Category Archives: Science

Back in the Swing of it! ☀️🌋🦕

It has been wonderful to see all the smiling young faces back at Busby ELCC and to welcome all our new children into the ELCC family.
In these early weeks the children have settled in very well, enjoying one another’s company and trying out all that is on offer.

In Arran building the Pink and Yellow groups are currently based in the Katrine playroom. Here many of them have shown a strong interest in dinosaurs, so we have been reading lots of dinosaur books and facts, making fossils in moulds and salt dough bones, and creating a dinosaur landscape with a working volcano….

Making Fossils
Making Fossils


Painting our Dinosaur Landscape

Making an eruption (with vinegar and bicarbonate of soda)

If your child is one of our budding young paleontologists, they might have fun checking out this latest news story with you: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-53917742

The children have also been enjoying lots of sensory experiences with ice shapes, sand, shaving foam, herbs, petals and water.

Making play dough for the day

The children love their regular sessions outdoors and in the MUGA , developing and showing off their physical and creative skills.


Rainy days not a problem…


Exploring the Gruffalo story sack (Literacy) and experimenting with Shapes (our current Numeracy focus)

At Snack time we wash our hands, then choose our snack if we’d like one and chat with our friends.


At group times we have been playing Spin the Bottle and talking about our feelings using stories, character puppets from Inside Out, and by placing our names on our  Feelings Board.

COMING SOON….
News of the Red, Blue, Purple & Green groups coming soon –  so keep your eye on the blog!

 

 

Get Skilled up with Skills Academy!

Hello everyone!
If you are looking for some fun challenges and ways to learn new skills with the nursery staff,  then you can take part in our brand new online Skills Academy lessons below.
So far we have 4 handy video lessons in Gardening & Science with Mrs Small, and 2 scroll-down Cooking demonstrations from Mrs MacLeod  – try making gingerbread or a quick easy pizza.
To access the lesson just click on the Green text link above each picture.
Have fun, whatever you choose!

Eco Planting with Mrs Small

Community Skills Planting herbs with Mrs Small

Science Skills Academy with Mrs Small

Science Outcome 1

Cooking – Easy Pizza

Baking Gingerbread

 

Why Playdough?

Playdough is always a favourite in our house whether it’s homemade or shop bought. There is lots that children can do with playdough and it is an amazing resource that covers all areas of learning, which the article below explains in more depth.

7 Reasons Children Should Play With Playdough Often

For Erin I found loose parts around the house for her to use in her creations along with the playdough. Loose parts play is a type of play that supports invention, divergent thinking, problem solving and offers a sense of wonder to children. They are materials that can be moved, carried, combined, redesigned, lined up, and taken apart and put back together in multiple ways. From pasta and spaghetti to cupcake cases, curtain hooks and lids for cutters, stones, shells, kitchen utensils, flowers…the list is endless when you start looking.

I have included a photo with a recipe for how to make playdough and the article attached also has recipes within it. Why not give it a go and let’s see your imagination go wild?

Scientific Scenes

I hope that everybody had a great holiday weekend staying safe at home. Erin and I were enjoying the weather last week and thought it would be great to do some painting outside, which we decided to turn into a science experiment. Instead of paper we filled balloons with water and put them in the freezer overnight. After observing what happened to the water once it had been in the freezer, we peeled off the balloon and it gave us ice which is a great surface to paint on. Erin particularly liked it when the ice balloons started to melt and the colours all mixed together, giving us another science experiment to observe. To join in with the science fun we were having we tried to dig out the toys we had frozen inside a couple of the balloons by using salt water to help us melt the ice. Ice melts faster in salt water because salt water has a lower freezing point than fresh water, so the ice cube will have to absorb less heat in order to melt in salt water than in fresh water. Let’s see your science experiments; why don’t you try painting on a different surface from paper? Do the colours mix like they did on the ice? Also how quickly can you melt ice with the salt and rescue your toy inside?

Kitchen Creation

By using kitchen resources I created a filling and pouring station for Erin. There is no need to have a tuff tray to do this as this can be done on a smaller scale on an oven tray, inside a cardboard box, a plastic box from under the bed…anything really that will contain the mess. I collected various items from the kitchen rice, cous cous, tea leaves out of teabags, cornflakes, cheerios, spices, herbs, oats, a crushed up biscuit, spaghetti…the list is endless. You only need a small quantity of each to enable pouring and scooping between containers so don’t worry about using up lots of food. Then add to the tray any utensils and bowls to aid scooping and pouring; different sized spoons, measuring cups and spoons, sieves, pots and pans…make sure nothing sharp is placed in the tray that could pose a hazard. Filling, scooping and pouring activities help develop fine motor skills in under 5s as well as using concepts such as less and more. Adding scales to your pouring and filling tub can also introduce the concept of weight. These tasks help children coordinate their hand movements with what they are seeing and feeling.

Super Science

The children have been busy investigating and discovering through lots of exciting Science Experiments during STEM fortnight. They have been testing, describing, asking questions and observing results.
“I’m wondering what would happen if…”

Adding the vinegar…

….and bicarbonate of soda to make a gas to blow up the balloon.

Magnet experiments: “You can make it move from under the table!”

Our new BUG HOTEL. Who will visit….?

Making Bird Food with raisins, maize, mealworms and lard.

Studying the different bird species.

Adding the thread for hanging the feeders.

The children loved watching Professor Eco

Wandering Water and Colour Mixing Experiments

“I am wondering what would happen if we mix blue and red…” “It makes purple.” “We need the paper to test it.”

“What happens if we do it like this?”

Using droppers to create patterns with the colours we mixed.