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Arg! Science fair ideas?
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<blockquote data-quote="smallworld" data-source="post: 144687" data-attributes="member: 2423"><p>We always went to the library to check out books on science fair projects. My kids would flip through the books to find topics of interest to them.</p><p> </p><p>My daughter just did a science fair project that might catch your difficult child's interest. She tested whether boys or girls were better at identifying different fruits using the sense of taste alone. She blindfolded her subjects (all the same age) and put ear plugs in their ears. They held their noses as they tasted the fruit. The results were interesting but not entirely surprising.</p><p> </p><p>A few years ago the same daughter did a project on whether twins and siblings were likely to have the same type of fingerprints (there are three different classifications of fingerprints). She actually "fingerprinted" a lot of kids in our neighborhood.</p><p> </p><p>Hope that helps.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="smallworld, post: 144687, member: 2423"] We always went to the library to check out books on science fair projects. My kids would flip through the books to find topics of interest to them. My daughter just did a science fair project that might catch your difficult child's interest. She tested whether boys or girls were better at identifying different fruits using the sense of taste alone. She blindfolded her subjects (all the same age) and put ear plugs in their ears. They held their noses as they tasted the fruit. The results were interesting but not entirely surprising. A few years ago the same daughter did a project on whether twins and siblings were likely to have the same type of fingerprints (there are three different classifications of fingerprints). She actually "fingerprinted" a lot of kids in our neighborhood. Hope that helps. [/QUOTE]
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