Friday, March 22, 2019
The Flinking Lab
Today, we took an approach to the learning cycle which follows
the 5 E’s (engage, explore, explain, elaborate, evaluate) through an investigation.
As the class was learning about floating and sinking, our professor showed us
that a piece of wood floats and a rock sinks. Although, he showed us a rock that floats and
a piece of wood that sinks, so how can it do this?! To further investigate, the class was
given the challenge to create something that would “flink” (neither float nor
sink). My group used many different strategies to try and achieve this. One way
was to fill a glass container with some air and some water. Another way was to
fill a bag with some air, a little water, and a little weight (pennies). The last
way, which was super easy to find the balance with, was taking a styrofoam cup, filling it with water,
and adding three washers to it. All three strategies “flinked.” Through this experience, I
learned a rock can float in water if it is less dense and a piece of wood can
sink in water if it is more dense, but anything can "flink" if it has the same
density as water.
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