By Mary Bigelow
Posted on 2008-07-14
In the ideal world, every school would have whatever materials it takes to provide quality learning experiences. But our world is not ideal and we teachers have learned to be quite ingenious.
Although the activity in the article Discovery Bottles is written for K-2, this could be adapted into a neat idea for the first day of school at other grade levels, including secondary. The author even gives us lists of themes and what to put in the bottles as well as some questions to focus the students’ observations. I was at a workshop where the presenter used these bottles as an icebreaker. Can you visualize a room full of adults shaking the bottles and trying to identify the 20 objects she had hidden in the bottles? These were ordinary water bottles filled with birdseed instead of sand. The website Discovery Bottles also has suggestions for themes for these bottles. I could see having older students create these for younger ones, too. The article Materials Repurposed also has suggestions for using ordinary materials in making manipulatives for science activities.
The author of You Can Get What You Want describes strategies for securing donations of materials and talent from the community. In addition to the sources mentioned in the article, I’d suggest the warehouses of government agencies or colleges/universities. Many of them have periodic sales of surplus or gently used equipment. I live close to our state capital, and a few of us department chairs would go on a shopping spree every summer to the warehouse. One time we really lucked out. The state had closed a medical facility, and we were able to get several cases of unused test tubes, graduated cylinders, Petri dishes, and other glassware for a total of a few dollars! We also snagged some gently used file cabinets for $5 each. However, I’d be cautious about accepting donations of used technology (I learned this the hard way). Check with you tech coordinator for any district or school guidelines.
Everybody Loves PRISM has another view of science fairs. This topic was also the theme of the December issue of Science and Children and the associated SciLinks blog.
In the February 18 SciLinks blog entry, I mentioned Project BudBurst. And in this month’s issue of S&C, the article Project BudBurst: Analyzing Data has a wonderful idea for integrating this project into classroom activities with the question “How does geography affect plant life cycles?” The article has suggestions for adapting the activity for younger students, but this could be “kicked up a notch” for secondary students, too.
As we can see in these articles every month, one of the best resources we science teachers have is each other!