Hi, everyone,
For the first time, there will be area-wide science festival that has a number of free programs for families and adults from Oct 29-November 5. This is a coordinated effort between a ton of organizations! I'm really excited about it, and I hope to see of you out there as well. Here's the link to the website:
http://www.bayareascience.org/
Go Science Education!
Ms. Jenkins
Friday, October 28, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
In Science Class . . . Week of 10/24
This week, 4/5 students will be continuing their study of chemical reactions. Last week, we learned that chemical reactions occur when two or more substances mix together and their atoms rearrange into new configurations (producing new substances). This week, we will look more closely at the combination of calcium chloride, water and baking soda and use a indicator (red cabbage juice) that will react to create a number of color changes. On Thursday, I'll be at a science training, so students will be watching a Bill Nye video on chemical reactions with the substitute.
- What kind of evidence tells you that a chemical reaction has taken place? (production of gas, color change, temperature change)
- What are some examples of fast chemical reactions? (Anything burning is a chemical reaction)
- What are some examples of changes that are not chemical reactions? (Phase changes, like melting or boiling)
Friday, October 14, 2011
In Science Class . . . Week of 10/10
This week in science, we have been looking at chemical reactions! During a chemical reaction, a mixture of chemicals changes to produce new substances. We did several chemical reactions on Thursday and observed changes. The evidence we saw of a chemical reaction included a color change, a temperature change and/or production of a gas (bubbles). (A common chemical reaction that produces a gas is mixing baking soda and vinegar. )
Key questions:
Key questions:
- What happens in a chemical reaction? (The atoms rearrange to form something new).
- What are common pieces of evidence for chemical reactions? (Change in color, change in temperature, bubbles)
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
In Science Class . . . Week of 10/3
This week, we'll be continuing to learn about saturation. For each solid that is mixed with water, there is a point in which the water cannot hold any more of the solid. This point differs based on what the solid is. Last week, we saturated a salt solution. Today, we'll be working with Epsom salt. Both dissolve in water, but have different amounts before reaching saturation. On Thursday, we'll identify a mystery substance based on its saturation point.
Key questions:
Key questions:
- What is saturation? How did you know that your solution was saturated? (No more solid could dissolve no matter how hard we shook the bottle of water and the solid remained visible.)
- How did Epsom salt's saturation point differ from regular salt? (About 14 grams of salt saturate 50 ml of water, but 48 grams of Epsom salt are needed to saturate the same amount of water. Therefore, Epsom salt has a higher solubility than regular salt.)
- What was the mystery substance? How did you identify it?
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