Listly by Elizabeth Ramirez
Class science lessons to teach children
The science movies teach kids educational topics like animals, habitats, plants, land, matter, forces, space, energy, and weather.
Use engaging videos on TED-Ed to create customized lessons. You can use, tweak, or completely redo any lesson featured on TED-Ed, or create lessons from scratch based on any video from YouTube.
Kids sometimes ask questions about the rain and what makes it rain. Here's a fun activity to learn more about rain by creating a model of rain.
· by · This modified version of a lava lamp is definitely one of our favorite cool science experiments! It's a super fun way for kids to explore the density of liquids using materials you have right in your kitchen!
Directions: Attach a balloon to the mouth of a funnel and pour the candy into the balloon. Next attach the balloon to a soda bottle. We used 12 ounce bottles for our experiment. Be careful to not let any of the candy spill into the soda while you are attaching it.
Hands-on Physics
Ok, time to get wet! Head to the fridge or your local Farmer's Market and grab some fruits and veggies -- we used a variety of small and large items (it's just more fun that way). You'll also need a large bowl or pot filled with water..
Joshua M. Sneideman examines the many ways in which energy cycles through our planet, from the sun to our food chain to electricity and beyond.
Hank takes us on a trip around the body - we follow the circulatory and respiratory systems as they deliver oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from cells, and help make it possible for our bodies to function.
This is part 5 of a 7 part hands-on unit study on anatomy of the human body. Walk through your circulatory system, create a blood model and fake movie blood, measure your heart rate, dissect a heart, and more! These lessons are geared toward 4th-5th grade level children and their siblings.
Happy Monday, wonderful people! We hope you had an awesome weekend. We celebrated birthday-style and I'm coming down from my cake-induced coma. So today, I thought I'd show you something simple we've been doing around our house lately. In our kitchen, behind out sink, sits the perfect little area for growing an herb garden.
Fun and quick way to teach students about the moon phases.
Whether you caught the common cold or came down with something much worse, have you ever wondered what is actually going on inside your body? Click here to see more videos: http://www.m301.me/lifenoggin Life Noggin is a weekly animated educational series. Whether it's science, pop culture, history or art, we explore it all and have a ton of fun doing it.
Learn about science and play games with your favorite PBS KIDS characters like Sid the Science Kid, Dinosaur Train and the Cat in the Hat!