Share & Help Me GrowLast week, I shared with you how we are studying Exploring Creation with Botany by Apologia and gave you an outline of how we approach each lesson as well as the PowerPoint review and a printable plan for Lesson 1. Today, I am covering the second half of Lesson 1 and […]
Our planet is as strange as it is beautiful.
Printable visual aids and worksheets with a labelled plant and flower.
Axel Ritter is an artist from Wiesbaden, Germany who created amazing 3D artworks. Axel's work. His work is composed with plants, underwater creatures,
Teach kids about the needs of seeds with this seed experiment that answers the question: "What temperature do seeds like?"
After weather we dove right into plants. In first grade, the kids need to learn the parts of the plant and be able to describe the life cycl...
Printable visual aids and worksheets with a labelled plant and flower.
This is a major revision in high definition to an earlier video I made on plants and photosynthesis. This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces…
Teach the academic language of cause & effect by using real world examples. A perfect example of Integrated ELD with Science.
Got a gardening guru on your hands? Give them a fun challenge with this fill-in-the-blanks quiz about the parts of a seed!
Our planet is as strange as it is beautiful.
Foster a love for science with these fun experiments perfect for even the youngest scientists .
Our latest science experiments for kids is all about leaves! We used colored water to observe how liquids move through the leaves of plants. This post also includes a free printable recording sheet. NGSS: Disciplinary Core Idea LS1.C Follow our Science for Kids Pinterest Board! With all the new growth in our yard this spring, …
A plant grows away from the ground up into the air, right? Of course it does, but how does a plant know to do this while it is a seed in the ground?
We had fun with this experiment. It was very cool to watch the colours change! I used food coloring and cabbage leaves to show the kids how plants …
Open Pool Nuclear Reactor [1131x1700] - Imgur
Artificial intelligence explorations by MONOMO via Midjourney, DALL.E 2, and Stable Diffusion showcasing an artistic approach towards possible
Medicinal plants have been used for millennia, and science is just beginning to validate many of their traditional uses. This basic overview of medicinal plants and their use focuses on herbs you can find or
Seeds are mature ovules that contain the developing embryo and the nutritive tissue for the seedling. Fruits and seeds are the primary means by which angiosperms are dispersed. The chief agents of dispersal are wind, water, and animals. Seeds may be modified in varied ways to promote dispersal.
Follow our companion planting chart and plans in your vegetable garden to attract pollinators, increase yields, natural pest control and more.
The Taiga biome stretches in the Northern Hemisphere taking huge chunks of North America and Eurasia, especially Canada and Russia respectively. It also stretches in Northern Europe in countries such as Finland, Norway and Sweden and spans across Alaska and Scandinavia.
Telling time past the hour can be challenging for primary kids but it doesn’t have to be a struggle for you or your students. Learn simple ways and effective strategies to make telling time easier for primary kids.
What is vegetative reproduction? Find out how you can clone plants and regrow cabbage from a stem in this cool experiment!
Best plants to grow with young kids and creative ways for learning kids' science in the garden while doing simple science experiments gardening with kids.
People have been changing plant genomes ever since agriculture got started thousands of years ago. Here are the high-tech ways researchers insert new genes into plants now.
Learning the basic parts of a plant can be fun and delicious. Here is a worksheet that can be turned into a memorable food experience to help learn the parts of a plant.
Gardeners are learning more every year about how our decisions can benefit the environment. We can plant more natives, say no to pesticides and chemical fe
Illustration and science have always gone hand in hand. If you want to understand something, drawing it is a good place to start. Macoto Murayama, a 29-year-old botanist and designer, goes even further: he carefully dissects and models flowers using 3D drafting software.