There are so many choices --
Look at the website listed and let him choose something he finds interesting.
It should be someting that he can do, and that does have some chalenge to it -- this helps develop pride, confidence and excitment.
2007-01-27 06:53:06
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answer #1
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answered by bmore 1 2
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Many of the above ideas are excellent. I always recommend this as something fun and easy...
Go to the grocery store and pick a product, like detergent. Buy 2 or 3 and then conduct expereiments to see which one gets grass stains out the bes tor soemthing like that. Which paper towel is most absorbant? Which bread lasts longest without molding? Which choc. chip cookie has the most chips? Which furniture polish leaves the brightest shine? Which brand of tennis or golf ball or any other ball bounces best (which would equate to flying further when hit)?
Some ideas for you. Good luck.
2007-01-27 01:44:13
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answer #2
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answered by baldisbeautiful 5
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We did 4 science fair projects for my son right from 3rd grade upto 6th grade now. Upto, 6th grade our township doesn't evaluate and award the price. They consider the students ability to learn science through experiments. So, do not worry about the outcomes of the project effort. But you can take different areas for learning each year. We did, magnetism (different materials and thier magnetic qualities), lights (about short and long sights), Electricity (home grown circuit board to explain the serail and parallel circuits), and the latest one, water quality in our township (bought the water testing strips, spent 150 dollars). These are my suggestion. Please evaluate yourself and take your own decisions.
2007-01-27 01:51:51
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answer #3
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answered by Uday 2
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RE: eighth grade technology honest undertaking...Any recommendations? i'm in the eighth grade am being compelled to take part in technology honest. the class isn't substantial yet eighth grade is actual technology so as that ought to be fantastic. the difficulty fact is due in an afternoon or 2 and that i'm thoroughly caught on what to do. final year I did an hassle-free undertaking on laundry...
2016-09-28 01:31:56
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answer #4
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answered by schiraldi 4
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well i know a really good topic, you could study the amount of aluminum in every-day products that are around the house and that you use quite a lot. if you want to i know a lot of good things that you can do with baking soda. (cause its a cleaning product.) put some baking soda in a stained glass fill it with water and then wait for a couple of hours if you dump the water out and it's clean then viola!
2007-01-27 04:28:00
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answer #5
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answered by ? 3
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I have a fifth grade science project to and my title was Which paper towel is strongest when it is wet?
2007-01-27 01:37:25
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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http://www.all-science-fair-projects.com/
http://www.ipl.org/div/projectguide/http://school.discovery.com/sciencefaircentral/
http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/fair.html
http://www.sciencebuddies.org/mentoring/Arotation3_science-fairs.shtml
http://www.scienceproject.com/
http://www.terimore.com/
Good luck - I hope it's not due the beginning of February. A good science fair project takes quite a bit of time, especially if experiments and comparisons are involved.
2007-01-27 01:38:00
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answer #7
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answered by lou53053 5
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fill a glass tumbler to the brim (100 to 200 ml capacity),add sugar slowly to the water & dissolve. - to prove there is inter molecular space. finally enjoy the drink
2007-01-27 02:46:22
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answer #8
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answered by charlatan 7
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Do a project on how to clean pennies w/ vinegar and ketchup
2007-01-27 01:41:43
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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How about a colourful display of tropical fish and coral reefs?
2007-01-27 01:50:19
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answer #10
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answered by citrus punch 4
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