A 15 foot Burmese Python...the question on the crowds mind: Which kid would it eat?? |
We brought out our full-scale saber-tooth cat skeleton for the last time before it takes up residence in the entrance foyer of the new Great Valley Museum. Kids eyes grew wide when we explained how these felines used to live right here in the Central Valley of California. Heck, this is better than dinosaurs (though we also had a big chunk of dinosaur bone for them to check out)...
We also had a bunch of stream table experiments for the kids to work with...science that's best is the science that's messy!
But what really caught the attention of the kids were the three lab desks festooned with trays full of rock, mineral and fossil specimens...with paper bags for carrying away as much as they could hold. There were fossil clams and oysters, sulfur and quartz crystals, agate, granite, mariposite, sandstone, schist and gneiss, obsidian, pumice, and other volcanic rocks.
For us it was a clearing of the decks in preparation for the move to the new science center. For the kids, it was an instantaneous rock collection, and perhaps for some a start down the road towards a future as a geologist. You never know...
The room was buzzing with activity for five straight hours. Science is boring, after all...
NOT!
1 comment:
I just love when kids get excited about, boring old, science. NOT. The hands on stuff is great. There really are scientists in our future. Thanks to folks like you.
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