Mini-Lesson Stations
Exploring the Basics
Before setting up a complete
hydroponics system, you may want to involve students in some
short hands-on activities to explore some of the key factors
affecting hydroponic setups. This section offers some ideas
for "stations" that could be set up as learning centers before
or during your hydroponics study. The stations are in no particular
order and can be modified easily to suit your students' abilities,
interests, and prior knowledge.
Station 1:
Super Soup: Mixing the Nutrient Solution
Purpose: To learn correct procedures for combining
the materials for a hydroponic nutrient solution
Materials: Nutrients, in the form of commercial powdered
or liquid hydroponic mixtures or as individual mineral salts,
water, containers, measuring equipment, stirring rods
Procedure: Have students follow container directions
or a recipe for mixing nutrients, being careful to measure
exactly.
Challenge Questions: What are nutrients? Which
of these might you investigate in the classroom? What do you
think might happen if you use a stronger nutrient solution
than called for? A weaker solution? How might you design your
own "secret formula" to grow plants? How would you measure
your success?
Station
2: pH: The Acid Test

Purpose: To learn how to measure and change pH
in a liquid
Materials: pH paper or test kit, vinegar, baking soda,
containers, distilled water
Procedure:
Challenge Questions: How might a very
acidic solution affect your hydroponically grown plants? A solution
with a higher pH? How could you set up an investigation to find
the answers to these questions? In what other situations might
you need to know the pH of a solution? How else might scientists
use pH?
Station
3: Plant Perspiration
Purpose: To discover that water can be lost from leaves
through transpiration in a hydroponic setup, how to compensate
for that loss, and explore the purpose of transpiration
Materials: Samples of different leaves with stems,
graduated cylinders (one more than you have leaf types), modeling
clay, water
Procedure: This investigation takes about 2 days.
Challenge Questions: What does this investigation
indicate about leaves and water? How does transpiration affect
the air plants use? Why did we have a plain cylinder with
no leaf in it? (This served as a control, to show that
all water loss was actually through the stem and leaf). What
do your observations tell you about what might happen in a
hydroponic system that you set up? How might you deal with
replacing the moisture lost through transpiration?
Station 4: A
Medium Well-Done
Purpose: To investigate different kinds of media for
their water-retaining properties
Materials: A variety of potential hydroponic media
(e.g., sand, perlite, cloth, rockwool, aggregate), magnifying
glasses, water, containers, waxed paper or recycled foam trays
for a work surface
Procedure:
Challenge Questions: Can you explain why you chose
what you did? Can you invent ways to compare the water-absorbing
properties of each medium? If you could design the perfect
hydroponic medium, what would it be like?
Station 5: Let
There Be No Light
Purpose: To observe the effect of light on plant root
development
Materials: Two identical clean glass jars, water-absorbent
polymer crystals, two similar ivy cuttings, black plastic
or other dark material sufficient to wrap one of the jars
Procedure:
This will take about three weeks.