Simple Science Experiments

Young Children Can Do Easy, Fun Science Projects at Home

Child Mixing Cornstarch and Water - flickr, kitchenkam
Child Mixing Cornstarch and Water - flickr, kitchenkam
Use things you have in your home to help your children do hands-on, simple science experiments.

Scene: 8:30 Sunday night, Your House.

Your child: “Oh, by the way, Mommy, I need to do a science experiment for homework. For tomorrow.”

You: “AAAAGH!”

Don’t panic. No need to raid the hospital medical lab or even try to find an open store. You can use items already in your house to do simple science experiments with your young children.

Here are five simple projects using everyday household items that you and your child can do as science experiments or just for fun on a rainy day indoors.

Celery Roots

The celery experiment is a good lesson in how plants get water into the very tips of their leaves.

Put 8-10 drops of red food coloring in water in a jar. Cut the end off the bottom of a celery stalk, leaving the leaves at the top, and place the celery in the jar of red water. In about 12 hours, you’ll be able to see the red water has been absorbed into the veins of the stalk and the leaves.

Color Wheel in a Bowl

Watch how some materials mix together and some don’t.

Pour 1 cup milk into a bowl. Add three drops of red food coloring at the edge of the bowl at the “12 o’clock” position; add 3 drops of blue food coloring 1/3 of the way away at the “4 o’clock” position; and add 3 drops of yellow food coloring 1/3 of the way away at the “8 o’clock” position.

Be careful not to move the bowl.

Squeeze a drop of dish soap (such as Joy or Dawn) into the center of the bowl. Watch as the soap, which won’t mix with the milk, floats on top of the bowl and spreads across the surface. As it moves it grabs the food coloring. Where the colors meet they form new colors.

Creating Crystals

An experiment in solutions, liquids and solids.

Fill a jar with boiling water. Mix in borax 1 tablespoon at a time, for a total of 3 tablespoons per 1 cup of water, until it settles on the bottom of the jar and won’t dissolve. Add food coloring.

Bend a pipe cleaner into a star shape, tie it to a pencil with a piece of string, and suspend it over the jar so that the star pipe cleaner is in the borax solution but not touching the bottom or sides of the jar.

Watch as crystals form on the star. Let set overnight. In the morning, remove the star and allow it to drip dry.

Enchanted Learning has more instructions for growing crystals.

Cornstarch Suspension

A demonstration in liquids and solids.

Place 1 cup cornstarch in a bowl. Slowly stir in about ½ cup water (you may need less) until the mixture is the consistency of thick pancake batter. Add a drop of food coloring just for fun.

Cornstarch and water is a suspension – it can go from a liquid to a solid state. If you hold it in your hands and are squeezing it, shaping it, and keeping it moving, it will be a solid. If you stop moving it and hold it in your hand, allowing it to be still, it will turn liquid and run through your fingers.

Egg in a Bottle

If you have more time for your experiment, this demonstrates how hot and cool can expand and contract glass, and how vinegar can soften hard, calcium eggshells.

How can a raw egg fit into a milk bottle with a narrow top? You have to manipulate both the egg and the bottle, but it can be done! First place an egg into a bowl of vinegar and let set for about two days. The vinegar will soften the eggshell, but leave it intact.

Next, take a clean empty milk bottle and heat it in a big pot of boiling water. Carefully remove the bottle (parent help will be needed here) and place it on a counter. Hold the egg on top of the bottle. As the bottle cools, it will contract and will suck the softened egg into the opening. Source: Hunkinsexperiments.com.

Diane Laney Fitzpatrick, Photo by Tim Fitzpatrick

Diane Laney Fitzpatrick - Writer, editor, blogger and humorist

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51 Comments

Comments

Dec 4, 2008 6:03 PM
Guest :
thank you i have a last minute science experiment to hand in tommorow and that helped!... ALOT!!!
Dec 10, 2008 6:18 PM
Guest :
in school, my child did the cornstarch experiment and they loved it. they said it was so much fun!
Dec 21, 2008 1:18 PM
Guest :
cool
Jan 21, 2009 4:53 AM
Guest :
I'm sure this experiment('cornstarch suspension') will be perfect to present(for our project) in front of our class. I'm a bit of nervous, but I'm sure it would be much fun.
Feb 1, 2009 1:53 PM
Guest :
I just finish doing the egg in a bottle project with my 7yr old daughter she needed it for tomorrw thx alot
Feb 25, 2009 8:18 PM
Guest :
I LOVE THIS WEB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU S0000000 MUCH MY DAUGHTER WAS REALLY PROUD OF HER SELF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mar 23, 2009 2:01 PM
Guest :
thanks i need one so bad and u helped me thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!
Mar 26, 2009 3:48 PM
Guest :
THe experimets were awesome :) :) :) :) :)
Apr 21, 2009 5:58 PM
Guest :
Thank You so much!!!These expiraments were so cool and unique!Now my group and I will have so much fun and wont have to take a week to come up with an idea!Your site is awesome!!!
May 7, 2009 9:32 PM
Guest :
I LOVE YOU!!! YOU HAVE JUST HELPED ME WITH MY HOMEWORK!!!
May 14, 2009 7:31 AM
Guest :
OMG i heart yew<3
May 15, 2009 8:50 AM
Guest :
awwwwwwww thank you a lot
May 26, 2009 1:17 PM
Guest :
THANK YOU SO MUCH THIS HELPPED ME SO MUCH!!!!!?
Jul 19, 2009 2:52 AM
Guest :
meron ba kayong pang 4o minutes experiment without fire or flame to be done in a small classroom I am only a grade 6 student. 11 yrs. old.
Jul 20, 2009 3:53 AM
Guest :
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz(makes me sleepy)
borring...experiments don't have variables
Aug 19, 2009 3:57 AM
Guest :
interesting and easy projects
Sep 2, 2009 4:28 AM
Guest :
Hey thanks!IT helped alot!!!
Hehehe. . . .
And i had a good presentation!!!
TY!!
Sep 2, 2009 4:33 AM
Guest :
Do you have some more and hardcore?!?!?


--->Isiah@97<---
Sep 9, 2009 5:37 AM
Guest :
extremely good. i found the best of experints here as i am going to village schools to show them experiments. keep it up!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sep 19, 2009 3:31 AM
Guest :
THANKS .... IT HELPED ALOT! IHAD A SCIENCE PROJECT DUE ON MONDAY THANKS! :)
Oct 4, 2009 5:25 PM
Guest :
WOW my little sisters love science experiments and these were perfect!! im going to get my mom to buy some vinegar though because they reeeaaalllly want to do the egg in the bottle experiment. lol :)
Oct 8, 2009 2:10 AM
Guest :
wow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!it was really nice it was just amazing i could say nd de expirement was on 30th september hope i get 1st in it
Oct 11, 2009 9:07 PM
Guest :
this website is so cool now at my cousins house we make heaps of cool experiments You have helped me your website is the best website ever
Oct 14, 2009 5:28 AM
Guest :
none of these are that simple iam in 7th grade and i dont have any of these matireals! =(
Oct 15, 2009 9:28 AM
Guest :
These Experiments are pretty basic. Why not something a bit more complicated?
Oct 17, 2009 8:16 AM
Guest :
you are cool thanks alot it did help was OKay
Jan 15, 2010 4:41 AM
Guest :
DINT LIKE AT ALL. these expriments r no use for me!!!!!!!!
Feb 2, 2010 8:25 PM
Guest :
i think this a good article for kids who are doing a simple but fun science project.my daughter did the egg 1 and she won the science fair and she iz 5years old!!!!!!!!!!LOL
Feb 18, 2010 2:29 AM
Guest :
awesome!!
Feb 20, 2010 11:57 AM
Guest :
it was very helpful
thnx
Feb 23, 2010 4:55 PM
Guest :
The color wheel experiment is great! I have an experiment idea due in two days and I was fretting over an experiment that was quick, simple, and I had the supplies on hand for... now I know!
-A very thankful 7th grader-
Apr 5, 2010 4:18 PM
Guest :
what the heck this is easy
Apr 13, 2010 6:18 AM
Guest :
great help thankx keep them coming
Apr 13, 2010 11:26 PM
Guest :
Fantastic!
May 4, 2010 10:51 AM
Guest :
Awesome!!!!!!!!!!!
Jul 16, 2010 2:31 PM
Guest :
The Egg experiment is not showing the contraction and expansion of the glass, but rather the contraction and expansion of the air inside the glass bottle. This article seems to argue that its the glass that is expanding but solids just don't do that as well as gases do. As the hot air inside the bottle cools, it forms somewhat of a vacuum and sucks the egg in. If you don't want to wait two days for the vinegar, just use a hard boiled egg, it works just as good. The Starbucks frappacino bottles work great for this experiment too.
Jul 27, 2010 4:47 AM
Guest :
very nice because of this i have submitted my project
Jul 29, 2010 7:58 AM
Guest :
very cool
Aug 9, 2010 8:49 PM
Guest :
VERY NICE INDEED
Aug 23, 2010 4:08 AM
Guest :
wow!!!!!!
Sep 8, 2010 6:38 AM
Guest :
thanks alot that helped me get a n A on my project
Sep 17, 2010 5:32 AM
Guest :
These are really good experiments
Oct 20, 2010 8:44 AM
Guest :
wowww!!!!!! I cant believe
Nov 8, 2010 1:03 AM
Guest :
it's cool .... it helped me alot in our science fair
Nov 11, 2010 6:11 AM
Guest :
Thank you just help me answer a question in my project
Dec 7, 2010 5:13 PM
Guest :
I really liked the Crystal one!!!!! I have not tried it, but it seems really cool..... Have you tried it before??? I'm going to!


Kennie, 11, CAN
Jan 28, 2011 5:45 PM
Guest :
For a father with little to no science knowledge this a wonderful site!
May 28, 2011 1:47 PM
Guest :
thanks for the help (: she had so much fun!
Sep 24, 2011 8:02 PM
Guest :
this is really helpful!! thanks! its great!
Sep 25, 2011 1:58 PM
Guest :
I think this would be soooo fun for the kids even if it isn't for school. Some moms won't do this for they're children. I would. I think it's important for kids to experiment. Especiallt this way!!!!
Jan 30, 2012 4:42 PM
Guest :
thank you for helping us with such a good information!!!
51 Comments
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