Fish Tumblers
Using scissors and scrap paper, you’ll build paper fish which gently tumble towards the ground.
We’ll use scrap paper, and scissors (you can tear the paper if you don’t have scissors) to make simple tumbling fish that fall gently to the ground when you drop them. Make big ones, small ones, fat ones, thin ones and see which tumble to the ground slowest.
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15 minutes or so.
Age 5 and up.
You know your children better than anyone, and you should judge whether they’re ready for this activity. You might want to think in particular about:
Get some scrap paper and scissors.
Cut a long thin rectangle. Draw two lines on the strip (shown in the picture). Snip the two lines, and then curl the paper around and connect the two snipped lines together.
The short video below shows more detail on how to make the tumbler.
Hold your tumbler high in the air and drop it. It should spin as it falls towards the ground. If you want an extra bit of height, try standing on a chair to drop it.
It doesn’t take long to make another tumbler. Try:
To see which falls slowest, drop two at the same time to compare them.
Use these questions to talk about what’s happening
These tumblers are quick and easy to make.
If you want to start experimenting you could video one falling and then watch it back in slow motion to get a better look at what’s happening.
Use the stopwatch on your phone to see how long the drops take and write your results down on a piece of paper.
15 minutes or so.
Age 5 and up.
You know your children better than anyone, and you should judge whether they’re ready for this activity. You might want to think in particular about: