Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/b3/9b/e4/b39be4d3-9f71-09fd-55f3-2acfd99df8d2/mza_3608911343029698871.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Creative Science for Kids
Creative Science Australia Pty Ltd
34 episodes
Few seconds ago
Explore science facts, intriguing scientific discoveries, and hands-on activities to try yourself at home. The perfect way to spark an interest in science and to feed the minds of science-curious children aged 8 to 12 years. Jenny Lynch is a science show presenter, writer, and science kit inventor, with a knack for making complicated scientific ideas fun, fascinating, and easy to follow. Matilda Sercombe is a young presenter with a passion for sharing fast facts and posing intriguing questions. https://www.creativescience.com.au
Show more...
Kids & Family
Science
RSS
All content for Creative Science for Kids is the property of Creative Science Australia Pty Ltd and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Explore science facts, intriguing scientific discoveries, and hands-on activities to try yourself at home. The perfect way to spark an interest in science and to feed the minds of science-curious children aged 8 to 12 years. Jenny Lynch is a science show presenter, writer, and science kit inventor, with a knack for making complicated scientific ideas fun, fascinating, and easy to follow. Matilda Sercombe is a young presenter with a passion for sharing fast facts and posing intriguing questions. https://www.creativescience.com.au
Show more...
Kids & Family
Science
https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog16651525/Ep33Podcast.jpg
Cutting edge technology – virtual reality with Dr Vanessa Moss
Creative Science for Kids
13 minutes
3 weeks ago
Cutting edge technology – virtual reality with Dr Vanessa Moss
Let’s get immersed in a high-tech virtual world with five fascinating fast facts about virtual reality, an interview with Dr Vanessa Moss, an astrophysicist who uses virtual reality to collaborate with other scientists, and an eye-opening binocular activity for you to try yourself at home. Presented by Jenny Lynch and Matilda Sercombe. Written and produced by Jenny Lynch. Music by Purple Planet Music. Sound effects by Pixabay. Creative Science: https://www.creativescience.com.au Facebook: @creativescienceaustralia Instagram: @creative_science_australia Episode content: 00:00 Introduction and fast facts 04:05 Interview with Dr Vanessa Moss 10:33 Dominant eye activity   Virtual science exhibition, The Future of Meetings TFOMxCSIRO Exhibition Hall NOTE: This virtual space uses quite a lot of data (100MB). The space is compatible with Safari, Chrome and Edge browsers (partial support for Firefox). It is also accessible via the Spatial.io phone app or Oculus Quest 2 (VR). https://www.spatial.io/s/TFOMxCSIRO-Exhibition-Hall-64a1609a2e4f7d91d95a43bd?share=9027864886891104356   Dominant eye activity instructions: The hand you use for writing is your ‘dominant hand’ and most of us are either left-hand dominant or right-hand dominant. A few people are ambidextrous, which means they can use one hand just as easily as the other. Did you know that you probably have a dominant eye as well as a dominant hand? Follow these steps to test which is your dominant eye. Stretch your arms out in front of you and use your fingers and thumbs to make a triangle shape that you can see through. Focus on an object in the distance and keep staring at it. Keep your arms stretched out, but slide your hands together to make the triangle smaller, while still looking at the distant object. Keep looking at the object, and close one of your eyes. If you can still see the object, the eye that is still open is your dominant eye. If you can’t close one eye at a time by winking, try asking someone to help you by carefully covering one of your eyes with their hand. If you can’t see the object, switch eyes, so the other eye is closed. If you can now see the object with your open eye, then this is your dominant eye. If it didn’t work, try again, or maybe you are one of the few people who does not have a dominant eye. As well as testing for your dominant eye, this activity demonstrates how each of your eyes sees a slightly different picture of your surroundings. Virtual reality relies on this binocular vision to create realistic images of three-dimensional worlds.
Creative Science for Kids
Explore science facts, intriguing scientific discoveries, and hands-on activities to try yourself at home. The perfect way to spark an interest in science and to feed the minds of science-curious children aged 8 to 12 years. Jenny Lynch is a science show presenter, writer, and science kit inventor, with a knack for making complicated scientific ideas fun, fascinating, and easy to follow. Matilda Sercombe is a young presenter with a passion for sharing fast facts and posing intriguing questions. https://www.creativescience.com.au