Float or Sink? | CMSMatHome

Float or Sink? CMSM at Home activity from the Children's Museum of Southern Minnesota

Float or Sink?

Today we’ll test boats made from found materials to see which ones will float, and which ones will not.

  • Let’s play with water. Choose a bath tub, sink, or any container that won’t leak.
  • Now, let’s build a vessel that holds more than 5 pennies.
  • What can we build with? Paper, popsicle sticks, aluminum foil, wax paper, bottle caps and lids, recycled yogurt cups, rubber bands, bamboo skewers and toothpicks…
  • What do you see? Which materials float on their own? Can you add pennies to your boat? How many can it hold?

Further Your Experiment

  • Talk about what happens before the boat sinks. Where does the water start coming into your vessel?
  • What can you change to make it float better? Is it the material, the boat’s shape, or size?
  • Which one of your boats can carry the most weight?
  • Which one can travel the farthest distance?
  • What material floats the best?
  • Can you get the boat to move without touching it with your hands? How?
  • How many pennies can your boat hold, and still float?

Share This Post

More To Explore

CMSM Blog

What’s New in the Loose Parts Play Hub this February

Loose parts play embraces an unrestricted method of play by offering children an assortment of materials or objects that can be freely moved, manipulated, and combined in various ways. This unstructured approach stimulates children’s creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills as they envision, design, and construct using the available materials. Here’s what you will find

Read More »
CMSM Blog

What’s New in the Loose Parts Play Hub this January

Loose parts play is an open-ended approach to play that involves providing children with a variety of materials of objects that can be moved, manipulated, and combined in a different way. The open-ended nature of loose parts play stimulates children’s creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills as they imagine, design, and build using the materials

Read More »

The Museum will be closed on Sunday, March 15.

Due to the Winter weather in our area.
Stay safe!