Day 4:
Thank you for an amazing week campers.
Today was the busiest day of all and everyone really rose to the occasion. View over 190 pics below of all the things we did today.
Hope to see you back again next summer.
Mr. Rozen
Thank you for an amazing week campers.
Today was the busiest day of all and everyone really rose to the occasion. View over 190 pics below of all the things we did today.
Hope to see you back again next summer.
Mr. Rozen
Day 3:
Tie-dye shirts, elephant toothpaste, putt-putt boats, balloon towers, Zootopia section three, water polarity labs....it just doesn't get any better than this!
We made some great progress today battling through our agenda. The pace was fast and the action was high.
Tomorrow we have an incredible list to tackle....including magnetic penny towers, cartesian divers, clouds in a bottle, rocket launches, toothbrush robots, 94fifty dribbling races, seashell necklaces, and much more. Our greatest challenge will be getting it all in.
Campers are doing great with lots of teamwork, heat tolerance, and curiosity!
Get a good sleep tonight, maximum energy needed for our last day tomorrow.
Enjoy 160 pictures today of mostly everything we did during this day.
Tie-dye shirts, elephant toothpaste, putt-putt boats, balloon towers, Zootopia section three, water polarity labs....it just doesn't get any better than this!
We made some great progress today battling through our agenda. The pace was fast and the action was high.
Tomorrow we have an incredible list to tackle....including magnetic penny towers, cartesian divers, clouds in a bottle, rocket launches, toothbrush robots, 94fifty dribbling races, seashell necklaces, and much more. Our greatest challenge will be getting it all in.
Campers are doing great with lots of teamwork, heat tolerance, and curiosity!
Get a good sleep tonight, maximum energy needed for our last day tomorrow.
Enjoy 160 pictures today of mostly everything we did during this day.
Day Two:
Another very active day today…..time just seems to fly by during each day of camp.
We started off talking about pressure and what it means in the world of science. Pressure is anytime any form of matter makes contact with another form of matter. The relative mass and speed of the object determines the amount pressure exerted. Air pressure was a huge topic of discussion and several demonstrations coincided with the discussion, including the orange suction cup experiment, the breaking yard stick demo, the upside down water trick and others. Tomorrow we will build on this topic and talk about high and low pressure systems in the atmosphere and how they impact weather patterns. We will actually manufacture our very own clouds in plastic bottles by copying the same process that Mother Nature uses.
Today we also did our primary colors experiment where some groups mixed and matched the 3 primaries to make more than 100 different color types….awesome. The egg drop experiment was one of the best that we ever had with only 4 eggs breaking during the entire three level process.
The homemade kites were a big hit at the end of the day. Amazingly some of these kites made out of only 8.5 x 11 paper, a little bit of tape, thread and a stapl can fly upwards to 30 or 40 feet in the air.
Tomorrow we will jump right on the tie-dye shirts and again try to catch up by getting to some things we just did not have time for today….the dancing quarters, the putt-putt boats, and the weather vanes. Fingers crossed!
Again, get some good rest and be ready for a day of nonstop action tomorrow. Hope you enjoy over 150 photos from the day on our website:
Thanks again Mr. Mo, Devyn and Liam! We are lucky to have all 3 of you.
Mr. Rozen
Another very active day today…..time just seems to fly by during each day of camp.
We started off talking about pressure and what it means in the world of science. Pressure is anytime any form of matter makes contact with another form of matter. The relative mass and speed of the object determines the amount pressure exerted. Air pressure was a huge topic of discussion and several demonstrations coincided with the discussion, including the orange suction cup experiment, the breaking yard stick demo, the upside down water trick and others. Tomorrow we will build on this topic and talk about high and low pressure systems in the atmosphere and how they impact weather patterns. We will actually manufacture our very own clouds in plastic bottles by copying the same process that Mother Nature uses.
Today we also did our primary colors experiment where some groups mixed and matched the 3 primaries to make more than 100 different color types….awesome. The egg drop experiment was one of the best that we ever had with only 4 eggs breaking during the entire three level process.
The homemade kites were a big hit at the end of the day. Amazingly some of these kites made out of only 8.5 x 11 paper, a little bit of tape, thread and a stapl can fly upwards to 30 or 40 feet in the air.
Tomorrow we will jump right on the tie-dye shirts and again try to catch up by getting to some things we just did not have time for today….the dancing quarters, the putt-putt boats, and the weather vanes. Fingers crossed!
Again, get some good rest and be ready for a day of nonstop action tomorrow. Hope you enjoy over 150 photos from the day on our website:
Thanks again Mr. Mo, Devyn and Liam! We are lucky to have all 3 of you.
Mr. Rozen
Day 1:
We had a great day today and accomplished so much. After some basic safety rules and procedures were discussed we quickly established teams and made team posters. Prizes were given out for ones that were most colorful, most creative, most scientific, etc. After some "explosive demonstrations" we tackle a unit on the structure of the atom and static electricity. Fun Fly Sticks were used to allow campers to see how like charges repel. These sticks are actually mini van de graaff generators. Tinsel structures work well in this lab, and if you look closely at the pictures you see these floating above the sticks. Lunchtime was followed by our first installment of Zootopia and then we tackled the ever-popular slime project. We concluded the day with two speed races by team. First was the 60 piece United States puzzle race and the the gold fever word search in honor of element 79 and the Golden Rule which we always try to live by in camp.
Hope you enjoy some of the 160 pictures posted from today's activities.
Get some good rest tonight, as tomorrow will be an extremely active day. We have the egg drop experiment and campers were asked to bring in anything special that they want to use to get the egg to survive drops from the first, second and third floor windows. They can bring in special cushioning items like plastic peanuts, bubble wrap, napkins, newspaper, containers or anything else that they think will adequately protect an egg on its trip to Earth from these heights.
We had a great day today and accomplished so much. After some basic safety rules and procedures were discussed we quickly established teams and made team posters. Prizes were given out for ones that were most colorful, most creative, most scientific, etc. After some "explosive demonstrations" we tackle a unit on the structure of the atom and static electricity. Fun Fly Sticks were used to allow campers to see how like charges repel. These sticks are actually mini van de graaff generators. Tinsel structures work well in this lab, and if you look closely at the pictures you see these floating above the sticks. Lunchtime was followed by our first installment of Zootopia and then we tackled the ever-popular slime project. We concluded the day with two speed races by team. First was the 60 piece United States puzzle race and the the gold fever word search in honor of element 79 and the Golden Rule which we always try to live by in camp.
Hope you enjoy some of the 160 pictures posted from today's activities.
Get some good rest tonight, as tomorrow will be an extremely active day. We have the egg drop experiment and campers were asked to bring in anything special that they want to use to get the egg to survive drops from the first, second and third floor windows. They can bring in special cushioning items like plastic peanuts, bubble wrap, napkins, newspaper, containers or anything else that they think will adequately protect an egg on its trip to Earth from these heights.