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Energy Lab for Kids: 40 Exciting Experiments to Explore, Create, Harness, and Unleash Energy
Product Information
▼▲| Title: Energy Lab for Kids: 40 Exciting Experiments to Explore, Create, Harness, and Unleash Energy By: Emily Hawbacker Format: Paperback Number of Pages: 144 Vendor: Quarry Books | Publication Date: 2017 Weight: 14 ounces ISBN: 1631592505 ISBN-13: 9781631592508 Stock No: WW592508 |
Publisher's Description
▼▲Energy Lab for Kids offers 40 discovery-filled and thought-provoking energy projects by Emily Hawbaker, a science educator from the NEED (National Energy Education Development) projectwith a foreword by Liz Lee Heinecke, author of Kitchen Science Lab for Kids. Using supplies that you can find around the house or in the grocery store, these exciting projects let you observe, explore, discover, and get energized!
We hear about energy on the news, we use it every day, and sometimes we're told we have too much of it. But what is energypotential, kinetic, chemical, radiant, and thermal? The lab activities in this book will let you explore almost everything about energywhat it is, how we find it, how we use it, and how we can save it.
Uniting this collection of science experiments for the kitchen, backyard, or classroom is the goal to explore and discover real energy solutions. The chapters cross all categoriesfrom steam, electricity, and chemical reactions, to water, solar, and wind powerallowing kids to compare and test the different sources and to discover their strengths and failings. Why is one source of energy is more efficient for a one situation but not for another? Why might two energy sources combined work better than a single source? Which sources are renewable? Projects are geared to understanding actual issues in the news today. With an emphasis on inventive exploration, you'll discover that creativity leads to breakthroughs.
Learn about:
- chemical, radiant, and thermal energy by activating a glow stick and watching it get brighter in hot water.
- viscosity by sucking soda and chocolate syrup up an "oil pipeline" made from straws.
- solar energy by melting s'mores in a pizza box solar oven.
- wind power by lifting paperclips with a wind turbine made from a cup, paper, tape, and straw.
- calories by burning cheese puffs (and other food) in a homemade calorimeter.
The popular Lab for Kids series features a growing list of books that share hands-on activities and projects on a wide host of topics, including art, astronomy, clay, geology, math, and even how to create your own circusall authored by established experts in their fields. Each lab contains a complete materials list, clear step-by-step photographs of the process, as well as finished samples. The labs can be used as singular projects or as part of a yearlong curriculum of experiential learning. The activities are open-ended, designed to be explored over and over, often with different results. Geared toward being taught or guided by adults, they are enriching for a range of ages and skill levels. Gain firsthand knowledge on your favorite topic with Lab for Kids.
Author Bio
▼▲Editorial Reviews
▼▲"The NEED Project continues to produce excellent resources for teachers. This book has an excellent variety of energy experiments. The labs are divided up into five units, making it easier to find the energy lab you need for your curriculum. The labs are easy to follow, with step by step color photos. Each lab gives specific examples as to how that specific energy concept relates to students' everyday life. The resource section for teachers helps explain the science behind each lab in the "Energy Explained" section. I also like how the book gives ideas on how to incorporate more technology into students' learning. I look forward to doing the experiments from this book with my students." - National Science Teachers Association Recommends
"Discover the amazing ways in which chocolate syrup, slinkies, and cheese curls can explain everything from solar power to sound waves and burning calories in Emily Hawbakers Energy Lab for Kids. Using just a few simple tools and everyday items, experiments focus on the production of all types of energy, the importance of conservation, working as a team and, of course, having fun, all in sixty minutes or less." - ForeWord Reviews
"Color photographs show children taking part in 40 activities involving household objects: readers can simulate drilling for oil using chocolate syrup and straws, create a "biomass bag" with leftover food and yeast, build a generator, and construct a solar cooker using a pizza box, aluminum foil, and plastic wrap. Hawbaker clearly describes the implications of each activity, and sidebars lend perspective on how the labs relate to science...Its a straightforward guide to energy principles that encourages collaboration and active exploration." Publishers Weekly
"a great way for children and their parents to bond over something that's both fun and practical"
"Throughout the book Hawbaker does an excellent job of combining an active, visually engaging experiment with real-world learning on energy, explaining how it works and how we can explore and exploit it to enrich our world"How It Works magazine
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