You chew and swallow, but do you know where your food goes next?
Into the amazing oesophagus! In this experiment, learn more about this very important body part, including how it manages to get your food from your mouth to your stomach.
Very nice video Nieves. Jose Luis got his classes to make mini experiment videos about matter and mixtures at home in pairs last year. He turned a not very interesting unit into a presentation and video-making activity and the students loved watching themselves explaining the experiments. Your students' video reminds me of them! Jenny
Thanks Jenny For students, experiments and labs can be the most fun aspects of a science class because they’re interactive and hands on. And while you can give students written instructions, they may not read them closely. Visuals help focus them. I think it´s not necessary to record every second of the experiment — just capture important moments that make it clear what you or they’re doing. Next time I will try to combine photos and videos with text slides explaining what we/they’re doing.
Very nice video Nieves. Jose Luis got his classes to make mini experiment videos about matter and mixtures at home in pairs last year. He turned a not very interesting unit into a presentation and video-making activity and the students loved watching themselves explaining the experiments. Your students' video reminds me of them!
ReplyDeleteJenny
Thanks Jenny
ReplyDeleteFor students, experiments and labs can be the most fun aspects of a science class because they’re interactive and hands on. And while you can give students written instructions, they may not read them closely. Visuals help focus them.
I think it´s not necessary to record every second of the experiment — just capture important moments that make it clear what you or they’re doing. Next time I will try to combine photos and videos with text slides explaining what we/they’re doing.