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Today, we will be reducing, reusing, recycling! We can create art with our old plastic packaging. Now, most of us have made awesome crafts out of the recycling bin before, but this time we will be transforming our clear plastics into shrink art!


We can use our shrink art to make jewelry, key chains, little figures, wind chime or wind spinner decorations, and so much more! follow along to find out how to do this simple and flexible craft for all ages!


Despite how much fun we're having, this also covers a lot of different curriculum connections! Be sure to read through the whole post to see how this sneaky learning will help your child discover new concepts, and be sure to make use of the questions provided to maximize on this.


What You Will Need

  • clear plastic containers (like what baked goods or takeout comes in)

  • permanent markers

  • oven (and a parent to help use it!)

  • baking sheet

  • scissors

  • hole punch



Parent Tips

This craft is great for all ages! Try to invite in all your family members to try this one out. The designs can be as simple or as complex as each person likes, and the finished product can be used to create anything! Discuss with your child while they're working what features may or may not transfer well once they shrink - shape and colour will change a bit! But how?


Instructions:



First, we're going to need our supplies. You will need clear plastic, like what you will find on food packaging. Different types of plastic may work differently. I found that a large container like what pastries from the store come in worked best for me, but any clear plastic should work. You will also need permanent markers, scizzors, and some images you'd like to use! I downloaded my images from the internet from Harry Potter at Home, since I am a HUGE Harry Potter fan, and these little cartoons are just SO CUTE! You can use any image you like, but simple, clear images will be the easier. You can also just draw onto the plastic yourself, if you have something original in mind! The important thing to remember here is that the image will shrink by about half once you are finished.



Next, cut out all the flat parts of your plastic that you will be drawing on. Some plastics may be sharp once cut, so an adult may need to help with this part.

Then, we can place our images under our plastic, and we can see them perfectly to trace! Begin with the outline of your drawing, and then you can move the image out from underneath and colour it!



Above, I have shown my image on the plastic with just the outline, and then again when I'm done colouring. Repeat with as many images as you like!

Once you have coloured, carefully cut out around your drawing, and you can leave a bit of a border. Leave extra on top, and use a hole punch to make a small hole if you want to use these as charms to hang them, as seen here.



Here are all my completed drawings before I put them in the oven!


Now, we will put our designs in the oven. A couple important notes about how to do this (that I learned the hard way):

  • use parchment paper under your designs

  • you MUST place them marker side down, or they will curl in on themselves

  • use the oven at 330 degrees Fahrenheit

  • try one piece at a time until you are sure the method will work with your designs


Place your designs in the oven at 330F for several minutes. I found that it's best (and most fun!) to keep an eye on them while they are in the oven. The pieces will curl up a bit on themselves as they shrink, and then flatten out. Once they flatten out, take them out. If you keep them in beyond this point, they will curl up again but NOT flatten out as well.




This is what they looked like when I took them out! They are about half of the size they began at, and very thick, almost glass-feeling. They are so sturdy, they could easily be made into bracelet charms, sun catchers, key chains, necklaces, and so much more!

I can't WAIT to experiment with more designs and see what else I can make!

What will you make? Please share your results with us!



Questions and Activities

  1. Describe the plastic before you decorate it. Describe the plastic after it comes out of the oven. What are the major differences?

  2. What is another way you can reduce waste in your house?


Curriculum Connections

Science

Grade 1 Understanding Structures and Mechanisms: 1.1 identify the kinds of waste produced in the classroom, and plan and carry out a classroom course of action for minimizing waste, explaining why each action is important; 3.1 describe objects as things that are made of one or more materials

Grade 2 Understanding Matter and Energy: 1.1 assess the ways in which liquids and solids in the home are used, stored, and disposed of in terms of the effect on personal safety and the health of the environment, and suggest responsible actions to replace inappropriate practices

Grade 5 Earth and Space Systems: 1.1 analyse the long-term impacts on society and the environment of human uses of energy and natural resources, and suggest ways to reduce these impacts

Across all grades: follow established safety procedures during science and technology investigations; use appropriate science and technology vocabulary


Additional Resources


Thank you Cleverly for the inspiration for the craft idea! To see what they made, click here.

For some inspiration on what to create, check out some ideas here.

For the below resources, you will need your library card number.

An activity to make friendship bracelets for the charms (or alter it for a keychain!): https://www.worldbookonline.com/kids/home#activities/craftRoom/mi000024

Huge collection of activities with curriculum activities to help extend the learning: https://www.worldbookonline.com/activitycorner/home




 
 
 

Today we will be starting to grow our very own crystals! It will take a little while for them to grow into something interesting, so this is the perfect time for it! We will also be experimenting a little bit to try to find the way to grow the coolest and biggest crystals.

Be sure to watch the video to see how!


What You Will Need

  • clear glass jars

  • salt - as many types as you have (table salt, epsom salt, sea salt, etc.)

