Here’s What You’ll Need:
·
Ice cube tray
·
Water
·
Food coloring or brightly-colored juice
(you’ll need a dropper or pipette if you go this route)
·
Straws
·
Paper
Before you begin the painting part of this activity,
prep your work area for the mess. Food coloring stains easily. Protect your
kitchen table, floor or wherever else your child is working by layering a
garbage bag over a piece of cardboard. Or, go outside and work in the grass.
Here’s What to Do:
1. Fill
the ice cube tray almost all of the way up with water. Ask your child what she
thinks will happen before you pop it into the freezer. Use some science vocab
and tell her that she is making a prediction or hypothesis.
2. Check
in on the ice. Let your child poke it to see if it’s changed from a liquid to a
solid. As it begins to harden let some of it melt or have your child poke it
hard enough to break the surface ice. Put the ice back into the freezer.
3. Take
the tray out again. Have your child poke straws through the top of each cube
(one straw per ice compartment). If it won’t go through, ask her what she can
do to make the straw move into the ice. Hint: It needs to sit out and melt a
little. Talk about what’s changing in the cubes that allows the straw to go
through the ice. Place the cubes back into the freezer again.
4. Bring
out your ice, again. Drop a few drips of food coloring or juice into each straw
top. If some of the water has gone up the straw and frozen, let the tray sit
out until the ice melts enough to let the coloring in. How will your child know
that it’s melting? She’ll see the color slowly move into the bottom of the
clear cube. As it moves through, she’ll see streaks and veins of color in the
layers of ice. She can add more than one color per cube to see what happens.
Put the ice back in the freezer.
5. Wait
a half hour or so and bring out the ice. Pop the cubes out, keeping the straws
in them to use as handles.
6. Put
the colorful cubes on plain white paper. Your child can use the straw handles
to paint with. If no color is coming off of the ice right away, ask your child
why (the streaks of color may not start until the second or middle layer of
ice- meaning that your child needs to let the cube melt before she can paint).
Your child can also explore the colored ice in other
ways. Fill two clear cups with water – one warm (from the tap, not boiling) and
one cold. Ask her to predict which cup will help the ice melt faster. Place a
colorful cube in each cub and watch what happens. Your child can play the role
of a scientist, figuring out why one cub melted faster than the other. If
you’re using an edible juice version, your child can drink the colorful water
from the cool cup!
Are you looking for more art and science activities?
Join my e-mail list for activities in your inbox and follow my Pinterest board
for ideas!
Follow Mini Monets and Mommies's board Preschool Art and Science Activities on Pinterest.
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