Open-and-go lessons that inspire kids to love science.

Science curriculum for K—5th grades.

90 sec
  • Hands-on — lead students in the doing of science and engineering.
  • Standards-aligned science lessons — Cover core standards in 1-2 hours of science per week.
  • Less prep, more learning — prep in minutes not hours. Captivate your students with short videos and discussion questions.

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This looks like a rainbow coming through a window! But this rainbow isn’t made of light. What do you think it’s made of?
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These fake rainbows are made from hundreds of pieces of string! They’re made by Mexican-born artist Gabriel Dawe.
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You can make rainbow string art, too, if you have some pushpins (or nails) to wrap colorful string around!
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Most people use crayons like this when coloring rainbows. But if you get crayons HOT, there’s another way to make a rainbow...
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Hot crayons melt—so the crayons can drip and create a rainbow! This artist is using a special tool that blows REALLY hot air!
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Can you tell what this is a picture of? (It’s a close-up picture of something you’ve probably seen before!)
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They’re soap bubbles, which have rainbow colors! A single bubble is round, but when many are next to each other, they look like this.
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Look at this video an artist made! If you look closely at soap bubbles, you may notice the liquid and colors moving and swirling.
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Watch how the light moves as people turn the glass shapes. But if you add even more glass, something else happens (next slide)...
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This art is also made using light and glass! Different kinds of glass are tilted in just the right way to make amazing colors on the walls.
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Shadows are normally gray or black. Can you think of any way to get a shadow to be a different color, like pink?
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Gray shadows are made when white light shines on things. But if you use blue, green, and red lights, they make shadows like these!
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We pulled three questions from our jar. Which question do you want to explore?

  • What happens to animals as they wake up from hibernation?

    -Knox, 4th Grade

  • Do you have to be tall to be good at basketball?

    -Joey, 3rd Grade

  • Why does it rain so much in the rainforest?

    -Abby, 4th Grade

Looking for a hands-on activity?

Try out a hands-on extension activity from Mystery Science.