  • string

  • pencils or Popsicle sticks

  • boiling water (PARENTS ONLY)

  • experiment tracking sheet (see bottom of this page)



Parent Tips

Today we're focusing on using science terms when discussing our experiments. Some big words to focus on today are: experiment, hypothesis, solution, saturation. Be sure to try as many combinations of type of salt and location as you can! As the crystals develop you can discuss what they look like (colour, shape, length, etc.), and discuss theories as to why some may be growing faster than others. This can help develop a hypothesis as to why they grow better in different conditions!




Questions and Activities

  1. Which of your experiments do you think will make the biggest crystal?

  2. Be sure to fill in your tracking sheet with which crystals are made of which salt, and where you will put them!

  3. If you can, have a parent help you take pictures of your experiments every few days so you can see the progress as they grow.


Curriculum Connections

Science

Grade 1: Understanding Structures and Mechanisms - 2.3 investigate, through experimentation, the properties of various materials

Grade 1: Understanding Matter and Energy - 2.2 investigate how the sun affects the air, land, and/or water, using a variety of methods ; 2.5 use scientific inquiry/experimentation skills, and knowledge acquired from previous investigations, to explore the effects of light and heat from the sun

Grade 2: Understanding Matter and Energy - 2.3 investigate, through experimentation, interactions that occur as a result of mixing and/or dissolving liquids and solids (e.g., salt and water, sand and water), liquids and liquids (e.g., oil and water), and solids and solids (e.g., salt and sand); 3.4 identify conditions in which the states of liquids and solids remain constant (e.g., solids remain solid when broken; liquids remain liquid when poured) and conditions that can cause their states to change (e.g., liquids may freeze when the temperature drops; solids may melt when heated)

Grade 5: Understanding Matter and Energy - 2.3 use scientific inquiry/experimentation skills (see page 12) to investigate changes of state and changes in matter; 3.3 explain changes of state in matter (e.g., evaporation, condensation, solidification or freezing, fusion or melting, sublimation), and give examples of each (e.g., water from wet clothes evaporates; steam from a boiling kettle condenses on a cold window; water in ponds and lakes solidifies or freezes in winter; a frozen treat melts on a warm summer day; a moth ball sublimates in the closet)

Across all grades: Use appropriate science terminology

Math:

Grade 4: Number Sense and Numeration - represent fractions using concrete materials, words, and standard fractional notation, and explain the meaning of the denominator as the number of the fractional parts of a whole or a set, and the numerator as the number of fractional parts being considered

Grade 6: Number Sense and Numerations - represent ratios found in real life contexts, using concrete materials, drawings, and standard fractional notations


Additional Resources

Magic School Bus S04e01 - The Magic School Bus Meets Molly Cule (Streams on Netflix)

This episode is a very cool way to see how molecules work together to form shapes. Supersatuating the water can be tricky to understand, and this episode explains it well!

If you're enjoying chemistry, check out the STEAM Class on making a Lemon Explosion!


 
 
 

Chemistry is easy to find and identify in things at home, if you know what to look for!


Chemistry is basically just exploring the way things go together, and the way they are made up (atoms and molecules). Today we'll be exploring one of the most FUN and well known chemical reactions - what happens when you put acids and bases together.


As some of you may know, typically at the library we LOVE to make a mess - there's so much to learn and explore by being a bit more free! Today's activity doesn't have to be a big mess, though, but we encourage preparing for a little one.


What You Will Need

  • Lemons

  • Baking soda

  • Food colouring

  • Dish soap

  • Tray or container (to catch the mess)

  • Something to stir with


Tips for Parents

The curriculum connections for this experiment are actually pretty advanced (initially explored in grade 5, and really dug into starting in grade 10). So, our main focus today is going to be on experimenting itself.

It is SO important to ask inquiry based questions! Making predictions about what will happen, asking questions when things happen, and questioning how we can change or adjust things in the future are the best parts of experiments. Today, try to get your child to talk through their thought process as things happen.






Activity and Questions

Check out the pH scale above. Are you surprised by anything?

Look at our ingredients today - Lemons, have a pH of 2, and are very close the the most acidic end of the scale, where baking soda is a 9, pretty close to the most basic or alkaline end of the scale.

What other combinations do you think would cause interesting reactions? (Note: DO NOT TRY any of these combinations without doing some research first, as some reactions can produce dangerous byproducts)


Curriculum Connections

Grade 5: Understanding Matter and Energy - 3.5 describe chemical changes in matter as changes that are irreversible, 3.7 identify indicators of a chemical change


Additional Resources

If you want to know exactly what acids, bases, and the ph scale are all about: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/biology/water-acids-and-bases/acids-bases-and-ph/a/acids-bases-ph-and-bufffers


Please tag us on social media if you take any photos or videos!

 
 
 

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Tel: 705-752-2544

Email: callanderlibrary@gmail.com

30 Catherine Street, W
Callander Ontario

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