Includes 4 kits Science Art Bubble Kit, Fusion Space Kit, Sculpture Kit, and Explosion Kit
Great hands-on learning and educational science STEM kit for boys and girls which encourages STEM learning for ages 5+
This unique series has Young Scientist making Art and Learning Science!
Developed by a team of Harvard graduates, scientists, and educators
Passed the ultimate test-approval by multiple teams of Young Scientists
10 science activities per STEAM kit - 40 activities total
Each kit comes with all supplies needed (except for common household items) and a detailed experiment manual with guidance to make this educational environmentally themed science STEM kit for kids a great learning toy
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Bubbles Kit
With the Bubbles kit, young scientists can create their own Bubble art gallery with the included poster and make all kinds of bubbles, foam bubbles, large bubbles, and funnel bubbles
Bubbling Lava Slime, Slime Bubbles, Bubble Sculpture, Bubble Foam, Bubble Paint, Bubble Train, Bubble Shapes, Stencil Bubble Art, “Lava” Lamp in a Test Tube, Funnel Bubble Art
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Sculptures Kit
With the Sculptures kit, young scientists can create their own Sculpture art gallery with the included poster and make all kinds of sculptures such as a DNA sculpture, atom sculpture, salt sculpture, and more
Colored Ice Sculpture, Molecule Sculptures, DNA Model, Red Ant Sculpture, Milk Sculpture, Salt Sculpture, Animal Tracks Sculpture, Airplane Sculpture, Shadow Sculpture, Floating Sculpture
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Space Kit
With the Space Kit, young scientists can create their own Space art gallery by creating a solar system, perform Earth chromatography, construct a space rocket, and more
Solar System Model, CentriPetal Art, Constellations, Orbits in Space, Gravity Art, Space Rocket, CentriFugal Art, Solar System Orbits, Planet Earth Chromatography, Phases of The Moon
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Explosions Kit
With the Explosions kit, blow up the art scene with experiments such as making fizz tablet explosions, paint explosions, milk color explosions, test tube explosions, volcanic explosions, rainbow explosions, and others. Explosions everywhere!
10 activities: Milk Color Explosion, Fireworks, Volcanic Explosion, Explosion Painting, Test Tube Rocket, Exploding Baggie, Fizz Tablet Explosions, Test Tube Explosion Art, Rainbow Color Explosions, Bacteria Explosions
What’s in the Box?
1x The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Bubbles Kit
1x The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Space Kit
1x The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Explosions Kit
1x The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Sculptures Kit
@hchavers Yeah I think most kids would love that one. My brother used to make explosives. We’d blow up sand castles in the backyard sand box and at the beach on camping trips. We had a blast (all pun intended ). No adult intervened. I guess they saw we stood way back and used a long fuse so let us carry on since we were being reasonably safe on our own.
Of course he once mixed red phosphorus in an aluminum (is a catalyst) pan. BANG! Red phosphorus in his eyes (he was luck and OK in the end, although it took over two hours in the ER to have 200+ pieces picked out) and the pilot light blown out on the furnace. Another time I forget what he mixed but that blew up in the crucible and he needed stitches in his hand. On the other hand, when he finally got around to going to college he was a chemistry major so his interest developed into something socially acceptable that wouldn’t put him on the police or terrorist radar.
Umm well and they missed he was the one who got high school released early the last day of school the year I graduated (younger brother). Something about a small smoke bomb in the ventilating system (did not damage to it - he was always careful about that kind of thing) and contact explosive (goes crackle crackle when you walk on it) on the floors in the hall.
I’d think this would be useful in developing an interest in chemistry in some kids.
Looks pretty interesting. It did say in the limited reviews on amazon that you will have to buy some additional supplies to, for example, do the bubbles one. Someone also said in the reviews that 5 year olds need a fair bit of help, 11 year olds can do these kids independently. They also said that you can do many of the activities more than once which would be helpful not having to buy one set for each kid in the family. Considering on my wish list was cool stuff for kids this is a step in the right direction. Thanks meh.
Dammit I had to pay my credit card bill today and by the time the payment cleared this sold out. Any chance of seeing this again? These were perfect to do with my neice and teach her some science in a fun way
Sent them to my granddaughter. My son posted her first experiment on FB-the lava lamp one. Seems to be a lot of interesting new and different things to expose budding scientists to. Only issue seemed to be requiring a lot of the things you MIGHT have around the house to complete the experiments which you don’t know you need until you open the box.
Still waiting for delivery. I can tell they are using some type of teleportation to ship these. According to the package tracking it made it to my city at 12:43 yest. and at 12:52 it then made it to another state over 400 miles away.
