Lesson 13 of 84 ยท Reaction Rates
Experimentโญ 30 XP๐งช Potion KitchenEcosystems: Living and Nonliving Parts
Reaction Rates.
๐ฏ Your mission
Set it up. Test it. Be amazed.
โก The twist
If it bubbles, something invisible is escaping.
Mind = Blown
๐งช If you could remove all the empty space from atoms, the entire human race would fit in a sugar cube.
Make a hypothesis first
Guess: will the fizz be loud, soft, or none at all?
What You'll Learn
Ecosystems include all the living and nonliving things in an area that interact with each other. A pond ecosystem includes fish, frogs, algae, water, rocks, and sunlight.
Key Words
- adaptation
- metamorphosis
Materials Needed
- magnifying glass
- paper towels
- markers
- tape
- small pots
- cotton balls
Safety First
- Protect your work surface with newspaper or plastic.
Steps
Read the introduction and identify the main idea of this lesson.
Build a model ecosystem in a jar using soil, small plants, and water. Seal it and observe how the water cycle works inside it for one week.
Compare the before and after states.
Write your conclusion: did the results match your hypothesis? What would you change next time?
Check Your Understanding
Question 1
1 of 3What is an ecosystem?
Where you see this in real life
Your toothpaste, your soap, even your breakfast involves this.
Stretch Challenge
Try this in real life this week.
Ask a grown-up to help you mix two safe kitchen things. Predict what will happen first.
For the dinner table
โWhat's something we cook that mixes things together this way?โ
Next Smart Experiment
We'll pick an experiment that matches exactly how you're thinking right now.
Share this experiment
Send it to a parent who's looking for a 10-minute kitchen science win.
Checkout complete lesson on Reaction Rates for 10th Grade
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