Hearts and crafts where is my water




















Click here to respond. Learning Objective: The children will reflect upon the sinfulness of their heart and how Jesus can give them a clean heart. Target Age: K-5 th Time Needed: 20 minutes without using a craft activity at the end Materials Needed: Marker board or poster board to draw a large heart.

You might look for extra heart-themed craft activity if you need a longer lesson. Closing : Lead the children in prayer asking God to you and the kids a clean heart. Need More Ideas? Browse our free coloring pages for Sunday School or check out these 10 easy Bible memory verses for children.

New Sunday School Curriculum: Church budgets are tight, that's why our curriculum is half the price of printed materials. Use your favorite candies to represent each in this easy model. Learn more: My Joy-Filled Life.

Learning about blood types? This clever experiment with food coloring helps kids learn which types are compatible with each other. If the dyes stay the same color when mixed, the types are compatible.

Learn more: Our Journey Westward. This might be the cutest of all the circulatory system activities! Kids learn about blood types and the importance of being willing to donate blood.

Learn more: Highhill Education. Learn about cholesterol and its effects on veins and arteries with this effective demo. Learn more: Teach Engineering. Combine a healthy eating lesson with a little math practice! Kids use a calorie chart to determine how healthy a variety of snacks are. Want to expand on this? Look at the labels of real foods and build a list of the best and worst snacks for your heart. Learn more: Nourish Interactive.

A healthy heart needs exercise too. Create a tic-tac-toe board with the free printables at the link, then toss a bean bag bonus points for making heart-shaped ones!

If you drill both straw sized like we did , you can use some modeling clay to make the second hole a little smaller. The exact amount of water is not important. Take two straws, stretch and bend them to create a 90 degree angle. Slide one straw into the other straw pinch one to make it smaller so it slides in , then tape up the join. Repeat with the second set of straws. Place your three bottles on the table. Leave the third one empty. On the first bottle place the cap with one straw hole and one small hole.

On the middle bottle place the cap with two straw holes. Leave the third bottle without a cap. Carefully slide the straws through the bottle caps. Place clay or play dough around the straw bases on the middle bottle to make an airtight seal with the bottle cap.

You are now ready to put your heart model to work! In this simple model the first bottle is the atrium of the heart, the second bottle is the ventricle, and the third bottle represents either the lungs or body.

Our fingers function as the valves of the heart. To make your heart model work, squeeze the middle bottle only. Start by pinching the straw between the atrium and ventricle bottle.

Now release the middle bottle and watch your blood move from the atrium into the ventricle. Then start again. Your heart rate is how fast your heart beats. We measure this as beats per minute.

The easiest way to do this is to count how many times your heart beats in ten seconds, then multiply the number by 6 60 seconds in a minute to get your heart rate. Heart rate is affected by many things. It varies by person, but also each person experiences variations in their heart rate every day. Many things can affect heart rate including age, health, activity, caffeine, sugar and more.



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