What happens if experiment

2–3 yearsSuccess MindsetMaterials: Water in a bowl or basin Safe objects to test (plastic toys, wooden spoons, small balls, blocks) Towel for cleanup

Set up simple cause-and-effect experiments using everyday items. Try dropping different objects into water to see what floats and what sinks. Roll balls of different sizes down a ramp. Stack blocks to see how high you can build before they fall. Let your child make predictions before each try, then discover what actually happens. Talk about what you both notice together.

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What happens if experiment

How to Do This Activity

Set up simple cause-and-effect experiments using everyday items. Try dropping different objects into water to see what floats and what sinks. Roll balls of different sizes down a ramp. Stack blocks to see how high you can build before they fall. Let your child make predictions before each try, then discover what actually happens. Talk about what you both notice together.

Why It Works

Trial-and-error problem solving is exactly how children this age learn best. When children are curious about outcomes, they remember what they discover much better than when they're simply told information (Gruber et al., 2014). This hands-on exploration builds scientific thinking skills while supporting your child's natural drive to understand how the world works. Research shows that fostering this kind of curiosity during early childhood optimizes later academic achievement (Arnone et al., 2011). The predictions and discoveries create memorable learning moments.

Tips for Parents

Ask open-ended questions like "What do you think will happen?" before each experiment. There are no wrong answers. Keep the experiments simple and safe. You're building curiosity, not teaching physics concepts yet. Let your child repeat the same experiment multiple times if they want. Repetition is how they learn at this age.

Materials Needed

Water in a bowl or basin Safe objects to test (plastic toys, wooden spoons, small balls, blocks) Towel for cleanup

Learning Methods

Symbolic and Pretend PlayHands-On Sensory ActivitiesInteractive Play-Based Learning

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