action, a small electrical current is generated which so astonishes the horse that he stops suddenly.
Iodine stain on Cotton Dishcloth
Cloth which was stained over solution of water & Alka-Seltzer tablets (side and top views)
Chemistry
Element form (Iodine): I2 + starch -------> blue
Ion form (Iodide): I- + starch --------> colorless
References:
Vitamin C Clock Reaction:
www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/demos/TickTock.html
Remove Iodine Stains from your Carpet with Club Soda:
Images taken of products incuded in the Science Kit 2009 catalog (www.scidence
Images taken of products incuded in the Science Kit 2009 catalog (www.sciencekit.com)
Product photographs taken for the 2009 Science Kit catalog (www.sciencekit.com)
Product photographs taken for the 2009 Science Kit catalog (www.sciencekit.com)
Production photographs taken for the 2009 Science Kit Catalog and CD (www.sciencekit.com)
Production photographs taken for the 2009 Science Kit Catalog and CD (www.sciencekit.com)
For Commercial usage of this image please visit:
ourdream.smugmug.com/Charity-and-Fundraisers/Newbattle-Wi...
Lee Live: Photographer
Local middle school students participate in a NCATS chromatography science experiment during the Frontiers in Science and Medicine event on Oct. 27, 2017.
Credit: National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Battelle/PNNL researchers participated in the 2nd annual Celebration of Science at John Dam Plaza in Richland. The event is festival-style, showcasing the amazing contributions of science-based industries in our community.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
PNNL staff volunteer for "Kids Outdoor Experience," including Fishing Day at the Columbia Park Fishing Pond. People of all ages who are members of Arc of the Tri-Cities were encouraged to participate.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
About a month ago my niece helped her 7 year old son with his science experiment that was too messy to do at his school - dropping a bunch of Mentos candy into a 2 liter bottle of Coke.
I was not quite prepared for the quick action (it happened really fast) so this is rather out of focus but it is still good enough to see what happened.
It was actually really cool.
It's the neighbor kid's science project that he has to bring to school tomorrow. His Mother doesnt want it anywhere near thier house so I volunteered my refrigerator to help him out. Its wrapped up real well so its not going to cause any problems but I dont want my darling to open up the package
Muse Magazine explores ideas in science, history, the arts and pie throwing.
MUSE is a science magazine, a history magazine, and an art magazine--all rolled into one! With insightful articles on topics ranging from anthropology to zoology and just about everything in between, MUSE Will captivate curious readers ages 10 and up.
MUSE magazine isn’t a collection of facts; it’s a guidebook for intellectual exploration. Nine times a year it sends kids on adventures to places such as under the sea to learn about giant squids, into the past to meet Neanderthals, and beyond the earth to visit Mars. Its articles are kid-friendly, written and designed to get kids to ask questions and think for themselves. Past features have raised questions like: Do animals think? What keeps a roller coaster on the tracks? What is the chemistry involved in the colors of fireworks? Why did the dinosaurs die?
But MUSE Magazine isn’t all serious. As Martin Gardner, author of Classic Brainteasers says, “I cannot imagine an intelligent child who would not be fascinated, entertained, amused, and enlightened by MUSE.”
Each issue is filled with engaging photographs and illustrations, cartoons, a contest, activities, Web site recommendations, and reader letters. And kids love Larry Gonick’s Muses, 9 cartoon smart alecks who inhabit the margins of the articles, providing their own brand of humor and pointed commentary.
Best of all are the many articles not only written by experts in their fields but also brimming with the enthusiasm the authors feel for their work. A perfect gift for former readers of ASK magazine or any kid interested in science, history, and the arts, MUSE magazine is 48 pages of addictive fun!
These are 1/2" 12.7mm dowels with 1/16", 1.5mm or so holes through them to anchor one end of the wire through.
DSC_0380
Tape a human hair on a laser pointer, hold it about two feet from a white surface, and measure distances between light and dark "rectangles" of diffraction pattern. Then complete the "gory" mathematics outlined in Ken Johnson's lab instructions.
References:
Detailed lab worksheet courtesy Ken Johnson (Muscatine Community College):
faculty.eicc.edu/kjohnson/labbook/physics/mdhhld.pdf
PhysicsQuest 2009:
www.physicscentral.org/experiment/physicsquest/index.cfm
Alan Yates
Z is doing a science project. She is comparing the volts put out by variouse fruits and veggies and seeing how acid level relate to volts.