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It’s time once again for my scientific gift guide. (No, I don’t mean I have the purchasing of gifts down to a science--if I did, I’d set up in business and be a millionaire before the New Year. I mean, it’s time once again for my guide to scientific gifts.)
Not being in a position to play with all the science-related toys on the market, however--again, more’s the pity--I have instead scoured the World Wide Web (so you don’t have to), consulted authoritative lists of dozens of science-related gifts--and then picked out the ones I like the most. (See, I told you it wasn’t scientific.)
From the
holiday toy list of the magazine Parenting for High Potential, for ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:31, December 8th, 2003 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |
Of all my Christmases as a small boy in Texas, the one I remember best is the one when I was seven, which is when my parents gave me my first microscope.
Asked what I would recommend in the way of holiday gifts for children, then, a microscope--or something similarly scientific--is always at the top of my list. To that end, I spent a little time this week cruising the malls and the Internet for some ideas.
And yes, you can still get a microscope, though it comes in a variety of different guises. You can still get the kind of "starter" microscope I got, more than adequate for a ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:29, December 12th, 2000 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |
There's been a lot of talk this year about how much easier the home computer has made Christmas shopping, and I agree--but not because I'm doing a lot of shopping on-line. I find computers have made Christmas shopping easier by opening up a whole new range of gift ideas. Any kid with a computer is a candidate for a computer-related gift: preferably, of course, if I have anything to do with it, one with a scientific bent.
After an arduous search, I came up with the perfect example. (Well, OK, actually it was the first thing I saw when I went into the store, but it's still the perfect example!) The IntelPlay QX3 ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:26, December 14th, 1999 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |
Sears calls its Christmas catalog the Wish Book, but while it's true that, as a kid, I spent a fair amount of time each year browsing through its pages of toys, there was another catalog I found even more interesting, not just at Christmas, but all through the year: my own personal "wish book," the Edmund Scientific Catalog.
Edmund Scientific is a New Jersey company that sells professional optical equipment to laboratories, but it also has a consumer science division that sells scientific items to schools, hobbyists, and anyone else who might have a need for, say, a hand-held altimeter that tells you at all times what your personal elevation is (up to ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 11:35, December 15th, 1997 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |
When I was a kid, nothing made me happier at Christmas than a present that had something to do with science. Of all my Christmases as a small boy in Texas, the one I remember best is the one when I was seven, which is when my parents gave me my first microscope.
Asked what I would recommend in the way of holiday gift-giving, then, for both children and adults, "something scientific" is naturally at the top of my list. To that end, I spent a little time this week cruising the malls and the Internet for some suggestions that can help you make this a scientific Christmas for people of all ages....
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:25, December 4th, 1995 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |
As a kid, I only wanted "fun" gifts for Christmas. I didn't want anything "practical," like (horrors!) underwear. And "educational" was way down my list, too. Yet my favorite gifts of all were actually very educational: I just didn't notice, because I was having so much fun with them. These were the gifts that involved science.
There are three "classic" science-related gifts: microscopes, telescopes, and chemistry sets. I had all of them.
I think I enjoyed the microscope most. I got one when I was seven, and it enthralled me for years. Table salt, human hair, blood, thread--anything and everything went under the lens. For a long time I regularly ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 16:57, December 5th, 1994 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns |