April 18, 2019
By Tami G. O’Connor
By far, my students’ favorite way to review for tests and quizzes was a game we called “Keep Your Shirt On.” I found that I was able to use this game for virtually any subject and any grade level. No matter what subject, my students’ scores increased dramatically! As long as your students can read, they can use this tool.
Keep Your Shirt On was a great review game before math tests (multiplication, division, addition, subtraction or properties), Social Studies (state capitals, explorers, landforms…) and especially Science!
Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Elementary level, Middle School level, STEM | Tagged: DIY, Educational Innovations, hands-on activity, phenomenon based learning, science, STEM, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
April 5, 2019
By Marty Mathiesen
During the electricity unit in my high school physics class, I like to do an activity in which students determine the effect of having batteries placed in a series circuit and also in a parallel circuit. We explore questions such as What are the similarities? The differences? What are the advantages of each method? Do you see any patterns?
Leave a Comment » | College level, electricity, Elementary level, experiments, High School level, Middle School level | Tagged: DIY, Educational Innovations, electricity, energy, experiments, green energy, hands-on science, light, parent friendly, phenomenon based learning, phenomenon-based science, science, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
February 22, 2019
By Chris Herald
NSTA STEM Teacher Ambassador 2017
I always love when Spring arrives because we start physics topics in my eighth grade physical science class! Don’t get me wrong—my first love is chemistry and I have a Master’s degree to prove it—but there’s just something about physics in the Spring. My students delve into the topics of speed and momentum with great gusto. Two highlights? Rolling marbles down a ruler and designing their own Hot Wheels experiment. Not only are these students exploring some key physics topics, they are ALSO getting a chance to dabble in engineering: a great combination!
Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | College level, construction, Elementary level, energy, engineering, High School level, Middle School level, Physics, STEM | Tagged: construction, DIY, Educational Innovations, engineering, experiments, hands-on activity, homeschool, parent friendly, PBL, phenomenon based learning, phenomenon-based science, Physics, science, STEM, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
November 16, 2018
By Priscilla Robinson
Snowflakes! They arrive in flurries, storms and blizzards, not to mention “Winter Bomb Cyclones!” I’ve always thought the science behind snowflakes is amazing.
A snowflake begins when a tiny dust or pollen particle comes into contact with water vapor high up in Earth’s atmosphere. The water vapor coats the tiny particle and then freezes into a tiny crystal of ice. This tiny crystal will be the “seed” from which a snowflake will grow. The process is called crystallization.
Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Chemistry, College level, Earth Science, Elementary level, Middle School level | Tagged: Chemistry, crystals, DIY, Educational Innovations, fun experiments, hands-on activity, parent friendly, phenomenon based learning, phenomenon-based science, science, scientifically accurate snowflakes, snow, snow and ice polymer, snowflakes, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
September 19, 2018
STEM education (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) is a curriculum driven by problem solving, exploration, and discovery while incorporating technology and engineering into the teaching of science and mathematics.
Educational Innovations carries a number of products like astronomy and space science tools that fit perfectly into the STEM classroom. These materials promote exploratory learning, and require students to actively engage themselves to discover the solution to the situation or problem at hand.
If you have a favorite STEM experiment or product, please let us know in the comments section below!
Read the rest of this entry »
1 Comment | Elementary level, High School level, Middle School level, STEM | Tagged: awesome science experiment, DIY, Educational Innovations, electricity, energy, experiments, force and motion, fun experiments, hands-on activity, hands-on science, homeschool, kinetic energy, light, newton, Newton's First Law, Newton's Second Law, Newton's Third Law, parent friendly, phenomenon based learning, phenomenon-based science, Physics, physics demonstration apparatus, science, STEM | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti