Learn about sensitivity in living things by getting a plant to grow through a maze. 🧵
It will give the plant (and your kids) something more interesting to do than just staring mournfully out of the window.
You will need:
✅ A shoebox (or box of similar size)
✅ Card
✅Scissors
✅Sellotape
✅ A small plastic tub (eg. Empty yogurt pot).
✅ A little compost
✅ 5-6 Pea seeds (dried peas should germinate as long as they've not been in the cupboard too long).
1. Soak your pea seeds / dried peas in room temperature water for 12 hours.
2. Take your cardboard box and stand it up on the narrow end with the lid facing you. Remove the lid and keep it safe.
3. Carefully cut a hole about 2-3cm in diameter, to one side in the top narrow end of the shoe box.
4. Use the card and Sellotape to create a maze inside the box for the plant to grow through. Make sure there is enough room below the maze to pop your little planter in.
5. 2/3 fill your little tub with compost. Put in your pea seeds, then top off with another cm of compost. Water until the compost is moist.
6. Put your little planter into the bottom of the maze, put the lid back on the shoe box.
7. Leave your shoebox on a windowsill. The plant inside should be checked every day and watered if necessary. Leave the lid off the box for as short a time as possible when watering. This stage will go on for a few weeks.
8. After a few weeks your plant should have germinated and grown through the maze to the light hole at the top.
The Science at Work
All living things display the 7 signs of life:
Movement (growing towards the light)
Reproduction (making seeds)
Sensitivity (detecting the light)
Growth
Respiration
Egestion (getting rid of waste)
Nutrition (getting or making energy e.g. Photosynthesis.)
These can be remembered with the Mnemonic MRS GREN.
This experiment is a nifty demonstration that plants have both movement and sensitivity. Many young children have a misconception that plants don't move, or that they cannot detect their surroundings.
This effect is called Phototropism.
Another example is my Money Tree which has grown this way towards the light from my kitchen window. (I kept forgetting to turn it).
Plants need sunlight to make their own food by a process called Photosynthesis. So it's pretty important to be able to grow towards the light.
Adaptations for Age Groups
KS2 - Learn the signs of life listed above (MRS GREN) discuss what each word means. Draw a picture of your experiment. It should have 7 labels. Each label should explain how your experiment demonstrates that plants are alive using MRS GREN.
KS3 - Revise MRS GREN (some kids may know it as MRS NERG).
Focus on the Nutrition and Respiration part. Plants take in sunlight, carbon dioxide and water and use for photosynthesis which makes sugars. The plant also takes in oxygen and uses respiration to turn those sugars...
...into useable energy.
Look at other ways plants use sensitivity to find light and water.
Such as a root-bound pot, or sunflower heads following the sun every day.
KS4 - We can adapt this experiment to explore another factor. The colour of light that is most important to plants. However, we will need to construct more than one maze.
Make identical several mazes. Cover the light hole at the top of each box with a coloured filter...
...you can make these from different coloured cellophane sweet wrappers or cut squares out of some waste plastic film or an old take away tub and colour them evenly with markers.
Have at least a red, a blue and a green filter (the three primary colours of light).
Does the plant get confused in any of the boxes?
Research which wavelengths of light plants use for photosynthesis. Find out about chlorophyll and what colour it is. (Remember green objects appear green because they reflect green light, they don't absorb it).
This is also a good opportunity to look at germination.
Sprout a few pea seeds separately in a jam jar. Plant them against the glass so you can see them. Take a close look at a freshly sprouting peas at different stages. Produce a labelled diagram of a germinating pea.
I heard in the ether that there was a Facebook group called "Christans Against Dinosaurs". So, I searched for it out of morbid curiosity. Please join me on a tour of the oryctodromeus hole I fell down. First, what I understand is the OG group.🧵 1/15
In response to the Christian threat the Dinosaurs have formed their own Facebook Group. Apparently the Dinosaurs outnumber the Christians 4:1. I am concerned that there may not be enough Christians to feed all the Dinosaurs. Hopefully, most of them are herbivores. 2/15
The Battle Royale is now in progress! Move over lions. The Christians have a new adversary entering the arena! The Raptor Resistance. 3/15
This has reminded me of a tale, passed down through three generations of my family, about a weapons test that went humorously wrong. (Although not as spectacularly as the Panjandrum.)
My Grandfather Graham Lee was one of the scientists working on the Bouncing Bomb with Barnes Wallis (whatever the film might suggest, Wallis didn't do it all himself). He was a chemist specialising in explosives and furzes.
Here he is with my Grandma, Dad and Auntie Ann.
During the time when they were testing & training at Ladybower Reservoir in Derbyshire, they had to ensure each dummy bomb was confirmed at the bottom of the reservoir or recovered at dawn. This was to ensure enemy espionage did not get wind of the design or the plan of attack.
As we once more restrict our movement to help save lives, here is a reminder of the deities in the Idol Scribblings pantheon who can help us get through this.
A worshipper of Sloth can flick through all 999 television channels like a Catholic prays their way around the rosary. idolscribblings.blog/2020/03/29/slo…
If you would prefer your Wine Marten with white text for a dark coloured garment (which will hide the splashes of Claret), click here... redbubble.com/shop/ap/579541…
(I am always impressed that Buttercup pushes The Man in Black off Carl Wark so hard that he lands nine miles away in Cave Dale. That's a good angry shove you've got there girl.)
Anyway back to the holiday.
Played a bit of Historic Graveyard Bingo in Castleton.
I scored for, "The stonemason accidentally ran out of space".