Test, answer, or show?
Your science fair project may do one of three things:- Test an idea (or hypothesis.)
- Answer a question.
- Show how nature works.
Topic ideas:
These are just the
beginning of ideas. Ask a parent, teacher, or other adult to help you
research the topic and find out how to do a science fair project about
it.
- Measure the cloud cover in the sky.
- Test the effect of a mild acid on sea shells. (Test lemon juice or vinegar, for example.)
- Demonstrate how Earth's water cycle creates fresh drinking water from sea water.
- Investigate the greenhouse effect outdoors, over one week using two thermometers, two shallow open boxes lined with soil, with one covered tightly with clear plastic wrap, and a notebook for taking temperature readings through the day and night. Or use a different, but well-controlled method of comparison.
- Make a do-it-yourself rain gauge. Measure the rainfall during one storm or over several days.
- Make a cloud in a bottle.
- Demonstrate why the equator is warmer than other parts of Earth (unequal heating of Earth's surface) using a flashlight, graph paper, a ruler, and masking tape.
- Compare the freezing point of fresh water with the freezing point of seawater or salt water, with varying amounts of salt.
By the way, what is science anyway?
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