This Pearson at Home: Homeschool Interactive Science Activities booklet is part of the Pearson Interactive Science Grade 3 curriculum. This booklet contains pages students rip out to make a lab manual to follow as they conduct experiments. Experiments include fun questions to investigate.
Experiments include fun questions to investigate, including:
How does water move through celery?
What can you find in your local ecosystem?
What can cause a rock to crack?
Why do you see phases of the moon?
And more.
With each activity students will answer the question by following the outlined procedures of each activity, collecting data, and drawing conclusions. Afterwards, they can expand and demonstrate scientific reasoning by modifying the investigations and/or designing their own experiments.
The workbooks are a way for children to have fun while growing their science knowledge. They combine hands on engagement with fun science activities while enabling children to learn the skills they need to be successful with their science curriculum. By using materials already familiar and available to kids at home, the lab work and experiments feel less intimidating and more entertaining.
Each hands-on activity presents a child with a challenging question that can be investigated and explored, then answered through lab work and experiments. An answer is reached through exploration of resources, following the individual steps of each activity, collecting data, and then drawing conclusions. After completing the activity as outlined in the workbook, there is an additional opportunity to create your own experiment. This allows the child to design his or her own activities, creating a personalized learning experience and further demonstrating scientific reasoning.
In some instances, parents might need to help children with certain parts of the activity, which turns science into a family affair! The activities in these workbooks will encourage every child to think like a scientist, encourage him or her to be inquisitive, and prepare kids for future lessons in science.