Yes, I do. I am a senior early childhood major in college and I have oodles of lesson plans that have activities and projects that are math and science related that I had to create for my college courses. Feel free to contact me and I will be happy to send you copies.
2006-09-13 13:33:36
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answer #1
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answered by happy_teaching_gal 3
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check out any of the multitude of teacher websites and they all have lots of experiments to use with all ages, also check out your local library for lots of good books, my daughter used a book i bought for her at a school book fair called 1001 science experiments for young children for at least 4 years and loved every minute of it. and the most fun type of math and science projects are right in your kitchen kids tend to eat the food they fix and its the best way to show cause and effect and practice math too.
2006-09-13 14:35:41
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answer #2
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answered by TchrzPt 4
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Yes! There are tons! My little boy is only 2 but his other classmates (3+) do plenty of projects. For example for physics, they performed an egg drop. My little one came home with a flyer to us parents stating to work with our child in figuring out what could save an egg from cracking when dropped from the roof, whether it be a device of some sort or protective seal....Not only did it put the little one's mind to work but it was fun for the parents with them as well.........Chemistry has some of the easiest experiments to come up with when it comes to children....Make homemade playdough together, cooking is one of the best examples....even soda.....theres no prep there and its also a treat after you show it. When it comes to math though..... Get out Graph paper, teach them a little bit about coordinates on a plane with dots, and have them draw out designs they think are neat, then have them recreate the design on a pegboard.....(usually for ones a bit older) you can also test geometric skills by drawing out a design or shape yourself on a peice of regular printing paper, then make construction paper cut-out of different shapes (size accordingly) and have them fill in the shape (like a puzzle) they can have several different turn-outs depending on how many different shapes you use make sure they fill in the whole puzzle, not only is this fun butmakes the child feel good about themselves.......options go on forever...Google is an awesome site, as well as yahooligans.com, try those sites for even more ideas.
2006-09-13 02:31:19
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answer #3
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answered by arielchrisandjunior 2
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positioned some glue on a small foam dessert-length plate and place it the place all the youngsters can attain quite. Then supply the youngsters each and each a Q-Tip and characteristic them use the Q-information as applicators. in addition they make roll-on glue and glue pens. those are no longer glue sticks - they are quite liquid glue in basic-to-use applicators. (Glue sticks have a tendency to dry out on the crafts and don't carry for extremely long.) you will get the two at any place of work furnish keep (place of work Max, Staples, place of work Depot), and Wal-Mart consists of the glue pens. I practice in an basic college, and that i require my pupils to apply the two the roll-on glue or glue pens on initiatives to get rid of the messiness and the over-gluing issues.
2016-12-15 07:17:27
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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Go to a children's educational store (e.g., Zany Brainy) and look for some books there.
Go to your library's children section.
Get involved with a home schooling group.
2006-09-13 02:24:33
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answer #5
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answered by SPLATT 7
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