100 First-Prize Make-It-Yourself Science Fair Projects

Product Description
Demonstrate the action of magnetic fields, make a moon box, build “ant architecture,” and measure static electricity. Plus: try homemade perfume, erupting volcanoes, jumping Puffed Wheat, a bubble gum plant graft, a big green solar machine, and a kite sighter. “Well indexed and accurately illustrated with black-and-white pen-and-ink drawings, this book is a good starting place for finding successful science-fair projects.”–School Library Journal. “…can provide ne… More >>

100 First-Prize Make-It-Yourself Science Fair Projects

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100 first prize make it yourself science fair projects

5 Responses to “100 First-Prize Make-It-Yourself Science Fair Projects”

  1. Anonymous says:

    If you need a book to do a sciend fair project it easy it tells you everything you need to know!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Steve Ross says:

    This book was amazing and I had so much fun reading it. You would never guess that this book would be this good. It has everything you would ever need to win at Science Fair. O my god I must be stoned.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Unfortunately, the first project my son attempted was on electromagnetism — and it didnt work!!! We checked, double-checked, and triple-checked his set-up and it was exact – but no way could we make this project work! Now he’s forced to go back to his teacher, hope she allows him to revise the project which she’d already approved, and start all over. This time, at least – we’ll make sure he tries the project out before he submits his ideas to the teacher for approval!
    Rating: 2 / 5

  4. Anonymous says:

    The author obviously put alot of work into thinking up some of the projects, but they are like projects from out school lab book that “demonstrate” certain scientific principles, they don’t actualy work as “science fair projects” because they
    don’t set out to solve a question. Its like “build tornado” or “build this” or “build that” but they are not sceice fair prjects. I think its a good curiosity book to have around if you’re into tinkering with stuff, but I dont think its good for coming up with a science fair project.
    Rating: 3 / 5

  5. Anonymous says:

    I agree with Cynthia A Albano from Wood-Ridge, New Jersey United States. My daughter and I tried the Springing Spring Project and it DID NOT work. Now, she needs to talk to her teacher about changing the experiment. I recommended to her to show that the author is wrong and how the experiment should work.
    Rating: 1 / 5

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