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Our Work

Explore our collection of upcoming and past teaching materials designed by the Palos Verdes Youth STEAM Association. Here, you’ll find hands-on projects, fun experiments, and engaging lessons created by high school students to inspire curiosity and learning in science, technology, engineering, arts, and math. Check out what’s coming next or revisit past materials to keep the creativity going at home!

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Sunday, June 22, 2025

DIY Lava Lamp: Chemical Reactions & Polarity

Using water, vegetable oil, food coloring, and Alka-Seltzer tablets, students will make their own lava lamps in a clear bottle. This fun, bubbly display teaches concepts such as liquid polarity, density, and chemical reactions in a way that's engaging, visually stimulating, and discussion-opening on immiscible liquids and gas formation!

Sunday, July  20, 2025

Popsicle Stick Catapult Competition

Students will design and build their own catapults using popsicle sticks, rubber bands, and ping pong balls. After learning about basic catapult mechanics, they'll test their creations in a fun competition to see whose can launch the farthest. A small prize adds excitement to this hands-on engineering challenge!

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Sunday, August 3, 2025

Paper Roller Coaster Physics

In this interactive STEM activity, students will build their own paper roller coasters and explore how gravity, potential energy, and kinetic energy work together to move a marble down the track. Working in teams, they’ll plan, build, and test their designs—then improve them through creative problem-solving and experimentation. It’s a fun, hands-on way to bring physics to life!

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Walking Water: Exploring How Water Moves and Colors Mix

In this fun and hands-on activity, students will watch as water travels along paper towels from one cup to another, carrying vibrant colors with it. This experiment helps students understand capillary action—the natural process that allows plants to draw water up their stems. As the colored water moves and mixes, kids get to see science and art come together in a simple, fascinating way that sparks curiosity and encourages teamwork.

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