IJMC Skippy Physics?

                       IJMC - Skippy Physics?

It's amazing what little kids will come up with. Especially when you 
remember that they only know what their parents taught them... -dave









The beguiling ideas about science quoted here were gleaned from
essays, exams, and classroom discussions.  Most were from 5th and 6th
graders.  They illustrate Mark Twain's contention that the "most
interesting information comes from children, for they tell all they
know and then stop."

* One horsepower is the amount of energy it takes to drag a horse 500
  feet in one second.
* You can listen to thunder after lightening and tell how close you
  came to getting hit.  If you don't hear it, you got hit, so never
  mind.
* Talc is found on rocks and on babies.
* The law of gravity says no fair jumping up without coming back
  down.
* When they broke open molecules, they found they were only stuffed
  with atoms.  But when they broke open atoms, they found them stuffed
  with explosions.
* When people run around and around in circles, we say they are crazy.
  When planets do it, we say they are orbiting.
* Rainbows are just to look at, not to really understand.
* While the Earth seems to be knowingly keeping its distance from the
  sun, it is really only centrificating.
* Someday we may discover how to make magnets that can point in any
  direction.
* South America has cold summers and hot winters, but somehow they
  still manage.
* Most books now say our sun is a star, but it still knows how to
  change back into a sun in the daytime.
* Water freezes at 32 degrees and boils at 212 degrees.  There are
  180 degrees between freezing and boiling because there are 180 degrees
  between North and South.
* A vibration is a motion that cannot make up its mind which way it
  wants to go.
* There are 26 vitamins in all, but some of the letters are yet to be
  discovered.  Finding them all means living forever.
* There is a tremendous weight pushing down on the center of the
  Earth because of so much population stomping around up there these days.
* Lime is a green-tasting rock.
* Many dead animals in the past changed to fossils while others
  preferred to be oil.
* Genetics explain why you look like your father; and if you don't,
  why you should.
* Vacuums are nothings.  We only mention them to let them know we
  know they're there.
* Some oxygen molecules help fires burn while others help make water.
  So sometimes it's brother against brother.
* Some people can tell what time it is by looking at the sun.  But I
  have never been able to make out the numbers.
* We say the cause of perfume disappearing is evaporation.
  Evaporation gets blamed for a lot of things people forget to put the
  top on.
* To most people solutions mean finding the answers.  But to chemists
  solutions are things that are still all mixed up.
* In looking at a drop of water under a microscope, we find there are
  twice as many H's as O's.
* Clouds are high-flying fogs.
* I am not sure how clouds get formed.  But the clouds know how to do
  it, and that is the important thing.
* Clouds just keep circling the Earth around and around.  And around.
  There is not much else to do.
* Water vapor gets together in a cloud.  When it is big enough to be
  called a drop, it does.
* Humidity is the experience of looking for air and finding water.
* We keep track of the humidity in the air so we won't drown when we
  breathe.
* Rain is often known as soft water, oppositely known as hail.
* Rain is saved up in cloud banks.
* In some rocks you can find the fossil footprints of fishes.
* Cyanide is so poisonous that one drop of it on a dog's tongue will
  kill the strongest man.
* A blizzard is when it snows sideways.
* A hurricane is a breeze of a bigly size.
* A monsoon is a French gentleman.
* Thunder is a rich source of loudness.
* Isotherms and isobars are even more important than their names sound.
* It is so hot in some places that the people there have to live in
  other places.
* The wind is like the air, only pushier.


IJMC December 1997 Archives