When one person says "I like science" and another says "I don't like science," I
remember school science textbooks that had geology, astronomy, chemistry,
botany, biology, agriculture and physics all in one book.
. . . .
There are many fun things to do and explore that could be called
"science," but why not just call them skate boards or miniature golf or
basketball or piano or water play or rescuing wounded birds or making goop or
collecting rocks or swimming or drawing pictures of clouds or taking photos in
different kinds of light or growing corn or training a dog or looking through
binoculars or waiting for a chrysalis to open or making a sundial or making a
web page or flying a kite or chasing fireflies or building a campfire or finding
out which planet that is by the moon on the horizon, or wondering why snowballs
take so much snow to make, or how a 4-wheel-drive truck works.
Science and the larger idea of Changing Facts
photo by Sandra Dodd