April 4, 2017
Need help explaining the fundamentals of forces and motion to your students? Hands-on science demos to the rescue! We have a dynamic array of energy conversion products as well as an impressive collection of simple machines to demonstrate pushes and pulls… just to name a few of our many energy-related materials. Read on to hear what our customers are saying about our some of their favorite EI teaching tools.
If you have a favorite Educational Innovations product, we invite you to send us a comment below. We’d love to share your review with your fellow teachers and science lovers.
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Leave a Comment » | College level, Elementary level, energy, experiments, High School level, Middle School level, Physics | Tagged: discrepant event, Educational Innovations, energy, experiments, fun experiments, hands-on activity, homeschool, kinetic energy, newton, Newton's First Law, Newton's Second Law, Newton's Third Law, parent friendly, Physics, physics demonstration apparatus, science, STEM | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
March 31, 2017
by Nancy Foote
I’m in love with goldenrod paper. I’ve loved it for a long time. In my never-ending quest to emotionally entangle my students in the content of our science curriculum, Color-Changing Goldenrod Paper provides a long-lasting entanglement.
If you’ve never done the bloody handprint goldenrod paper demo with your students, you are truly missing out—and so are they)! This is the most engaging “engage” part of the 5 E’s I’ve ever experienced. I like to do the bloody handprint demo around Halloween, but we don’t do acid/base chemistry until February. That’s a long time to wonder, ponder and try to figure out exactly what is happening. But that’s for another blog post.
Leave a Comment » | Chemistry, College level, electricity, Elementary level, High School level, Middle School level | Tagged: discrepant event, DIY, Educational Innovations, electricity, experiments, fun experiments, goldenrod paper, hands-on activity, homeschool, parent friendly, PBL, PhBL, PhenoBL, phenomenon based learning, science, STEM, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
March 17, 2017
By Roy Bentley and Ken Crawford
You’ve probably heard the expression, “A journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single step.” That’s certainly true of Educational Innovations‘ Transparent Alternator Kit. It’s a hands-on kit that visually (and vividly) demonstrates how electricity is created—the single step that has launched humankind into the technological age! Show your students the start of this fascinating path and they will begin their own journey.
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1 Comment | College level, electricity, Elementary level, High School level, Middle School level | Tagged: DIY, Educational Innovations, electricity, hands-on activity, hydropower, parent friendly, PBL, PhBL, PhenoBL, phenomenon based learning, science, science fair project, STEM | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
March 3, 2017
by Paul Reyna
Have you ever had a science activity or demonstration that you really liked to do with your students, but then were told you could not do it anymore—or it did not fit your curriculum?
That is exactly what happened to me a few years ago.
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4 Comments | College level, Elementary level, energy, experiments, High School level, Middle School level, Physics | Tagged: acceleration, DIY, Educational Innovations, energy, experiments, fun experiments, green energy, hands-on activity, homeschool, kinetic energy, parent friendly, PBL, PhBL, PhenoBL, phenomenon based learning, science, science fair project, STEM, variables | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti
February 10, 2017
by Liz Inman
I first discovered The Private Eye Loupes when I borrowed a class set from a professor friend at the University of Kentucky. I fell in love with them and so did my biology students!
Here are some tips I discovered while using the loupes. Read the rest of this entry »
Leave a Comment » | Biology, College level, Earth Science, Elementary level, experiments, High School level, Middle School level | Tagged: Educational Innovations, hands-on activity, homeschool, magnification, parent friendly, PBL, PhBL, PhenoBL, phenomenon based learning, STEM | Permalink
Posted by Donna Giachetti