Kids' Questions

Here at Curiouscity we measure our success by the kind of questions the children ask. We firmly believe that when a child is interested enough to ask us a question, they are engaged, they are thinking, and they are interested in the subject material presented. It doesn’t matter how trivial or seemingly unimportant the question is. If it is important to the child , it is important to us. When a child asks us a question that we don’t know the answer to, that’s when we know we’ve done our job. Rather than avoid it or give a shaky answer – we honestly tell them we are stumped and it’s an amazing question and then we all go out and look for answers and meet again to see if we do have an answer.

Our Wisdom begins in wonder

– Socrates

💡 I wonder if the rain bends towards a strike of lightning?

Asked at Headstart, Static Electricity workshop

We were doing a session on static and dynamic electricity in class and we were having a hard time getting enough static to grab onto the balloon. I moved everything near a window and we talked about conditions when static worked best…. DRY conditions. I later had them try to guess the strongest force of static that they could imagine…. And we eventually talked about it being “lightening”…. One kid immediately said, “That’s not true…. You just told us that static works best in dry conditions, but I only see lightening when it rains.” We looked it up and found that the forces of static are created in the upper atmosphere where it is drier… and it is so strong that it easily overcomes the rain when it zooms towards the earth.

In the same session, another child made an observation after this discussion, when I showed them a demo on how water bends towards a static charge. “Hmm… I wonder if the rain bends towards a strike of lightening?” he said. Still don’t know the answer to that one.

🎨 I think alcohol likes the colour more than water does

Asked at Lawrence School, Ooty, Chromatography demo

When the kids were watching the colours separate using both water and alcohol…. One kid made the following observation when watching non water soluble markers separate.

“I think alcohol likes the colour more than water does”

They also wanted to try if water soluble colours could be separated with alcohol… so we tried, and we noticed a different pattern of separation with the two mediums. I’ve never had kids want to try this before and it was quite spectacular.

Another child actually asked whether they used blood to paint in the old days… when we spoke about natural colours being derived from plant material. I do believe that they did…. Need to confirm this though.

🥬 Is purple cabbage juice an acid or a base?

Asked at Acids and Bases workshop

When the kids were watching the colours separate using both water and alcohol…. One kid made the following observation when watching non water soluble markers separate.

“I think alcohol likes the colour more than water does”

They also wanted to try if water soluble colours could be separated with alcohol… so we tried, and we noticed a different pattern of separation with the two mediums. I’ve never had kids want to try this before and it was quite spectacular.

Another child actually asked whether they used blood to paint in the old days… when we spoke about natural colours being derived from plant material. I do believe that they did…. Need to confirm this though.