Thursday, February 25, 2010

Make Something Sink, Then Float (page 17)
Materials Needed: Bowl of Water, Marbles, Modeling Clay
Tennesee Science Standard: GLE 0107.9.1- Classify solids according to their size, shape, color, texture, hardness, ability to change shape, magnetic attraction, whether they sink or float, and use.
Step1: Drop some marbles into the bowl of water.
They sink!

Step 2: Roll the clay into a ball, and drop it into the water.
It sinks also!
Step 3: Make a "boat" out of the same ball of clay you dropped into the water.
Step 4: Place the boat in the water. It floats!
Step 5: Place some marbles in the boat.
The boat and marbles are both floating now!
We made objects sink, and then made the same objects float even though they weighed the same as before.

How does this work?

Whether something sinks or floats has nothing to do with how much an object weighs. We didn't change the weight of the obects; we changed the shape. An object floats or sinks based upon how much water is displaced, or "pushed aside." The "boat" made out of clay was bigger than the ball of clay and displaced, or pushed aside, more water causing it to float. The marbles couldn't float because they were small and couldn't push enough water out of the way to equal the same weight. So, it is important to remember that anything that floats weighs the same as the water pushed out of the way. There is another factor that determines whether an object sinks or floats. Density also plays an important part.
What is density? Density is a measure of mass per unit of volume
Density = mass/ volume

What is volume?

Volume, also called capacity, is a quantification of how much space an object occupies.
The density of an object depends upon its weight and size(or voulme).If two solid objects are different sizes, but weigh the same, the smaller object is more dense because it is more compacted.
If an objects floats on water, then it is less dense than the water itself. If it sinks, then it is morse dense than water.
Here's a look at density: http://www.nyu.edu/pages/mathmol/textbook/density.html

These very principles are also used in shipmaking and boat making. Even though some boats are huge, they still float. This is because they are metal shells that are filled with air. They are less dense and lighter than the water they push aside, or displace, and this allows the boat to float.


I think this would be a great experiment to use in the classroom. I think everyone wants to know just how a boat can float when it is so big. I know when I was a child it amazed me to see such big ships floating on the water. It even amazed me that I could float in the swimming pool. :) This experiment could be used to teach about density, water displacement, and volume. Students could also have fun with the experiment by seeing who could make their boat hold the most marbles.


Here is a website that calculates density for us: http://www.1728.com/density.htm


10 comments:

  1. Great job! Would this experiment work with something else besides clay? It would be fun to see how many marbles a clay "boat" could hold :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great job on comparing your experiment to a real life boat. Kids will love doing this and seeing what else they can make float on their clay boat. Great work girls!

    ReplyDelete
  3. This is a great project. I wonder if you used different materials for the clay, what would happen? Great job!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Good job. This would be a good experiment for crital thinking by having the students decide why some object would float and why others would not.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Great job! You have a lot of useful infromation. Kids would love this.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great job! It would be real neat to see how many marbles the boat could hold without sinking, and allow the students to estimate how many they think it would take.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great Job Ladies! This is wonderful way to explain density and weight. I like how you added the link to explain density. I wonder if the clay would have sank if the clay was just flattened out instead of shaped like a boat?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Great project! What if a child asked about a paper boat. The child would probably just be thinking about his/her background knowledge of the fact that a boat is suppose to float.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Great job! You could give students a time limit to create a boat and then let them test it at the end of the week to see whose boats floated/sank. Loved that you added a website for reference.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I really like this experiment ladies. It was also very nice how you provided links to other websites so we could obtain more information if we needed to. Could you have used play dough instead clay? or perhaps wooden beads instead of marbles?

    ReplyDelete