Want to have a MagLab expert visit your classroom? Watcg our Pre-Recorded Outreach Videos or let a Gainesville MagLab expert come visit your classroom at no cost!
Show your students one of our pre-recorded lessons to have a MagLab educator visit your classroom online!
Play one of our virtual classroom outreach activities on magnetism and/or electromagnetism. You can sign up for our MagLab Educator's Club to stay informed about other Maglab opportunities for teachers and education professionals. For more information, please email Carlos R. Villa.
Do you need asynchronous materials for your students to view on their own? Check out the MagLab's pre-recorded outreach videos to offer your students a science lesson whenever it works best for their schedule.
This recorded lesson is an introduction to the magnet lab for primary students. You'll find out what research goes on at the Magnet Lab and what types of magnets the MagLab operates. Get more information on the properties of magnets while learning about how the MagLab magnets work.
This recorded lesson covers the connection between electricity and magnetism as it explores the phenomenon of electromagnetism. You'll get an introduction to the MagLab and the types of science that go on here while also learning about the magnets and how they operate. You'll even get to learn about a few World Record magnets.
Thank you for your interest in Classroom Outreach from the National MagLab. To request an outreach, please complete our online Outreach Request Form. Please sign up for our Educator's Club to keep up with all of our events.
The MagLab extensive classroom outreach programs reach more than 5,000 students each year. Teachers can choose from diverse outreach topics that will give students a hands-on experience with science.
Science nights for individual schools are offered based on staff and scientists availability. School-wide science events or requests for MagLab outreach at community events must be requested 8 weeks in advance. For more information, contact Amy C. Howe at (325) 294-4786 or amy.howe@ufl.edu.
Choose from one of the lessons below, or call us to customize a program to meet your specific needs. Please be prepared to stay with your class at all times during the outreach. Our educators are not responsible for the class, and therefore the regular room teacher must be present. In cases of a substitute, call ahead to the Center so that proper arrangements can be made.
4-5 6-8 9-12
By combining items commonly found in and around your house, you can create an electromagnet. In this activity students are given the items and the basic directions for creating an electromagnet that is strong enough to pick up paper clips. They are then encouraged to modify their magnets and note the effects that each change brings to the strength of the magnet.
K-3
After a short introduction detailing the composition and principles of magnets, students are encouraged to experiment with magnets of different compositions, shapes and sizes. This exploration allows them to make discoveries about magnets through hands-on activities that highlight the principles of magnetism.
4-5 6-8
Science is not the memorizations of facts. Science is a way of thinking, and scientific knowledge is subject to change as new information is learned. Scientists collect evidence through use observations. This evidence can challenge or support notions of how the world around us works. This activity will use evidence as a basis to distinguish between an observation and an inference.
K-3
This outreach: introduces students to the subject of science; explains what scientists and engineers do; and encourages students to think about the way they view science. Then students use their observational skills to explore magnets of different shapes and sizes, and make some amazing discoveries.
Last modified on 22 April 2024