An idea that sticks
Marisa O’Neil
You could call the fourth-graders in Karin Selby’s class at Eastbluff
Elementary School little MacGyvers, except they’re probably too young
to remember that TV show.
But give them a battery, some wire, a rivet and a switch, and
they’ll put it all together to make an electromagnet.
Each student at the school in Corona del Mar has been diligently
keeping a science notebook detailing all the class’ experiments,
including lessons on magnets and electricity. On Monday, they put
those two together.
“Think of a junkyard and the cars stacked on top of each other,”
Selby explained to them. “They use a really big magnet to pick up and
move the cars because the crane operator can turn the magnet on and
off. Can you make a junkyard crane that turns on and off?”
She then demonstrated that using a permanent magnet attached to a
steel rivet turns the rivet into a temporary magnet, able to pick up
small metal washers. The students went through their notebooks and
wrote down their question.
Selby made a list of all the materials they would need -- a rivet,
a 150-centimeter wire, a 15-centimeter wire, a circuit base, a D-cell
battery, a switch, 50 small washers and a plastic cup.
“Uh, don’t we need a magnet?” 9-year-old Lillian Rauch asked
skeptically.
“No, no magnet,” Selby replied. “And I’m not going to tell you how
to do this. You are scientists, and you have to figure out how to
make this.”
The scientists broke up into groups while one member of each got
the needed materials.
“This is going to be hard,” 9-year-old Grant Wysopal sighed as he
sat on the floor.
In a nearby group, 9-year-old Adam Varasteh struggled with his
supplies. He held his notebook in one hand, wires, cup and battery in
his other and hopped along with the circuit base between his ankles.
Grant’s group members, Zoe Paris and Braden Cooley, sat down with
their supplies and set to work. First, they set the battery in the
base, strung wires to the switch and one to the rivet.
They dipped the rivet in the cup filled with washers. Nothing
stuck.
“Grant, you have a really long wire there,” Selby said when she
came to check on their progress. “Why do you think it’s so long? It
has electricity running through it.”
“I get it,” he said, struck with a sudden epiphany. “Wrap it
around the rivet.”
They took the long wire, wrapped it around the rivet and again
dipped it in the cup.
“It’s working!” Grant exclaimed as tiny washers stuck to its end.
“We did it!” Zoe added.
Things progressed more slowly in Adam’s group. The first few tries
yielded no magnet for Adam, 9-year-old Brett Thompson and 10-year-old
Katie Corum.
Student teacher Christine McClintock came by for a look, just as
they caught on to the wrapping-the-rivet idea. But, still, no magnet.
Brett fetched a new battery, just in case that was the problem. He
re-wrapped the rivet for added measure.
They dipped the rivet in the cup, and the washers finally clung to
it.
“Yeah, that’s cool!” Brett said, satisfied with their miniature
junkyard magnet.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Marisa O’Neil visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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