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Tag - stevespanglerscience com or water wizardry or stevespangler
February 22, 2006
I was contacted several months ago by Julia Ann Charpentier, a Milwaukee-based freelance writer and an editor for book publishers, for a future article in the trade journal TD Monthly Magazine. If you’re interested in learning more about the world of educational toys… or you are curious about how Steve Spangler Science got it’s start, just click on the link below. Read the article
January 28, 2006
Maybe I should say we hit all of the Targets with our new science products. If you stroll through the toy isles at Target stores, you might stumble across some old Steve Spangler Science classics along with a few brand new science kits. All of these kits are part of our product license agreement with Be Amazing Toys, a Salt Lake City company specializing in hands-on science kits and toys for children who want to learn how to do something amazing.
On the shelves at Target you’ll find Blizzard in a Bucket, Fun-damental Science, Water Wizardry, Fire and Ice Mountain, Jungle Quicksand, Insta-Worms, Morphin’ Gators, F/X Snow, Terrific Twisters and the best selling Test Tube Wonders. Thanks to everyone who emailed when they saw our creations at their local Target store.
Tags: Be Amazing Toys, Blizzard in a Bucket, children, F/X Snow, Fire and Ice Mountain, General, Insta Worms, Jungle Quicksand, Morphin Gators, science kits, science products, steve spangler, Steve Spangler Science, stevespangler, stevespangler science, stevespangler.com, stevespanglerscience, stevespanglerscience com, stevespanglerscience.com, Terrific Twisters, Test Tube Wonders, water wizardry
December 29, 2005
This statement was released earlier today regarding the lawsuit filed in district court in August 2005: “Scientific Explorer, Inc. and Steve Spangler, Inc. reached a settlement with regard to the lawsuit filed by Spangler in district court on August 16, 2005. Steve Spangler is no longer affiliated with Scientific Explorer nor does he endorse any Scientific Explorer product.”
September 21, 2005
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - A hands-on chemistry kit developed by Steve Spangler Science for Be Amazing! Toys won one of the most coveted awards in the educational market - the Teacher’s Choice Award. The science kit called Water Wizardry teaches children how to perform incredible scientific acts with amazing polymers that defy the laws of nature. The kit includes more than a dozen science-based activities using non-toxic chemicals that help children better understand the amazing properties of water and the need for water conservation using superabsorbent polymers. “Chemically speaking, polymers are simply long chains of molecules repeated over and over again. It’s important to know something about polymers because we all need to make informed decisions about purchasing products made from polymers that are recyclable, biodegradable, or reusable,” says Steve Spangler, the creator of an entire line science kits and science toys for Be Amazing! Toys, a Utah-based corporation that manufactures educational toys and learning resources. “This kit was designed for the young scientist who wants to mix and measure and whip up an erupting concoction without any need for worry on the part of the parents,” according to Spangler. This kit focuses on a …
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Tags: amazing polymers, Be Amazing Toys, chemistry kit, General, laws of nature, science based activities, science kit, Science Toys, scientific acts, steve spangler, superabsorbent polymers, Teachers Choice Award, water wizardry
September 3, 2005
People often ask how I got excited about science. Who was the great chemist who influenced my life? I grew up in an unusual family. My first recollection was when I was three years old, peeking through the curtain at the Paramount Theater, watching my dad cut my mother into three pieces. Dad would close the show by eating fire. That my Dad could eat fire had amazing applications to my days in kindergarten - I took my Dad to “show and tell”?. Growing up in a family of professional magicians, I learned how to think like a magician. Magicians always start with the impossible and move to the possible. All things are possible. The difference between magic and science is the secret. Unlike magicians, science teachers get to create intrigue and wonder, but also reveal the secret. It is a beautiful approach to use when we are teaching science.
Listen to my podcast on magicians and teachers (File size is 1.1 MB) (Show length 4 minutes 20 seconds)