Planting Science - Projects: THE COUNCIL OF JIMOTHY
You are here: Home / Groups / BCS Boyle Fall 2020 / Projects / THE COUNCIL OF JIMOTHY

THE COUNCIL OF JIMOTHY

Project by group bcsboylefall2020


Explore That plants form photosynthesis that produces oxygen for man kind. That there are many plants that I thought were from Maine but ended up to be an invasive plant. How do they make their own food?
Research Question we want to see which light will help the plant and which will kill the plant. well we thought of how the sun has a lot of different colors. so we were going to see which works the best. they fit because the topic is about the lights so we were going to break down the colors of the sun into there individual.
Experimental Design We will have four cardboard boxes, each with a volume of 216 cubic centimeters. Each will have ten cups, which will be five nasturtium seeds and five corn seeds. each box will be equipped with a two lights, and each box will have a different light. We will use blue lights, red lights, fluorescent lights, LED lights, and the sun, which will be a control.
Investigation Theme WOS
School Name Bangor Christian Schools
Session Fall 2020
About this Project

The great updates and documentation from this team made it a fun project to follow along with. This group do the scientific process justice by methodically planning, executing, and recording their findings with in depth data collection and great pictures of their experimental set-up. They also showed resilience when some things didn't quite go as expected, a common experience as a scientist!
-- Mason Kamalani Chock, Scientist Liaison

LogoWithTags.png

f_logo_RGB-Black_72.png 2021_Twitter_logo_-_black.png icons8-mail-30.png

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

GET INVOLVED AS A TEACHER  *   GET INVOLVED AS A SCIENTIST MENTOR

SUPPORT US!   *   TERMS OF USE

NSF_Logo.jpg This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant #2010556 and #1502892. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Copyright © 2022 PlantingScience -- Powered by HUBzero®, a Purdue project