crosshome- Your Christian home on the Net!

Main Page

sponsor info
Find A Match For Life!
Christian Indie Radio
GetChristianMusic
Solid Walnut Music

free e-mail
Sign-up or Login

free stuff
Christian Wallpaper

bible study
Bible Search
Devotionals

channels
Books
Cartoons
Culture
Family
Games
Health
Homeschooling
Humor
Inspiration
Kids
Men
Ministry
Parenting
Poetry
Teens
Women

about us
Writers Guidelines
Statement of Faith
Contact Us


Find Your Soul Mate




homeschooling

archives
homeschooling archive

How Do Your Lungs Work?
by Kathryn Martinez (Kathryn's bio)

[Note: If you'd like to read more from Kathryn, be sure to check out her web site.]

Have your kids ever asked how do you breathe? What are lungs? What do they look like and how do they work? Have you ever wondered this yourself? Here is a super simple, super easy project to explain this. Goes well with a study of anatomy, life science, and/or biology. How about studying diving and snorkeling? Just a good, all around activity.

SUPPLIES:

One 1-liter or 1-quart clear plastic bottle*
One large balloon
One small balloon
Two rubber bands
One straw
Modeling clay

DIRECTIONS:

1. Cut off the bottom of the bottle. You can use a serrated knife, a utility knife, or scissors … what ever sharp instrument you use, please use standard safety rules.
2. Cut the neck off of the large balloon.
3. Stretch this balloon over the bottom of the bottle. Put a rubber band around it to hold it in place.
4. Insert the straw into the neck of the small balloon.
5. Tie the balloon to the straw using the other rubber band.
6. Put the balloon end of the straw into the bottle so that the balloon is all the way into the bottle but does not touch the balloon over the bottom of the bottle.
7. Secure the straw in the bottle by using the modeling clay. Make sure the clay completely covers the mouth of the bottle, but does not crimp the straw.
8. Push on the rubber at the bottom of the bottle. What happens? Is this like breathing in or out?
9. Pull the rubber down. Which way would you be breathing now?

What happens? The stretched balloon across the bottom of the bottle acts like a diaphragm. This is the flat muscle at the bottom of the chest cavity. This muscle forces air in and out of your lungs. Your lungs do not inflate or deflate by themselves … a muscle, your diaphragm, is pulling or pushing so that you can breathe.

*Vegetable oil bottles work well for this. So do drink bottles, the disposable kind, not the kind you re-use.

Copyright 2001 Kathryn Martinez. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

About Kathryn Martinez: I'm a SAHM, home schooling mother of 4 children, 1 husband, and a neurotic cat. This is our sixth year of home schooling. I worked for over 10 years at USF in an education and training department. I hope that by sharing my experience with other home schoolers, both the new and the not-so-new and those just considering home schooling, I will pass along all the help that was given to me when I first started out.


Copyright 2000,2001 crosshome.com