Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Experiments of Their Own

The children have been designing and running experiments of their own based on questions that arose during our class experiment (which is far from over, by the way). They made careful plans and helped each other think critically about what might need to be changed to help their experiment be more valid. Ideas about treating all of the perti dishes in one experiment the same, wiping the swab for the same amount of time on each dish, deciding a standard procedure for various phases of the experiment all came up during our discussions. Mostly I love the that children are helping to bring these ideas to light rather than following directions their teacher gave them because their teacher said so. They are thinking carefully about how to make their experiments as valid as possible because THEY care.

 
 
Questions being tested included
 
Is dirt germy?
 
Are we more germy at different times of day?
 
Does hand sanitizing work?
 
How clean are tap water, rain water, creek water and condensation?
 
Does the length of time of hand washing influence the results?
 
 



Wednesday, October 16, 2013

See for yourself!

I decided to bring petri dishes into the classroom for the children to experiment with. I wanted to give more visibility to the invisible world of germs (and distract them from wanting to study animals for the millions year in a row for science). Turns out they LOVE the dishes and are anxious to test all sorts of things.

To kick things off and get the children used to using the materials and thinking carefully through the experiment process, I started by asking them to help plan an experiment that would help us determine if hand washing really works.
 
Some initial considerations the children thought of to make our experiment more reliable were
  • Needing a comparison-- we need to know what the hand was like before washing in order to know if washing really made any difference (Lila told us that was called a control test, which she had seen on Myth Busters)
  • The regular hand and the clean hand needed to be from the same person. Different people have different germs, so it wouldn't be a fair comparison. You need to know what THAT person's hand was like before and what THAT person's hand was like afterwards.
  • We would want to test the regular hand and the washed had close together to limit exposure to extra germs in between.
  • We would need to wash for 20 seconds (the recommended hand washing time)
  • The test subject did not touch the faucet, soap dispenser, doors etc. to avoid extra contamination (though later it was questioned if these were necessary since in real life you would actually touch all of these things when washing your hands).
 
We tested and waited for about a week for things to start growing in our dish. It was very fun to watch the children come back from the long weekend to see the newly visible growth.
 
"If you look close, you can see little hairs!"
 
"They look like grey dandelions!"
 
"Wait! The clean is dirtier than the dirty!!!!!"
 
See for yourself! The results are surprising!
 


* Note: The original science chapter I was reading in the Best Practices book shared this experiment. The author said he started off every year with this test and that the results were almost always this way with the washed had growing more than the dirty hand. I wasn't sure our test would be so surprising, but it turned out to fit with the author's experience. The discrepant event  has the children completely baffled; it has them RIGHT where I want them to be. Now they will get to put their brains to the test to solve the mystery. (P.S. I did run the experiment exactly as they had planned. No foul play by the teacher to trick them)

How can that be? Why does everyone want us to wash our hands? Why do doctors wash their hands before surgery? Should we stop washing our hands? Did something go wrong?

"I think you must have mixed up the dishes!"
"You probably accidentally used the same swab twice."
"I think it matters how long you wash."
"Maybe the soap is dirty. I don't think the soap is sterile."
"What if waving her hands in the air after she washed actually gathered more germs on her hands?"
"Maybe the dirt in the dirty dish keeps the germs from reaching the agar, so it can't grow as well."

Some children seem convinced that they should just never wash their hands again. Others feel like there is a problem and we need to get to the bottom of it.
"We may never know."
"We should leave this to the scientists."
"I think we are going to have to make a list of things we think could have gone wrong and test to rule each thing out."

Monday, October 7, 2013

Trout Tank: First Visit

We went over to the middle school to check out the trout tank for the first time. We will be back soon because the eggs are supposed to hatch!

http://mssciencessp.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-trout-eggs-have-arrived-they-are-so.html#comment-form

"No offense to the trout, but they look like what I imagine a germ to look like!"

"I was surprised how SMALL they were!"

"They looked like eyeballs."

"I did not think there were going to be THAT many eggs."

"I thought there were going to be MORE!"

"More than 200!?!"

"They were really cute! But I felt really bad for the rotting ones."

"Me too. But at least in the tank they have a much better survival rate."

"If our eggs match the usual results, we should have about .... 50 eggs hatch!"

"I want to see them hatch!"

"What will the actual survival rate be? Will it be more than 50? Less than 50?"

"I hope the non-fungus eggs survive. I hope no more get fungus."

"Once you get fungus, can you get rid of it? Is there medicine?"