KID'S SCIENCE EXPERIMENT & ART PROJECT KIT

For Little Monkey’s 3rd birthday - yeah, WAAAAAAY back last July – I made him a Science Experiment and Project book and kit. The boy loves to get his hands dirty and is so dang curious he drives me crazy with all the ‘why?’s. It makes Mr. Napping a little nuts as well. I wanted something that he would enjoy, but also something that would entertain him for more than a week or two. We have tons of toys and a lot of them just sit on the floor until they get stepped on and kicked aside. I didn’t want more “stuff”. We have done small experiments over the past few years, starting with the baking soda and vinegar volcanoes. That was cool, but Little Monkey was a bit too small to really enjoy it at the time. We experimented with water beads last January and that was fun, until Little Monkey thought ripping them apart was the new fun thing. Then they went bye-bye for a while…
Anyway. I went through my Pinterest boards and Google and gathered any and all ideas that were science projects or demonstrations and a few art projects as well. I typed up the basic instructions and an easy-to-understand explanation (at least easy-to-me, so I can explain it later) and printed it off. Sounds easy, but I spent several hours (think, like 20 hours) putting it all together. Then I went down the ingredient list for each project and made a shopping list. There were several projects that used at least some of the same ingredients (Borax, baking soda, corn startch, and glue, to name a few) so the shopping wasn’t horribly expensive – most of those are pretty cheap anyway. I put it all in a big box with the printed project book and wrapped it with a nice big strip of tape.
This has been fantastic as we have started Little Monkey School and during the days when I think I’m going to strangle the kid. He usually just needs a little structure and attention. We’ve had fun and made some cool projects together. It was definitely worth the time and minimal cost. It has turned out to be a great gift that is enjoyed by both of us (and sometimes Daddy, too!) with some educational value to it as well.
Download your own copy of the Project Book from Scribd. I don't have much experience with this site, so if you have problems, let me know. Or you can email me by clicking this icon
*If you have tried to download anything from my blog and have received spam or viruses of any kind, please let me know. If it's an issue with my file server, I will change things. I want you to have access to the content and not worry about spam and malware.*
Print it out and then you'll be well on your way to creating your own Science Project Kit. If you find formatting issues, let me know. I've tried to check and make sure all is well, but it's a lot of pages and I'm not perfect. Because a lot of these projects are inspired by other bloggers, this is FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. Do not sale, alter or edit, or sale alterations of this book. Please do not post the book anywhere else. If you would like to tell others about this book, please link them back to this post - not the download page. I would really appreciate it.
And, to help simplify things for you, I've made out a materials list below. Not everything is included, but what I left out are things that most people have on hand around the home, water, ice cube trays and muffin tins, for example.
Materials you will need in your kit:
- Baking soda
- White vinegar
- Food coloring
- Bar of Ivory brand soap
- Balloons
- Borax
- Cornstarch
- White glue
- Craft sticks (popsicle sticks)
- Ruler
- Vegetable Oil
- Alka-Seltzer
- Flashlight
- Clear Glue or Corn Syrup
- Ultra Fine Glitter
- Shampoo or Hair Gel
- Dice
- Marbles
- Glow Sticks
- Glow in the Dark Paint
- Paper Clips
- Pipe Cleaners
- Small Nuts and Bolts
- Magnets
- Sand
- Small Shells
- Baby Oil
- Colored Candle Wax
- Flour
- Salt
- Shaving Cream
- Sweetened Condensed Milk
- Liquid Dish Soap
- Jello
- Nonfat Dry Milk
- Peanut Butter
- Honey
- Crayons
- Cola
- Mentos
- Polystyrene Beads
Most of these are used in more than one project or experiment. Check out the book and choose what projects you want to include in your kit and make your shopping list from there. I think I spent about $23 on supplies, but I had a lot of already. I did get a new container of corn starch and some of the other kitchen supplies and ingredients so that Monkey and I have his own stash to pull from when we do experiments instead of hoping I remember to replace it in the kitchen.
This post was written by Krista and originally posted on While He Was Napping.
If you'd like to get more While He Was Napping, you can find me here:





















Great idea - going to try and do a simple version for my 3 year old. She will love it.
ReplyDeleteYes! What a great idea! My kids are 11, 10 and 7 but they would still really enjoy this. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteGreat idea! I love science experiments for kids and creating a kit is brilliant especially as a lot of great science projects use the same ingredients. Pinning it!
ReplyDelete-Ana from www.babbledabbledo.com
That's so weird, I made a similar kit for my 2nd grader nephew and posted it the same week you did. I called mine a STEM kit. You can see it at: http://www.stemmom.org/2013/01/gifting-stem-kit-for-hands-on-experience.html
ReplyDeleteBut your kit is great for younger kids, I would love if you shared this post at a week-long linky I'm hosting this week. http://www.stemmom.org/2013/02/stem-themed-linky-party-2.html
Darci the STEM Mom
Great minds, huh?! I will have to check out your kit and stash it away for when my kiddos get a little older. They love the hands-on stuff!
DeleteThank you! This is awesome.
ReplyDelete