STEM/Space Activities
Welcome to a place everyone can share STEM/Space activities for summer and beyond.
The following links are just the beginning. To suggest activities, please contact us at 850.245.6625.
Sun, moon and stars
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Explore the phases of the moon with Oreos, make a telescope or your own constellation projector and more.
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LPI also offers audio stories about the moon and eclipses of the sun.
- Find your local constellations with the interactive sky chart from Heavens Above.
- The Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI) Explore website has a number of hands-on activities for children and preteens.
- Learn about different types of stars (PDF) found in the Milky Way Galaxy and how to classify them.
- Read all about solar flares.
- See how the Sun affects the Earth.
- Sunshine weaving activity.
Planets and the universe
- Make and watch a planet fizzing.
- How about a Ziplock Solar System I-Spy Busy Bag?
- Does your community have an astronomy club? Check out this resource to find or create one.
- Kinesthetic astronomy (PDF) teaches basic astronomical concepts through choreographed body movements and positions that provide educational sensory experiences.
- Check out this free, open source planetarium for your computer.
- Explore the universe with ice orbs.
- Create a pinwheel galaxy (PDF).
- Make a bedroom planetarium.
- Check out information on the planets.
- Make your own pair of RoverView 3-D glasses and use them to look at 3-D space images.
Mars
- Download free, high-resolution Mars explorers posters.
- Check out Mars in detail.
- Explore life on Mars.
- Bring Mars into your classroom (PDF).
Saturn
- Learn about Saturn.
- Investigate Saturn's rings.
- Make Saturn from a DVD.
Rockets and space life
- Learn how real astronauts on board the International Space Station live and work.
- STEM activities and resources on the International Space Station.
- Do-it-yourself cardboard space rocket.
- Teens can construct solar sails using everyday materials and learn about Newton’s laws of motion and the transfer of energy.
- Since 1985, astronauts have carried toys into orbit and tested them in a different atmosphere. Can you replicate their experiments (PDF)?
- Build your own spacecraft at NASA SpacePlace.
- Make a soda-straw rocket.
- Make a cardboard rocket ship for your youth area.
- Make a paper bag space helmet for your trip into new frontiers.
- Join the NASA kids’ club.
- Craft 25 different aliens.
- Build an Alka-Seltzer rocket (PDF).
- Get lost in space.
- Turn art into STEAM.
STEM
- Browse through the many activities at Starnet.
- Discover many activities relating to astronomy, physics and chemistry for grade K-12 from the McDonald Observatory.
- This activity for ages 5-13 (PDF) shows how UV radiation reacts to different light sources.
- Check out these fun, simple STEM activities: a catapult challenge, origami and a carnival design game.
- Create nebula art.
- In this simple erupting volcano experiment, use lemon, baking soda and food coloring to produce a bubbling eruption of rainbow colors.
- Homemade catapults are easy to make and an excellent example of engineering. Children will love trying out the finished product.
- This engineering activity uses clothespins, binder clips and craft sticks, encouraging critical thinking for constructing a bridge or a building.
- Learn how electrostatic levitation allows tinsel to fly.
- Use color chromatography to find out how many colors there are in a black marker.
- Elementary youth and tweens will have an opportunity to design and build whatever they want from a mystery bag. They will also learn about Rube Goldberg machines, designed to deliver a ball from one place to another.
- Can kids support a heavy book with a single sheet of paper? Find out with this challenge (PDF).
Apollo 11
- Watch Neil Armstrong's "one small step".
- Read the voice transmission from Apollo 11.
- Check out this article for kids about the Moon Landing.