Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: MICHEL
Quick Words:
hawley-family-science-night
Full Text:
Family Science Night At Hawley School
(with cuts)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
Third graders at Hawley School know what happens when you pile pennies on a
little aluminum foil boat. It sinks.
But how many pennies can you pile on your boat before it sinks?
Students and parents experimented with the activity at the Family Science
Night on Wednesday, May 13.
Some thought that if the boat was made wider, the pennies could be spread out.
At first it seemed to be working, then a few pennies later, the sides crumpled
in and it sank.
Maybe you could make the sides thicker, but then you would use up more foil,
and your boat would be small. It would lack surface area. When tried, it sank
with only a few pennies.
What about if you made a round boat, or a super long and skinny one?
Intriguing questions led to wet little fingers and more questions, as third
graders and their parents molded little boats, piled on pennies, and tried to
figure out what would lead to success.
This was all part of a program developed by math/science specialist Debbie
Cowden and third-grade teacher Lil Martenson, both of Hawley School, to
involve parents in the kind of scientific thinking that their children are
learning.
Over the year, children showed parents the skills they had gained with the
scientific process: measuring, hypothesizing, communicating, observing,
predicting, and inferring at a series of stations setup throughout the
auditorium.
In one station, students played with pendulums. They measured the pendulum
swing with various lengths of string in order to understand how they could
control relevant variables.
Fourteen fifth graders manned the science stations that were visited by about
150 people that evening.
Mrs Cowden said it was "thrilling to see parents working through these science
activities with their kids, and the fifth graders did a great job."
Mrs Cowden is reviewing the most popular science activities -- the pennies in
the boats, the complex classification of small things, and the pendulums -- to
come up with more great activities for next year's family science night.
