By Jayden Osorio:
This fun experiment teaches you how to extract DNA from a strawberry
By Hazel, Reia & Mary Susselman:
How to fill up a balloon using baking soda and vinegar with carbon dioxide
By Leslie Wang:
The membrane of a cell is referred to as "semipermeable" because it lets some, but not all, things pass through. Use a chicken egg to see how a semipermeable membrane works.
By Julian, Merrick & Beth Cheung:
In this super simple activity you can make a piece of cereal move in water using a magnet. It might look like magic, but it can be explained by science!
By Dilan Lalani:
Washing hands is very important.
By Julia:
Learn about density by making a super cool lava lamp.
By Eco Station:
Meet an Australian cockatoo and learn how to make 3D art.
By Dylan Thana:
Make a lava lamp with things you have at home.
By Max Evans:
Our immune systems are incredible! Vaccines help them prepare to fight off some of the germs that make us sick.
By Tambry Chapnick
Short step-by-step volcano experiment using everyday household items.
By Kaan Turktan:
Spin a motor using a closed loop circuit that creates its own magnetic field.
By Maya Haile & Megan Hitchins
The genetics of red hair color!
By Megan Hitchins:
See why and how blood is drawn by phlebotomy and processed in the laboratory for testing.
By Danilo and Yasmine:
Will this clock work without batteries and just a potato to give electricity?
By Erina Vlashi:
A quick glimpse into a science laboratory that studies cancer.
By Elina Pirastehfar:
Temperature and pressure are directly proportional. Meaning that when the temperature rises so does the volume or pressure. When the water in the bottle is hot, it exerts a lot of pressure. However, as it cools down and the water vapor condenses back into water droplets, the inside pressure decreases. As it cools, the pressure on the outside of the bottle is greater than the pressure inside the bottle. This creates a vacuum. causing air to push into the bottle from the outside. sucking the balloon inside the bottle.
By Denis, Dylan, Elijah, Gil & Olivia:
A Scientist answers questions about COVID vaccines.
By Amy and Tim Fisher:
Measuring the speed of light with a microwave oven and chocolate.