Product Details
Scientific Explorer's My 1st Science Kit - The Science of Color

Scientific Explorer's My 1st Science Kit - The Science of Color
From Scientific Explorer

List Price: $19.99
Price: $19.70 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

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Product Description

The perfect science introduction for younger kids. Set up a color mixing lab, perform 10 science experiments, grow gobs of crystals in 24 different hues, and capture a rainbow in a tube.

Scientific Explorer kits have won praise and awards for fun and educational value from the Parents’ Choice Foundation, Oppenheim Toy Portfolio, Dr. Toy, Family Life Magazine, Discover Magazine, Scientific American Explorations Magazine, and many others.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3272 in Toys & Games
  • Brand: Scientific Explorer
  • Model: 210
  • Released on: 2007-01-01
  • Dimensions: 3.00" h x 10.20" w x 12.30" l, 1.00 pounds

Features

  • Winner of Creative Child Magazine's Seal of Excellence Award and Parents' Choice Approved Award
  • Learn to make crystals in brilliant colors
  • Explore color by mixing primary colors to discover how to make secondary colors
  • Create a rainbow in a test tube
  • Learn to set up a color science laboratory

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
The perfect science introduction for younger kids. Set up a color mixing lab, perform 10 science experiments, grow gobs of crystals in 24 different hues, and capture a rainbow in a tube. This award-winning kit is lots of fun for your budding scientists!


Customer Reviews

Bad product, yet turned out good...2
I agree with all the reviews here - the good AND the bad. The set is cheap, chintzy, and NOT worth the money for the materials. The magnifying glass is...well, I wouldn't even call it cheap plastic. Just impossible to see anything through it. The droppers are cheap and I am sure will not hold up to repeated use. The plastic cups are the kind they use to give you 2 pills in the hospital - disposable plastic.

The entire kit is based solely on color mixing using Crayola tub tints! I almost had a fit - I have a jar of 50 of them in the bathroom! Color mixing is all you get here.

That being said - my 4 1/2 year old loved it. Felt like a real scientist with her dropper and what-not. So, was it worth the twenty dollars? Not from a materials stand point. But for watching my daughter learn and discover and become jazzed about experiments even more than she was (if that's possible), then yes, it was worth it.

It was definitely worth Mom learning a lesson on buying good quality materials and borrowing experiment idea books from the library!

Sooo hard to rate!4
I am a microbiologist and worked years in a lab and know exactly how cheap these materials are, BUT the kids loved it! The bottom line is that if I had brought them the same materials and used food colouring in the pantry, they would have not have had half the interst. Is it the box, the wrapping? Who knows. My hope was to have some fun with science and to introduce the idea of scientific exploration as a joy and this silly kit works. The lesson ideas help you guide them in an age appropiate way and along with extra food colouring from my pantry (arguing over the yellow) we have been able to use this 3 time on rainy days with much enthusiasm. If you want to introduce science as something fun, these kits do the trick. I will certianly purchase more in the future.

You don't need this to do the science1
I cannot believe that other reviewers gave this cheesy so-called science kit 5 stars. I gave it to my almost 5 yr. old grandson for Christmas. His mom & I decided that one does not need the junky things included in this set to do these experiments. For instance the little plastic food coloring bottles available at the grocery store are perfectly suited for mixing colors either on paper towels or in custurd cups. The chrystal making stuff is what is used in baby diapers and for $.26 (the cost of one diaper) you can make chrystals easily. The magnifying glass is so chintzy--very small and hard to see through the murky plastic.
Get your child an inexpensive real magnifying glass. No more packaged so-called science kits for us. Most kids really interested in science would find little inspiration in this kit.