Activities / 4-year-old
Science Experiments for Dads with 4 Year Olds
Four-year-olds ask 'why' and 'how' constantly, which makes them natural scientists. These experiments use stuff you already have at home and create reactions that blow their minds. You don't need to understand the science perfectly - just be willing to try stuff and see what happens together.
What kids this age are like
At four, kids can form hypotheses ('I think it will float'), follow multi-step procedures, observe cause and effect, and describe what they see. They're moving from random experimentation to intentional testing. They can compare results and remember outcomes. Science at this age should be hands-on, visible, and a little dramatic.
Baking Soda Volcano
Build a volcano from clay or playdough around a cup. Add baking soda, food coloring, and a squirt of dish soap. Pour in vinegar and watch it erupt. The classic science experiment for a reason - the reaction is dramatic and repeatable.
Mentos and Diet Coke Geyser
Drop Mentos into a 2-liter of Diet Coke and run. The eruption is massive and four-year-olds lose their minds. Do this OUTSIDE on grass. Talk about why it happens (nucleation - tiny bumps on the candy release gas). Do it twice because once is never enough.
Rainbow Walking Water
Line up cups with water dyed red, yellow, and blue. Put empty cups between them. Fold paper towels into strips and drape them from full cups to empty cups. Watch the water 'walk' up the paper towels and mix into secondary colors. Takes an hour for full effect.
Magnetic Treasure Hunt
Give them a magnet and go around the house testing what's magnetic and what isn't. Make two piles - sticks and doesn't stick. Talk about why (metals vs non-metals). The fridge, doorknobs, and coins are good test subjects.
Seed Germination Window
Put wet paper towels in a zip bag with bean seeds. Tape to a sunny window. Over the next week, watch roots and sprouts emerge. It's a living science experiment. Four-year-olds check on it every morning like it's Christmas.
Lava Lamp in a Bottle
Fill a clear bottle 3/4 with oil, add water dyed with food coloring. Drop in pieces of Alka-Seltzer tablet. The bubbles carry colored water up through the oil creating a lava lamp effect. Cap it and shake for a different effect.
Static Electricity Fun
Rub a balloon on their hair and stick it to the wall. Rub it on a sweater and use it to move small paper bits, bend water from a faucet, or make their hair stand up. Four-year-olds think static electricity is actual magic.
Egg Drop Challenge
Give them materials - cotton balls, tape, bubble wrap, a small box, paper - and challenge them to protect a raw egg from breaking when dropped from chest height. Design, build, test, redesign. Engineering thinking in action.
Shadow Tracing Clock
Put a stick in the ground on a sunny day. Trace its shadow with chalk every hour. Watch how the shadow moves and changes length throughout the day. It's a hands-on lesson in how the Earth and sun work together.
Dissolving Test
Fill cups with water and test what dissolves - sugar, salt, sand, oil, baking soda, rice, flour. Predict before testing. Stir and observe. Four-year-olds are fascinated that some things disappear and some don't.
Tornado in a Bottle
Fill a bottle 3/4 with water, add a drop of dish soap and glitter. Cap it tight. Swirl it in circles and a vortex forms. Discuss how real tornadoes form. The glitter makes the vortex visible and mesmerizing.
Ramp and Speed Test
Set up ramps at different angles using boards and books. Roll different objects down - toy cars, balls, cans - and measure how far they go. Test which angle makes things go fastest. Steeper isn't always better and that's the lesson.
Ice Melting Race
Give them several ice cubes and different tools/conditions - wrap one in foil, put one in salt, put one in warm water, leave one in the sun, cover one with a towel. Race to see which melts first and discuss why.
Milk Color Explosion
Pour whole milk in a plate. Drop different food colors around the edges. Dip a cotton swab in dish soap and touch the center of the milk. Watch colors swirl and explode outward. The fat molecules react with soap and it's visually insane.
Rain Cloud in a Jar
Fill a jar with water. Spray shaving cream on top (the cloud). Drop food coloring on the shaving cream. Watch as the color saturates through and 'rains' into the water below. It visually explains how rain works.
DIY Compass
Rub a needle on a magnet (always in the same direction) to magnetize it. Float it on a small leaf or cork in a bowl of water. It points north. Test it against a real compass. Four-year-olds are amazed that a needle can know directions.
Worm Observation Lab
Dig up some earthworms and put them in a clear container with soil layers (dark soil, light sand, dark soil). Watch them tunnel over the next few days. Observe them up close with a magnifying glass. Release them back when done.
Balloon Rocket
Thread a string through a straw, tape it taut across the room. Tape an inflated (untied) balloon to the straw. Release the balloon and watch it rocket across the string. Test different balloon sizes for different speeds. Newton's third law in action.
Survival Tips
- #1Always ask 'What do you think will happen?' before the experiment. Their predictions are often hilariously wrong and that's the best part of science.
- #2When an experiment fails, treat it as a success. 'It didn't work - interesting! Why do you think that happened?' Failure IS science.
- #3Keep it simple. The most impressive experiments use everyday materials. You don't need a kit - you need curiosity and a kitchen.
- #4Do experiments more than once. Repetition helps them understand that results are consistent (or that variables matter). Plus they always want to do it again anyway.
- #5Take photos and videos of experiments. Start a 'science journal' with pictures and their dictated observations. It makes them feel like real scientists.
