| Third grade science projects can be a lot of fun and a | | | | flowers, and warm water into the other vase with the |
| great learning experience for the students. In third | | | | other three flowers. You just need to monitor them |
| grade, students are at the age where they are | | | | and see which ones last longer, the ones in the cold |
| exploring the world around them and learning how | | | | water or the ones in the warm water. |
| things work, so projects that answer the question | | | | Other fun third grade science projects can be to see if |
| "What happens if...." are great for this age. Students will | | | | waterproof mascara is really water proof. You can do |
| likely be able to come up with a question to answer on | | | | this by getting a white sheet of paper and several |
| their own, but will need help organizing their project and | | | | different brands of mascara that claim to be water |
| doing the actual project, as well as reporting their | | | | proof, and then put some of each brand onto the |
| findings afterwards. | | | | paper and run it under some water for a few seconds |
| A fun 3rd grade science project might be to see if cut | | | | to see which ones stay and which ones run on the |
| flowers will last longer in warm water or cold water. | | | | paper. Then, you record your findings so you can see |
| You can do this by getting half a dozen carnations and | | | | which mascara brands are really the waterproof |
| two vases. Put cold water into one vase with three | | | | product they claim to be. |