Getting Your Whole Family Involved in Science Fairs

Get Your  Family Into Science Fairs

If your local science fair hasn’t happened yet, it’s likely to be right around the corner. More and more schools are making participation mandatory, and giving a test grade for the project. I think requiring participation is a great idea, causing many who would never compete, to at least start to understand the process of discovery.

Every science fair project has to follow a particular process; the first is always a hypothesis. With such a large name, your younger kids will no doubt wrinkle their noses, but it’s just a forerunning thought about what they expect to happen and why during their experiment. Asking these kinds of questions ultimately causes a child to start thinking ahead with a part of their brain that’s not finished developing until their early twenties. That’s one reason science fair projects should involve the whole family on some level.

I’m not suggesting that the whole family do one project; instead, I’m suggesting that every age sibling be exposed to the line of reasoning used for each child’s separate project. Different ages and different thought processes cause each to see something in the other’s projects they may not have otherwise gathered.

Science Fair Project Choices

There are so many choices out there! Inevitably your child will either look online for some kit to purchase or work on something that they already have an interest in. They may decide to do what their brother or sister did last year, and that’s okay. Do some looking, too, but make sure your ideas aren’t running the show. Here’s where it’s nice to have sibling involvement. You can better manage from afar, with the majority of the conclusions being discovered independently. Of course, depending on the risk factors, they may need you to be more involved! Don’t let them get hurt, by any means (this means you, daredevil dads!).

Affordable Science Fair Project Ideas

Making science interesting for your family is just good sense. Science projects don’t have to cost much if you’re creative. To name a few:

  • The fastest paper airplane. This should include different weight distributions like paper clips or Popsicle sticks. Dig deep, you’ll enjoy it!
  • Sugar crystals are my personal favorite. When kids work in the kitchen they learn science, math, and reading, so I encourage something in the kitchen for students of every age. This project has to do with food coloring, the length of time cooked, and the temperature used to make a chemical reaction. This is pretty frequently suggested in the info packs from school.
  • Strongest nail color. No kidding, my daughter did this by hot gluing fake fingernails to Popsicle sticks, painting each with a different brand of nail polish, and then subjecting them to daily tasks! She completed her idea in the 6th grade, and she learned a lot. It interested her friends and her little sister!

Many educational hobbies are discovered when you begin to research what topics to test.
Check back often because I’m going into more detail in future posts. Let me know what creative things you’ve been trying.