Ensuring your child’s safety during a science school project
December 26th, 2008 by admin
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A science school project can be a lot fun and thorough learning experience for your child. However, there are also possibilities of accidents if you don’t take care. Sometimes, parents worry about chemicals dropping on the body or the child getting hurt by any of the ingredients or to make the situation worst, an explosion.
Don’t worry the science project in school will be a fun experience for your child. All you require to do is to keep in mind some of the tips mentioned below.
Tips to ensure safety while doing a science school project:
- Age and skill:
When it comes to science projects in school, people tend to choose the most complicated and those that have excellent chance to win irrespective of the child’s age and skill. This way, they are keeping child’s security at stake. Make sure that the science school project you choose for your child is fit for your child’s age group. The best way is to start off will less complex and small science projects for school and then move on to the next level.
- Equipment safety:
When involving in your child’s science school project safety, it is important to ensure use of proper safety equipment. For instance, you need to give a protective eye gear to your child in case, he is mixing some chemicals or performing sawing.
- Read the instructions:
Before starting off with a science project for your child’s school read all the instructions carefully. This will ensure your child’s 100 percent safety.
- No guesswork:
There should be no guesswork when it comes to performing a science project at school. Never ever mix chemicals that you are not sure of. Study, research, confirm and then act.
Other tips at a glance:
- Don’t rely on shortcuts
- These are dangerous
- Keep safety equipments such as a fire extinguisher handy
- Don’t get tempted to smell or taste the chemicals
- Speak to your child and be with him guiding through out the project.
All the best!
This entry was posted on Friday, December 26th, 2008 at 4:40 pm and is filed under Education. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.