Get crafty and build your own telescope to look for birds, treetops, and even stars in the night sky. Trish doesn't wash her hands all day and then visits a scientist to look at the microbes she's collected. What do you think they found? Mia's trying to take the perfect photograph, so she's learning about light for some top tips!
Have you got freckles? Learn everything you need to know about freshwater ecosystems with this collection of videos and activities! Choose one of the nine dinosaur jigsaw puzzles to complete. Can you use fans, electric circuits and other tools to guide a ball into the goal?
Jessi explains why it is we feel bad when we don't get enough sleep. Watch the Earth from a live feed of a camera mounted on the international space station! Learn how to make your own lava lamp using only water, oil and heartburn tablets! Use your phones camera to identify stars, constellations and satellites in the sky! Join Bitz and Bob as they teach you how to make a paper parachute! Watch a runner bean seed grow roots, shoots and eventually seed pods! This app is full of information, images, games and activities to teach you all about volcanoes!
How many drops of water can you fit on a penny without it spilling over? See how you can bend the water coming out of a tap using only a plastic comb! What external adaptations do pandas have for their unique diet?
See how gravity affects the blood flow around your body. Take a guided tour of Mars or explore the features of the planet yourself! In this video Bitz and Bob show you how to make a pinwheel. Watch it spin in the wind! Can you engineer a path to get the picnic ingredients to the invention engine?
Do you know how to tell the difference between solids, liquids and gases? A digital information book for primary school age children. Use code to programme Anna and Elsa to ice skate and make patterns in the ice. Do you know how planets compare in size and position in space?
Create your own rover or orbiter and launch it into space! Put all kinds of materials into this special testing machine and discover its properties! Work with the inventioneers to solve problems and help the character in need! Join Dan as he explores the latest science stories with special guests and experts.
Can you sort the animals so they are given the right food? Learn the coding basics and bring the minecraft world to life! Explore the science of music with this collection of fun hands-on experiments. A collection of fun, practical science activities for children.
Learn all about the seasons, continents, volcanoes, oceans and much more! What does it mean when we describe an animal as cold-blooded?
Learn about how parachutes work and then make your own! Watch the black ink from a pen separate into many different colours! Plenty of games, videos, puzzles, songs, and fun things to make all around the topic of space! Programme A. These podcasts are just a few minutes long but are packed full of interesting science facts! Use mirrors and glass blocks to direct light and unlock new puzzles.
Collaborate with others to create new and exciting design ideas! Watch this video and see if you can spot the animals camouflaged in the pictures! Find out about Mary Anning, a famous fossil collector who lived hundreds of years ago. The belly button forms just a few weeks after you are born but why do we have them?
Learn some of the basics of coding using the characters from the movie Moana. CBeebies videos, games, stories, activities and quizzes to explore the night sky. Instructions to make an origami butterfly and to make a moth hotel. Explore the Earth's moon from all angles with this detailed simulation! See the dangers of approaching a powerful source of electricity!
Learn how to make a helter skelter slide using paper plates and cardboard tubes! See how you can help scientists monitor and protect the environment! Download a leaf identification sheet to find out more about the trees around you.
Curiosity Corner — answering questions about the brain. Help the team at Keadby2 power station get ready for work! I have always had a passion for toys and games, and I have many fond memories of playing yard and board games with my friends and family growing up — before the days of playing on the internet! These games taught be valuable coordination and analytical skills, and demonstrating concepts in a fun and exciting way, an outlook which I appreciated and I built on through my years of teacher training.
View all post by Jason Walker Website. Your email address will not be published. More advanced students can compare the potential energy graphs for neon, argon, oxygen, and water -- which all have different interaction potential.
See Related Materials for links to complete lesson plans developed by teachers to accompany "States of Matter" simulation. Please note that this resource requires Java Applet Plug-in. Currently 0. Post a new comment on this item.
Standards 40 Next Generation Science Standards Matter and Its Interactions MS-PS1 Students who demonstrate understanding can: Develop a model that predicts and describes changes in particle motion, temperature, and state of a pure substance when thermal energy is added or removed. Students who demonstrate understanding can: Develop a model to describe that when the arrangement of objects interacting at a distance changes, different amounts of potential energy are stored in the system.
Students who demonstrate understanding can: Develop and use models to illustrate that energy at the macroscopic scale can be accounted for as either motions of particles or energy stored in fields.
HS-PS Plan and conduct an investigation to provide evidence that the transfer of thermal energy when two components of different temperature are combined within a closed system results in a more uniform energy distribution among the components in the system second law of thermodynamics. Structure and Properties of Matter PS1. A Gases and liquids are made of molecules or inert atoms that are moving about relative to each other.
In a solid, atoms are closely spaced and may vibrate in position but do not change relative locations.
Types of Interactions PS2. B Attraction and repulsion between electric charges at the atomic scale explain the structure, properties, and transformations of matter, as well as the contact forces between material objects. Definitions of Energy PS3. A The temperature of a system is proportional to the average internal kinetic energy and potential energy per atom or molecule whichever is the appropriate building block for the system's material.
The details of that relationship depend on the type of atom or molecule and the interactions among the atoms in the material. Temperature is not a direct measure of a system's total thermal energy. Well, we can't make that happen, but you can play a game that will win you lots of fake money if you know the answers to the states of matter questions.
Play the States of Matter Millionaire Game. Play this game of hangman with words about matter. Awesome simulation about states of matter from The University of Colorado.
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