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STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science
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Page 1: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

STEM Fair

Shana TiradoSupervisor, Elementary Science

Page 2: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Scientific Method

Hillsborough County STEM Fair Expectations

1. Ask a question and state a purpose

2. Research

3. Hypothesis

4. Procedures(variables, materials, step by step directions)

5. Collect data

6. Create a graph

7. Draw a conclusion

Page 3: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

STEM Fair Log

Required for all projects

Page 4: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

STEM Fair Log

• You will keep everything you do and think about your STEM fair project in your log.

• Your log is like a diary or journal of your progress in your investigation.

• Keep everything you write in your log even if you change your mind or start over.

Page 5: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Day 1 Entry:

• Write today’s date on the first page of your log.

• Write what you know, think, and wonder about science fair.

Page 6: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Log Expectations

• Projects without logs will be disqualified.

• The log IS the project. The show board is just a commercial for the project.

• Each entry should be dated.

• Research notes, measurements, observations, and test results should be included.

Page 7: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

How to Select a STEM Fair Topic

Page 8: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Restricted Topics

• Projects involving blood, bacteria, mold or fungus.

• Projects using guns or explosives.• Projects causing harm to animals.

Page 9: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Animals

• Permission must be given prior to the start. – Human / Animal Form

• No surgery or dissection may take place

• Neither physiological or psychological harm to the animal can result

• Must be supervised by an adult.

Page 10: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Brainstorming Topics(Grades 3-5)

Help your child make a list of things they are interested in or have questions about.

Brainstorm at least 10 to get started.

Page 11: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Help your child think of questions ….

Things I Like Questions

Baseball Does a baseball roll farther on artificial grass?

Paper Airplanes How does the shape of the wing affect the glide?

Rocks Do rocks erode more when exposed to acid rain?

Playing outside What color shirt will keep me cooler outside in the sun?

Page 12: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Creating a testable

STEM Fair question

Page 13: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

STEM Fair Questions

How does the type of water affect the growth rate of a plant?

How does the species of the orange affect the amount of juice it has?

How do shade trees affect temperature of areas on our playground?

Page 14: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

What is a Good Question?

A good science investigation question:• Can not be answered with one word such as

yes or no. • Tells you what you need to measure.• Is something you can investigate yourself.• Is answered with data that is collected.

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Identifying the

Purpose

Page 16: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Research

Page 17: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Research

• Before the project begins, learn more about the topic.

• Include the information learned in the STEM fair log.

• This information will be used to develop the hypothesis.

Page 18: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Hypothesis

Page 19: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

ProcedureMaterialsVariablesDirections

Page 20: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Example of Materials List

Materials• 2 – 16oz Office Depot clear plastic cups• 130ml tap water• 1 Thermometer • 16 oz of ice from cafeteria ice maker

• *Include how and when materials were obtained

Page 21: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Examples of Directions

1. Gather Materials

2. Fill cup to ½ way mark with ice.

3. Add 130 ml of tap water

4. Swirl cup for 1 minute. (hold by top edges of the cup)

5. Record water temperature. (Keep thermometer in water, look at eye level)

6. Add 2 more ice cubes.

7. Repeat steps 4 and 5

Page 22: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

DATA

Page 23: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

DATA

•Data refers to the information gathered in the investigation

•This is in the form of tables and charts.

•You can also use photographs or drawings to show the information you gathered but pictures do not replace the data.

Page 24: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

DATA

The more trials you do the more accurate the results of your experiment will be.

The minimum for STEM fair is five trials.

Scientists often repeat experiments thousands of times.

Page 25: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Trial Tile Floor Carpet Sidewalk

Trial 1 4.3 2.4 2

Trial 2 4.4 2.7 2

Trial 3 3.5 1.8 1.8

Trial 4 4.5 2.8 2.5

Trial 5 4.8 2.5 1.6

Distance a toy car will Roll in Meters

Page 26: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Graph

Page 27: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Graph Use a bar graph or line graph to display data.

This is the same information gathered and already

recorded on your data chart.

Page 28: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Distance Toy Car Travels When Rolled Down Ramp Onto Various Surfaces

Met

ers

Trials

Key

Page 29: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

CONCLUSION

Page 30: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

CONCLUSIONMy hypothesis was supported (or not supported) by the data. (Explain) I found out that…

If I were to do this project again, I would change…because…..

The way this is connected to the real world is…

Page 31: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

CONCLUSIONA problem I had or unusual event was….

Describe your data in detail. What does your data mean?

Compare the results with you background information.

Explain why the experiment is important.

Page 32: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Data

Materials

OptionalResearch Paper

My TitlePurpose

Hypothesis

Procedure:

Variables

Step-by-Step Directions

Graph

Conclusion

Data Log

Page 33: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.
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Judging Criteria

• Scientific Investigation – 40 pts• Thoroughness – 20 pts• Skill – 15 pts• Creative Ability/Originality – 15 pts• Clarity/Neatness – 10 pts

Page 38: STEM Fair Shana Tirado Supervisor, Elementary Science.

Questions?

Shana Tirado, SupervisorElementary Science

[email protected]

Developed by Hillsborough County Schools Elementary Science

Department