|
|||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||
|
Home > Lesson Planning Channel > Lesson Planning Archives > Show-Biz Science Archive > Show-Biz Science Activity |
||
| SHOW-BIZ SCIENCE ACTIVITY | ||
Candy GlassIs the Solution Starring You and Your Students! Script By Vicki Cobb, Education World Science Editor Synopsis Here’s a lesson on solutions and stage craft using hard candy. Genre Chemistry, engineering
Setting the Scene (Background) Necessity is the mother of invention... Here's the problem: A play requires an actor go through a glass window. Obviously, since a play is not real, the actor can't go through real glass without doing great harm to himself or herself. So you need something that looks like glass and breaks like glass but won't cut up the actor. The solution: hard candy. For many years, "candy glass" was used on stage. Today, an expensive "breakaway" plastic is used. The problem with candy glass was that it dissolved in water. It couldn't be used to make bottles that held water that could smash like glass on stage. But your students will be interested to see how hard candy smashes just like glass. So after you're finished learning how candy smashes like glass, you can use the shards to learn something about the science of solutions (how sugar dissolves in a solution). Stage Direction Have the kids work in groups of two or three.
Plot
Act I
Act II Every few hours dip the end of the straw just under the surface of the water. When the straw is removed a small drop of liquid will remain in the end of the straw. Taste that drop. As the candy slowly dissolves in the water, the sugar in the candy will diffuse to the top of the liquid and it will taste sweet. Ask: Which candy disappears first -- the intact sourball or the smashed sourball? Behind the Scenes A solution is a mixture where the smallest particles are molecules and the mixture is homogenous -- that means that there is the same amount of sugar at the top of the solution as there is at the bottom. Article By Vicki Cobb 11/10/2005
|
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
Copyright 1996-2009 by Education World, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Home | About Us | Reprint Rights | Help | Site Guide | Partners | Contact Us | Privacy Policy |