Facts about air catapult game

Facts about air catapult game

Learn facts related to air in this Science catapult game – Fun game for one or two students to take turns playing. Each time a question pops up, select the correct answer and get a chance to shoot at your adversary with the help of your army. If you keep getting the answers right, you keep shooting at your adversary until his /her castle breaks down. A dragon also joins on your side to spit fire on the loser and destroy his/her castle completely. Be a champion and conquer enemy territory.

In this game, kids will learn facts about the air, properties of air, uses of air, wind energy, air quality, pollution etc. This game is for children in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grades.

Landforms catapult game

Definition of land forms catapult game

Learn how to define different land forms in this science catapult game – Fun game for one or two students to take turns playing. Each time a question pops up, select the correct answer and get a chance to shoot at your adversary with the help of your army. If you keep getting the answers right, you keep shooting at your adversary until his /her castle breaks down. A dragon also joins on your side to spit fire on the loser and destroy his/her castle completely. Be a champion and conquer enemy territory.

In this game children will learn about the definitions of land forms - What is irrigation, a canal, stream, lake, duck, bay, ocean, stream, lakes etc.

Landforms 2 Rally game

Concepts of geographical land forms

Science Rally game – Classroom rally game for one or more students. Select your team with color and play Science classroom rally game. Random questions will pop up during rally race and if you answer it correctly then you will get boost and your opponent gets some hurdles like stone or mud on the way so they slows down. Beat your opponent and have fun with Science rally game.

This game is for children in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grade. In this game, children with learn defining some geographical land forms (features) like plateau, mountain, valley, hill, peak, mountain range etc.

Weather rally game

Definition of weather concepts

Learn about the weather in this Science Rally game – Classroom rally game for one or more students. Select your team with color and play Science classroom rally game. Random questions will pop up during rally race and if you answer it correctly then you will get boost and your opponent gets some hurdles like stone or mud on the way so they slows down. Beat your opponent and have fun with Science rally game.

In this game children will learn about the definition of weather: rainy, sunny, dry, windy, humid, moist weather conditions. This game is for children in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grade children.

Money spent

Money spent video cartoon 

Math video cartoon on teaching children money related facts (money spent). This is math activity is suitable for children in 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th grades. have fun watching this math lesson at home and in school.

Counting 1 to 20

How to count from 1 to 20 cartoon video

Math video cartoon on teaching children how to count from 1 to 20. This is a fun math cartoon with numbers being moved along a beach. Teach children to move objects while counting and spelling numbers. This activity is suitable for kids in pre - k, kindergarten, 1st grade, 2nd and 3rd grades. This is a helpful aid for self learning at home and in school.

Counting 1 to 10

Counting from 1 to 10 math video cartoon for children. This is a useful homeschooling aid for kids on how to counting numbers. It is a fun activity with a girl riding a bicycle past different numbers. This is suitable for children in PreK, kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, 3rd grades.

Area of triangle

Area of a triangle cartoon

Finding the surface area of a triangle cartoon for children in 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grades. This video teaches you how to use the base and the height to find the surface area of a triangle. This is an introduction to using the Pythagorean theory in a fun way. Lets kids sit at home or in the classroom watching this video lesson on geometry.

Area of circle

Finding the area of a circle video cartoon

Math video cartoon lesson on teaching children on how to find the surface area of a circle using pie, radius and diameter. This is a useful homeschool and classroom video less on area of circles for children in 3rd, 4th and 5th grades.

Prehistoric animals

Prehistoric animals moon shoot game

Science moon shoot game is a game for one player when self-testing skills or many players of in a classroom. Each player enters his/her name on their rocket and before launch. Answer questions as the rockets rise. If you answer a question incorrectly, you lose a chance and your rocket is hit by a meteorite. The winner is the student who answers the most questions.

Learn about prehistoric animals ( dinosaurs, mammoth etc) , names, diets, reproduction, era of existence etc. This game is for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grade children.

Prehistoric Animals

Long before humans roamed the earth, the planet was full of strange and wonderful creatures. Some of them were the biggest animals that have ever lived, and others were much bigger versions of what we already have, centipedes that were three metres long, or a dragonfly half a metre long. Prehistoric animals lived millions of years ago when the world was unrecognizable to how it is today, the continents we have today didn’t exist, the world was one big piece of land where prehistoric animals would roam, and then it started to break up and drift across the oceans to form what we have now. In this lesson we will look at some of the best prehistoric animals.

T-Rex – The famous dinosaur that everyone knows, and not just from Toy Story. T-Rex lived 70-65 million years ago and used to walk upright on its two strong legs, but had short, weaker arms. T-Rex had a very strong bite, similar to that of alligators.

Megalodon – Megalodons were giant sharks that could reach 30 metres long! They had sharp 7-inch teeth and a powerful bite; they could chomp through the skull of a prehistoric whale as easy as us biting into a grape.

Archaeopteryx – This was the first prehistoric animal found that had both traits of dinosaurs and traits of birds. It had a face like a dinosaur but feathers like a bird, but we’re not yet sure if it could properly fly or just glide. It helped us figure out that birds descended from small dinosaurs.

Sea Scorpions – some species of Sea Scorpions were 2.5-3 metres long and would crawl about the sea floor picking up its prey with it’s pincers or hiding on the sea floor and waiting for something to swim over it and sting them with it’s tail.

Woolly Mammoth – Woolly Mammoths looked a bit like elephants only much bigger and with fur. They went extinct around 9,000 years ago, but after the last ice age. It is thought that one of the main reasons they went extinct is that they were hunted by prehistoric cave men for food.

Smilodon – This was a type of sabre-toothed cat, and the last one that would have existed at the same time as humans. Like Woolly Mammoths they survived until the end of the ice age.

Dire Wolves – Dire Wolves were similar to Grey Wolves but much bigger, heavier and with larger teeth.

Neanderthals – Neanderthals were very much like modern humans. They were shorter, but much more robust because their bones were a lot stronger. They, like us, had language and families and art, however they lacked imagination and only lived in small groups. It’s thought that we lived alongside them for thousands of years once modern humans migrated into Europe, which is where Neanderthals lived. Unfortunately they became extinct, probably because we were killing the food they eat and eating it ourselves, meaning they often went hungry.

Brachiosaurus – Brachiosaurus’ were one of the largest dinosaurs to ever live and weighed around 30 tons. They were vegetarians, eating tall plants and would have to eat plants all day long because they were so big! They had long necks and long tails and a large body.

Terror Bird – Terror Birds were birds that couldn’t fly, but roamed the land ‘terrorising’ its prey. They could be 3 metres tall, and would eat mammals, their favourite mammals to eat were horses, but they would also eat small mammals too.

Learn about Prehistoric Animals - Teaching Tips For Instructors

  1. Use Drawings of the animals so that the kids can see what they looked like.
  2. For the animals that are particularly large, find a scaled drawing showing the size of the animal compared to a human, these exist all over the internet.
  3. Relate the animals to animals they already know or have seen in popular culture, for example Woolly Mammoths and Sabre Tooth Tigers both appear in the popular children’s movie “Ice Age”. For Neanderthals you can compare them to cave men, Sea Scorpions and Megalodon are a little easier because they look very similar to their descendants today only much bigger.
  4. Engage the children by encouraging to pick their favourite one, describe why, and draw a picture of it.
  5. If you have the time, watching an episode of “Walking with Dinosaurs”/”Walking with Monsters”/”Walking with Beasts” can help the children know what life was like for these animals. There are episodes on Sea Scorpions, T-Rex, Brachiosaurs, Megalodon and Neanderthals, which are easy to find on YouTube.