Museum of Science, Boston

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Contact the Discovery Center and Living Lab staff at livinglab@mos.org

All Activities of the Month

Archaeology Excavation

Archaeologists study ancient cultures by looking at what they have left behind in the archaeological record. Contrary to popular belief, archaeologists are not "treasure hunters". Archaeologists are actually much more interested in the ordinary things of life that can give us valuable information about the daily lives of past people.

On a very basic level, archaeologists study ancient garbage or "midden". In fact, garbage can quite indicative of cultural values, social status, diet, and social organization of the society that left it behind.

Bubble-ology

Children love bubbles! Whether blowing, chasing, or popping bubbles, children are fascinated by the floating, iridescent, spheres that seem to defy gravity while elegantly soaring around.

The Bubble-ology activity allows children to explore the science concepts of surface tension, air pressure, light and prisms, in a fun and interactive way. While many children have experience playing with bubbles, this activity will help them think about the science behind bubbles, and challenge them to explore the properties of bubbles by participating in a variety of engaging experiments.

Capillary Action Snowflakes

Young children love to explore water! And no wonder- playing in water, with all of it’s interesting properties, presents young children with both satisfaction and challenges. The Capillary Action Snowflakes activity allows children to explore one of water’s most appealing properties: it’s “stickiness”. Water molecules stick to almost everything- the table, your hand, paper, and even other water molecules. This stickiness is what allows water to move through the coffee filter, taking all of the colors with it and mixing them together.

Copter Engineering

Whether watching a jet plane race across the sky, a paper airplane zoom through a room, or a bird soar overhead, children are fascinated by objects in motion and flight. The Copter Engineering activity presents children with an opportunity to explore two contributing factors to flight: air resistance and push. Although air is all around us, it can be difficult for young children to understand what is air and how it works, since air is invisible to the eye. By watching the copters spiral downward, children can see the affects of air on a spinning helicopter-like object.

Fingerprint Detectives

Today’s media is packed with crime dramas depicting scientists in forensic labs examining evidence collected at crime scenes, but what do these scientists actually do?

In the Fingerprint Detectives activity, children learn how to take their own fingerprints, and are encouraged to use different tools (i.e. magnifying glass or microscope) to examine their own fingerprints as well as the fingerprints of others.

Kids can compare their fingerprints to a chart of the most common fingerprint patters and decide which patterns their own fingers have.

Hoop Glider Engineering

In the Hoop Glider Engineering activity, children are able to practice both science process skills, and engineering design skills.

This activity encourages children to create and test a prototype (ideally, an adult will help children make a glider with the ‘basic’ design to start with), to set a goal for creating a better glider, and to change one variable at a time in controlled experiments to make their glider meet that goal.

Oobleck

Children love exploring gooey substances! And no wonder- the properties of these mixtures make them fascinating for children to play with!

Has your child ever played with an oozy ‘liquid’ that they can also roll into a ball? The Oobleck activity allows children to experience a material that can act in a variety of ways, depending on how it’s touched!

Playing with Oobleck is a fun way for children to explore the properties of a substance (a “non-Newtonian fluid”) that can exhibit the properties of both a liquid and a solid.

Owl Pellet Dissection

Dissections are a great way for children to learn and practice their observation and classification skills, all while learning about animals that are quite different from themselves! During an Owl Pellet Dissection, children learn about how and what owls eat, as well as how a pellet is formed in an owl’s unique digestive system.

Paper Bridge Engineering

In the Paper Bridge Engineering activity, children and their grownups practice their engineering design skills by building and testing their own paper bridge. Discovery Center visitors are encouraged to brainstorm about bridges, make a prototype, test it, re-evaluate, and re-design.

Secret Messages

Many children enjoy participating in art activities, and no wonder — art provides children a means by which to work with their hands and spark their creativity. In the Discovery Center, our goal is to help children become equally as fascinated with the science behind their artistic creations. The Secret Messages activity encourages children to explore the properties of pigments, papers, water and waxes as they try to find the best combination of materials to write, and de-code, their own “invisible” messages.