What makes a rainbow Mystery Doug?
What do you think it’s made of? These fake rainbows are made from hundreds of pieces of string! They’re made by Mexican-born artist Gabriel Dawe. You can make rainbow string art, too, if you have some pushpins (or nails) to wrap colorful string around!
Why are oceans salty Mystery Doug?
Hint: if salt water dries up (evaporates), it leaves salt behind like this! When ocean water dries up, salt is left behind. The salt in your kitchen comes from here!
Is Mystery Science still free?
Free trials available to teachers who haven’t tried Mystery Science, at schools that haven’t had full memberships. Homeschool free trials available for the first two Mysteries in each unit.
Can you touch a rainbow?
In short, you can touch someone else’s rainbow, but not your own. A rainbow is light reflecting and refracting off water particles in the air, such as rain or mist. However, it is possible to touch the water particles and refracted light (if you agree that you can touch light) of a rainbow that someone else is viewing.
Is Mystery Science a complete curriculum?
At this point, Mystery Science might even have enough units to be a complete curriculum for a year for kindergarten through third grade. The lesson design certainly works well enough for core curricula since it provides teaching, hands-on activity, written work, and oral discussion.
Could a mountain turn into a volcano?
A Mountain is made up of a series of volcanic rocks that represent different types of volcanic activity. The mountain itself is not a volcano. The mountain continues to erode. As volcanoes erupted near A Mountain, around 25 million years ago, they left evidence of their activity in the form of different rocks.
What grades is Mystery Science for?
Mystery Science now offers Anchor Storylines and a free add-on module, the Anchor Layer, which adds anchoring phenomena and performance tasks. These are currently available for all 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade units.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agf5ksBZu0k