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High School Science Projects

Samantha Said:

High School Science Projects about Wine?

We Answered:

First, you're going to have a hard time selling this to your school. They probably aren't going to let you bring in wine bottles and there's certainly going to be some questions about the legality of your experiment.

If you insist on using wine, you could repeat the experiment about wine cost and enjoyment. Test people with three cheap wines but falsely label them with high price tags and have them rate the wines. Swap the tag prices between tests and see if the one you labelled as expensive wins.

Alternatively you could see how quickly wine gets tainted with bacteria and see if different ABVs or grape varieties are more resistant to bacteria.

Sarah Said:

I need sugestions for high school science projects?

We Answered:

make this science project cardboard box 2-string upright bass, and all of your wildest dreams will come true.
http://www.geocities.com/washtubbass/car…

Stephen Said:

where can i find some high school science projects?

We Answered:

http://www.all-science-fair-projects.com…
http://www.super-science-fair-projects.c…
http://www.imagineeringezine.com/e-zine/…
http://chemistry.about.com/od/elsewhereo…

Ruth Said:

does anyone know any high school science projects using horses and doesn't take very long?

We Answered:

I did something related to bits and flexion...I believe the title/question was, "Which bit will cause the greatest degree of flexion at the poll?" I collected a variety of different bits and then put them one by one on my horse and applied rein pressure. I took a picture and then used a protractor to measure the angle of his jaw/neck.

The judges basically told me they didn't have a clue what I was talking about (too much horse terminology), but they did like the idea and what I did.

My sister did something regarding saddle pads and heat dissipation...the title/question was something like, "Which type of saddle pad will dissipate the most heat?" She used a variety of saddle pads (wool, cotton, fleece, rubber, etc.). She measured the temperature of the horse's back under the pad at the beginning of the rider and again at the end of the ride (making sure to ride the same amount of time each time, on the same horse, with the same type of work). I think she did pretty well with that one.

The bit one could really be done in a day. The saddle pad one would take a bit longer (depending on how many pads you used) because you'd have to let the horse cool out completely between each ride.

You could also do something like training a horse using treats (like people do with mice in mazes?) and see if you can do a conditioned response type thing (ie, give the horse a treat at the same time you ring a bell, for instance, to do something specific...gradually remove the treat but continue the bell or whatever). Or maybe something about which type of horse shoe (get aluminum, iron, etc.) resists wear the most? You could get the shoes and then put each one in different situations (ie, put the shoe in a bucket with rocks and shake it around, leave it in water/mud overnight, etc.) and see which one lasted the best.

Joann Said:

Where can i find some high school science projects?

We Answered:

www.all-science-fair-projects.com/

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