This week we went on a field trip! We visited a local Italian ice store and saw the process of making Italian ice.
I didn't even know this place existed. |
The machine that packages the flavored ice into plastic cups |
Watching the staff mix ingredients into the machice. We watched them make lemon Italian ice. |
It only took about ten minutes to turn all the ingredients into an icy slush--we all tried a sample and it was good! |
This is a local man and his company and he supplies many of our local grocery stores with his wonderful Italian ice |
Tasting our samples--we of course bought a small cup to go:) |
MarioFan has been busy working on his bridge unit. We finished learning all about Arch Bridges and made a few examples.
We painted the bottom of one bridge set which will eventually hold 3 different type of bridges |
We mixed some plaster |
Using a plastic mold built some stones |
then built our arch bridge--all the blue paint flakes off our model. |
Next MarioFan got out his K'nex bridge kit and built an arch bridge |
We taped up both ends |
We used this form from one of our books to make predictions on which pillar would hold up the best |
Next we went outside and tested our pillars by standing on them (acting as the pillars compression) |
Some pillars held up very nicely under MarioFans weight while other simply collapse and we discussed why |
The order in which the pillars held up starting with the one that failed to the one with the most success... air, popcorn, flour, marbles and sand/gravel |
We did the same thing after adding water |
A bridge would not hold up under these conditions--so we discussed how bridge engineers came up with a strategy building caissons |
We constructed our own caisson using PVC pipes--first we pushed in into the soil until it reached the hard surface |
Next we began suctioning out the water once we got as much water out we added another internal cassion |
and began scooping out the mud and water until we reach the hard surface. |
we removed the internal caisson and we put in our pillar |
and removed the outer caisson (Dad got to see this part) |
Our completed pillar:) |
I love the bridges! So cool!
ReplyDeleteWow, I think he is on his way to becoming an building engineer. I always love how you make the learning so hands on. Blessings!
ReplyDeleteMy kids would love to see how Italian ice is made; they eat it for snack just about every night. We've used that K'nex bridge set this spring and my son just loved it so much!
ReplyDeleteI love your week!! The bridge experiments are cool!
ReplyDeleteMy son would love to see how the Italian ice was made. The hands on learning about bridges is truly excellent! #WeeklyWrapUp
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