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Easy Award-Winning Science Fair Projects for Homeschoolers!

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Manage episode 346483275 series 3413944
Content provided by superchargedscience. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by superchargedscience or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
If you want your kids to do an award winning science fair project without headache or hassle, go to: www.SuperchargedScience.com/easy You'll find a video that shows you my homeschool online science program, and included is my complete set of eight science fair projects, including how to measure the speed of light with a chocolate bar, how to make a gauss accelerator, build solar vehicles, construct an underwater remote controlled vehicle, rockets, and so much more! The trouble with picking up a textbook to select your topic and doing a project listed is that they are usually finished projects - meaning that everyone knows not only the experiment but what’s going to happen. No scientist in their right mind would do a experiment if they knew the ending! You’ve got to take a different approach. Imagine your teacher just strode into class and announced that it’s nearly time for the Science Fair, and projects are due next week. You scope out the room and find Brian Brainiac inventing a new addition to the International Space Station… Corey Comet discovering a new species of octopus… and Darlene Dazzler built a transporter. Your head begins to spin like hamster wheel as you try to hit on the Ultimate Science Project that would make Einstein gape with awe. The truth is, science fair projects don’t have to be glitzy, glamorous, or even work quite right… they just have to be yours. And they need to be science experiments, not jazzed-up science reports masquerading as projects. A science experiment is a simple question you want an answer to, such as:• “Do later bedtimes really make you sleep better?”• “Does eating high-sugar foods before bedtime make your dreams more wild?”• “How many balloons will lift a kid into the air?”• “What kind of grass needs to be mowed the least?” A science report are questions that don’t require any real testing on your part - all you have to do is research to get the answer. Topics like: What is acid rain? What is the sun made of? How does a power plant work? How does the human body work? Is overeating bad for you? We’ve seen reports win local school science fairs, but they don’t make it into the big time regional or national competition. And they aren’t nearly as much fun as doing your own experiment. Here is the basic recipe for science fair projects across the globe:The Scientific Method:1. Ask a question/Think of an idea2. Do background research (if possible)3. Construct hypothesis/Plan your experiment4. Test with an experiment (This is the fun part, and you can do steps 4 & 5 together)5. Gather, collect, and record your data and analyze the results6. Does the hypothesis and results match? If not, go back to step 3.7. Reach a conclusion Tips and Tricks for Great Experiments: 1. Repeat good results. If you get the result you’re after, then do the experiment again to make sure you can duplicate what happened. And again. And again. 2. Remove yourself. After you’ve listened to music during a test, ask your friends to do the same thing. This checks to make sure this idea you're testing can work for everyone. 3. End with recommendations. This is a personal favorite, not a requirement, but I always like to report on the things I would do if I were to continue experimenting. You can easily make three, four, or even five future experiments that you would consider doing that would further refine your conclusion by drawing on the results you found and the experience you gained. If you can produce consistent results for not just yourself, but for the whole class, and not only that but plans for future areas of study and relate it back to why this was important enough to study in the first place, now you’ve got an experiment worthy of a blue ribbon. These are the key areas you need to cover for an outstanding science fair project. Remember, you don’t need a Nobel-prize winning project to make headl
  continue reading

101 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 346483275 series 3413944
Content provided by superchargedscience. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by superchargedscience or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
If you want your kids to do an award winning science fair project without headache or hassle, go to: www.SuperchargedScience.com/easy You'll find a video that shows you my homeschool online science program, and included is my complete set of eight science fair projects, including how to measure the speed of light with a chocolate bar, how to make a gauss accelerator, build solar vehicles, construct an underwater remote controlled vehicle, rockets, and so much more! The trouble with picking up a textbook to select your topic and doing a project listed is that they are usually finished projects - meaning that everyone knows not only the experiment but what’s going to happen. No scientist in their right mind would do a experiment if they knew the ending! You’ve got to take a different approach. Imagine your teacher just strode into class and announced that it’s nearly time for the Science Fair, and projects are due next week. You scope out the room and find Brian Brainiac inventing a new addition to the International Space Station… Corey Comet discovering a new species of octopus… and Darlene Dazzler built a transporter. Your head begins to spin like hamster wheel as you try to hit on the Ultimate Science Project that would make Einstein gape with awe. The truth is, science fair projects don’t have to be glitzy, glamorous, or even work quite right… they just have to be yours. And they need to be science experiments, not jazzed-up science reports masquerading as projects. A science experiment is a simple question you want an answer to, such as:• “Do later bedtimes really make you sleep better?”• “Does eating high-sugar foods before bedtime make your dreams more wild?”• “How many balloons will lift a kid into the air?”• “What kind of grass needs to be mowed the least?” A science report are questions that don’t require any real testing on your part - all you have to do is research to get the answer. Topics like: What is acid rain? What is the sun made of? How does a power plant work? How does the human body work? Is overeating bad for you? We’ve seen reports win local school science fairs, but they don’t make it into the big time regional or national competition. And they aren’t nearly as much fun as doing your own experiment. Here is the basic recipe for science fair projects across the globe:The Scientific Method:1. Ask a question/Think of an idea2. Do background research (if possible)3. Construct hypothesis/Plan your experiment4. Test with an experiment (This is the fun part, and you can do steps 4 & 5 together)5. Gather, collect, and record your data and analyze the results6. Does the hypothesis and results match? If not, go back to step 3.7. Reach a conclusion Tips and Tricks for Great Experiments: 1. Repeat good results. If you get the result you’re after, then do the experiment again to make sure you can duplicate what happened. And again. And again. 2. Remove yourself. After you’ve listened to music during a test, ask your friends to do the same thing. This checks to make sure this idea you're testing can work for everyone. 3. End with recommendations. This is a personal favorite, not a requirement, but I always like to report on the things I would do if I were to continue experimenting. You can easily make three, four, or even five future experiments that you would consider doing that would further refine your conclusion by drawing on the results you found and the experience you gained. If you can produce consistent results for not just yourself, but for the whole class, and not only that but plans for future areas of study and relate it back to why this was important enough to study in the first place, now you’ve got an experiment worthy of a blue ribbon. These are the key areas you need to cover for an outstanding science fair project. Remember, you don’t need a Nobel-prize winning project to make headl
  continue reading

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