Milk of magnesia with different fruit juices. For example with cranberry juice is turns blue.
2007-03-05 06:40:36
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answer #1
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answered by frankenberries 2
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4-5 year olds want to know why. They ask their parents why ALL THE TIME. Exploring the five sensesis fun, easy and the kids can rotate to several small activities, or can spend a week tying it all together. A table for tasting (stick to the sweet, salty, sour, and bitter it will make it easier for them to understand the difference between taste and smell later), a table for smelling (a small cloth soaked in a scent in a baggie does the trick, a tabe for seeing and one for touching. As for hearing, do it all together at the end with several different sounds of different volumes. Just help the kids associate each sense with its major organ and have fun, they will learn more that way. You can also do one sense for ten minutes a day, wear a costume (comically large) version of the organ for each sense and talk about and show examples. You can have the kids put a small sticker on or near their sense organ so they remember and it will help them to talk about it later. (There are some stickers like scratch amd sniff and fuzzy ones that can be germain as well). Hope that helps.
2007-03-05 10:27:47
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answer #2
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answered by Huggles-the-wise 5
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Have the children sit in a circle. Pass an ice cube around the circle as you play some quiet music. Children will sit anxiously waiting for their turn to hold it and pass it along. Every few minutes you stop the music and the child holding the ice will share with the group what is happening to it. Then you start the music again and it continues to go around the circle. This gives the children the opportunity to discover that ice will melt. You can then discuss why the ice melted (heat) and what we can do so that our hands will not get cold. (wear gloves) I do this lesson with my class each year and they really enjoy it.
2007-03-05 11:46:37
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Make "Oobleck" all you need is cup of cornstarch and a few table spoons of warm water. Kids LOVE feeling it. It is a solid/liquid mixture. When you let it sit in your hands it is very runny but when you start to form it, it turns solid like. Oobleck can be made after reading Bartholomew and the Oobleck by Dr. Seuss. Try it out for yourself it is a lot of fun to play with. I teach first grade and I made it to teach a lesson on solids and liquids. What ever you choose make sure it is hands on. Kids love it at that age.
2007-03-05 12:02:53
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answer #4
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answered by Kris 1
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Sand Paper Gingerbread adult males: use super sandpaper and function them hint a cookie cutter on it, decrease it out and beautify it with crayons, punch a hollow interior the the suited option and that's a Christmas Tree decoration. Popsicle Stick Stars : merely like it sounds, glue them collectively in a action picture star shape and beautify them with something obtainable (markers, paint, glitter, sequins...) use pipe cleaners to make the letters J O Y and glue them to the action picture star. Painted Orniments: locate the sparkling plastic bulbs and enable the youngsters placed a pair diverse colours of paint in it and swirl it around. Snow adult males: employing a wood or plastic skewer (or a warm glue gun) help them placed 2 or 3 styrofoam balls collectively and beautify with fabrics and different odds and ends. inspect the community craft shops, they in many circumstances have much less costly crafts that are preschool perfect. Use Oriental buying and advertising or LTD in case you have extra childrens/extra of a funds. maximum of all use your mind's eye, the youngsters will like doing elementary issues like stringing cheerios or fruit loops on string (and it will help improve thier super motor skills!!)
2016-12-18 15:51:19
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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If you have an over head projector you can make a rainbow.
You need a square plastic or glass dish that is clear. put a sheet of paper on the upper lens.set the dish on the over head projector and turn it on,it should show a rainbow on the ceiling.
Hope you have fun!
2007-03-05 09:13:22
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answer #6
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answered by Andie 2
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Trying mixing colors. Thats always fun for young children.
2007-03-07 09:08:21
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answer #7
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answered by jumba 1
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Make toothpick masts and business card sails for matchbox boats and blow them along on a sea in a washtub.
Explain the effects of winds on sails, etc.
If you want art, too, you can color the sails beforehand.
2007-03-05 06:35:51
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answer #8
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answered by nora22000 7
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you can have a bowl of icecubes and use salt to let them stick together you can make wonderfull sculptures... then experience cause and effect as it melts. You can also add foodcoloring or poor warm water over the ise and wathc it melt....
2007-03-05 14:23:09
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answer #9
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answered by yvette777 2
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Do the starch-to-sugar thing. Have them each chew on a little bit of bread or saltines and have them notice how it will taste sweet in a minute as the saliva turns the starch in the crackers to sugar. Don't let them spit on each other though. ;-)
2007-03-05 06:40:07
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answer #10
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answered by Nightlight 6
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