Specs
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Bubbles Kit
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Sculptures Kit
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Space Kit
The Young Scientists Club Science Art Fusion Explosions Kit
What’s in the Box?
Price Comparison
$51.77 at Amazon | $14.99 for Bubbles Kit | $9.80 for Space Kit | $14.99 for Sculptures Kit | $11.99 for Explosions Kit
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Tuesday, Sep 21 - Monday, Sep 27
It is never a fluke!
Worthy?
@Stallion nope
@Stallion Not according to Amazon reviews.
Ugh, meh. Things for me I can skip over. But things for my kid that look kind of awesome, I can’t skip over that. No fair.
DIPLOMAT! RAT-A-TAT! FAT CAT! AWESOME!
What’s the difference between STEM and STEAM? Art? Architecture? Astrology?
@farfromfunny It’s art at my kid’s school. I mean, what doesn’t that cover?
@farfromfunny @sammydog01 Reading, Writing, History, Economics, Government, Foreign Languages, PhysEd are a few subjects off the top of my head
It honestly enrages me that school has been so ‘business-fied’ that art is deemed irrelevant.
@farfromfunny, one’s misspelled!
@farfromfunny ‘And’.
@farfromfunny So a Stempunk costume, rather than Steampunk?
The explosions one looks fun. Now, how do I give it anonymously to the kid of those annoying neighbors?
@hchavers Yeah I think most kids would love that one. My brother used to make explosives. We’d blow up sand castles in the backyard sand box and at the beach on camping trips. We had a blast (all pun intended ). No adult intervened. I guess they saw we stood way back and used a long fuse so let us carry on since we were being reasonably safe on our own.
Of course he once mixed red phosphorus in an aluminum (is a catalyst) pan. BANG! Red phosphorus in his eyes (he was luck and OK in the end, although it took over two hours in the ER to have 200+ pieces picked out) and the pilot light blown out on the furnace. Another time I forget what he mixed but that blew up in the crucible and he needed stitches in his hand. On the other hand, when he finally got around to going to college he was a chemistry major so his interest developed into something socially acceptable that wouldn’t put him on the police or terrorist radar.
Umm well and they missed he was the one who got high school released early the last day of school the year I graduated (younger brother). Something about a small smoke bomb in the ventilating system (did not damage to it - he was always careful about that kind of thing) and contact explosive (goes crackle crackle when you walk on it) on the floors in the hall.
I’d think this would be useful in developing an interest in chemistry in some kids.
Looks pretty interesting. It did say in the limited reviews on amazon that you will have to buy some additional supplies to, for example, do the bubbles one. Someone also said in the reviews that 5 year olds need a fair bit of help, 11 year olds can do these kids independently. They also said that you can do many of the activities more than once which would be helpful not having to buy one set for each kid in the family. Considering on my wish list was cool stuff for kids this is a step in the right direction. Thanks meh.
After reading the reviews, I’m sure my nieces and nephews will have more fun with the slimes!!
OH MY GOD THEY CAST GLEN AS THE GIANT SPACE WORM IN THE NEW BUT TOTALLY DERIVATIVE STAR WARS MOVIE THAT WON’T LIVE UP TO THE HYPE!!!
/giphy twisted-rational-leather
Probably too young for my 10yo, but fuck it… xmas is about the number of presents, not the quality, right?
/buy
@haydesigner It worked! Your order number is: truthful-adamant-tub
/image truthful adamant tub
/giphy weedy-filthy-lithium
Did what a lockdown Daddio gotta do…
put a little meh in my kiddo’s heart!
/giphy deserted-large-pilsner
/buy
@kevo152 It worked! Your order number is: replete-risky-team
/image replete risky team
/buy
@thardesty Sorry, the
/buy
command is only available to members. Learn more.@mediocrebot Jokes on you, I bought it and became a member (again)
/giphy gullible-mocking-titanium
Dammit I had to pay my credit card bill today and by the time the payment cleared this sold out. Any chance of seeing this again? These were perfect to do with my neice and teach her some science in a fun way
This science kit got issue. Tried to do the explosion kit and all the fizz pills and bad. No fizz. Wtf. What will meh do??
@par_2404 may I suggest you reach out to customer support and ask. Those of us on the forum cannot provide assistance
Sent them to my granddaughter. My son posted her first experiment on FB-the lava lamp one. Seems to be a lot of interesting new and different things to expose budding scientists to. Only issue seemed to be requiring a lot of the things you MIGHT have around the house to complete the experiments which you don’t know you need until you open the box.
Still waiting for delivery. I can tell they are using some type of teleportation to ship these. According to the package tracking it made it to my city at 12:43 yest. and at 12:52 it then made it to another state over 400 miles away.