Thursday, November 8, 2012

Oroville High teens share science fun with fourth-graders


Denstity Columns

This post was created from an article that was originally published in the Mercury Register by  Barbara Arrigoni  


OROVILLE — Chemical reactions, density and outer space were translated into hands-on fun Friday for 33 grade-school children with the help of Oroville High School's teenage Science Ambassadors.


Dry Ice Bubbles
For more than two hours, Allen Kreitzer's students made bouncy balls out of glue, blew bubbles from a mixture of dry ice and liquids, and used dry ice to inflate balloons.
They also learned about space, particularly supernovas, which they painted on silk squares.



Density of Bubbles vs Dry Ice 














Leading the class were Oroville High School chemistry teacher Shane Johnston and the high school's student club, Science Ambassadors.In its fourth year, the club goes to different schools and grade levels to help make science more fun and interesting.


Crystal Ball



Learning Moment

Conservation of Mass

Johnston said recently the Science Ambassadors got a grant from the Lassen Foundation that paid for the Ambassadors to go to Lassen Volcanic National Park and take 15 teens there."The kids are going to take what they learned at the park and build a teaching, hands-on activity to do with elementary school kids," he said.


Creating rubber balls














Three of the Science Ambassadors now want to become teachers, after teaching younger students."We're seeing a lot of benefits from this program," he added.
For Kreitzer's students, the focus was on learning about density, chemical reactions and space.





The space section of the class involved teaching the children about stars and supernovas, as well as a painting activity.
Before painting, Oroville High School science chairman Rich Hogan told the children that the project had never been taught to elementary students before.
Johnston said one of the purposes about having the children paint supernovas is to get them thinking about what each layer of the stars are and what the different colors mean.


what do you know about space?

silk painting supernovas


















A supernova is a star, bigger than the sun, that explodes at the end of its life. Johnston told the class that although people generally can't see the colors in a supernova, colors and swirling patterns have been recorded through computer technology.
Given printouts of different supernovas, which showed a wide array of patterns and colors, the students picked the example they wanted.Several steps were involved in the process. First they made swirls on the silk with a substance called resist-all, which separates the colors of the dye.



After drying the resist-all, the children then painted in blues, pinks, greens, yellows and other colors with dye.With the 33 students separated into groups, two Science Ambassadors were assigned to help each group.Some of the children worked quietly, but many chattered and showed off their work, and all appeared to have a good time.


Kreitzer has had the Science Ambassadors in the classroom before, and indicated how pleased he was to have the teens return."The best part about this is they're doing experiments that aren't available to do in elementary school," Kreitzer said. "It gets my kids excited about science."
Staff writer Barbara Arrigoni can be reached at 533-3136, barrigoni@orovillemr.com, or on Twitter @OMRBarbara.


No comments:

Post a Comment