Glass is made up of tiny grains of the purest sand where heat is added so that it becomes holt and molten or in other words like a liquid. Once the sand becomes liquified it can then be turned into glass.
Since you most likely will not have access to sand and high heat, let's get creative with the materials you do have access too! Just like real glass, sugar glass is made from tiny opaque particles.
Materials Needed:
• ½ cup superfine sugar
• 40ml of corn syrup
• 60ml of water
• Pinch of cream of tartar
• Butter or cooking oil
• Baking paper
• Cooking thermometer
• Baking tray
Method:
Materials Needed:
3+ Eggs
3+ Jars
Vinegar
Measuring Tape, Paper and Pencil
Plastic table cloths.
1. Put one egg in one jar. Do this with all your eggs
2. Cover with vinegar and leave it for a minimum of 24 hours (up to 3 days)
3. Once the shell has dissolved and the egg looks translucent, it is ready to be removed.
4. Rinse off with cool water.
5. Now it’s time to Test!
a. Make a Chart on your paper that records your Bounce Test adding a column for “Drop Height,” a column for “Hypothesis”, and a column for “Drop Outcome”
b. Place table clothes on ground where the test will be conducted
c. Start at 6 inches from the ground all the way up to as high as you can (safely!!)
d. Start at the lowest height. Guess and record what you think will happen. Drop the egg. Record if it bounced or if it broke
e. Continue dropping the egg at higher heights and record your findings?
6. CHALLENGE – Can you bounce it off one object to make it land in another?
How It Works:
The egg becomes bouncy as a result of a chemical reaction between the eggshell and the vinegar. The eggshell of a chicken egg is made of calcium carbonate, and vinegar is a weak acid. If you’ve ever mixed baking soda and vinegar together, you know the violent reaction that results. The calcium carbonate that makes up the eggshell will react with the vinegar the same way baking soda reacts with vinegar (just a lot less violently). You know the vinegar and calcium carbonate of the eggshell are reacting because of the small bubbles that form around the egg when it is placed in the vinegar. These small bubbles are carbon dioxide gas, which are the result of the reaction between calcium carbonate and vinegar.
Once the shell of the egg is gone, all that is left covering the egg is a thin membrane. The vinegar begins working on the egg’s membrane. The membrane of a chicken egg is selectively permeable. The vinegar is able to cross the selectively permeable membrane of the egg through osmosis. The vinegar toughens up the membrane of the egg making it bouncy!
The selectively permeable membrane of the egg means that some substances can pass through the membrane while others cannot.
Osmosis is the diffusion of solvent molecules through a selectively permeable membrane.
Reference: https://www.generationgenius.com/activities/earths-orbit-and-rotation-activity-for-kids/
A race that requires concentration, balance, and persistence! Take this race outdoors or create space in your living area for a fun, perhaps messy, race!
All that is needed for this activity are, an egg, a spoon, and concentration! But don’t forget to have fun!
Family Projects can be fun, but they also provide opportunities to bond, to create unity within a team, and provide many learning opportunities. Creating a Family cookbook can provide children with valuable family history and storytelling that they can pass on for generations to come. It also supports literacy and numeracy learning, scientific understanding, and creative development.
Materials Needed:
Paper/Cardstock, Markers/Camera/Magazine, Printer, Binder, Paper Sleeves
Getting Started:
1. Have a family meeting and discuss your favourite recipes
2. Write down ingredients and instructions to each meal on an individual piece of paper
3. Add pictures by drawing, taking photos, or cutting out of magazines. Decorate each page.
4. Don’t forget to think of a fun Title and Decorate a Title Page
5. Dedicate one day a week to do have a family cooking project to continue to add to the book
a. Take a Picture of the family cooking together, add it to the recipe in your new cookbook
Make copies and distribute them to friends and family on holidays!