The Bean FilesGRDCCLIMA
School Programs
Episodes Episodes Episodes
Episode 1Episode 1 Episode 1 Episode 1
Episode 2Episode 2 Episode 2 Episode 2
Episode 3Episode 3 Episode 3 Episode 3
Episode 4Episode 4 Episode 4 Episode 4
Episode 5Episode 5 Episode 5 Episode 5
Episode 6Episode 6 Episode 6 Episode 6
Episode 7Episode 7 Episode 7 Episode 7
Episode 8Episode 8 Episode 8 Episode 8
Episode 9Episode 9 Episode 9 Episode 9
Episode 10Episode 10 Episode 10 Episode 10
Episode 11Episode 11 Episode 11 Episode 11
Episode 12Episode 12 Episode 12 Episode 12
Episode 13Episode 13 Episode 13 Episode 13
Episode 14Episode 14 Episode 14 Episode 14
Episode 15Episode 15 Episode 15 Episode 15
Episode 16Episode 16 Episode 16 Episode 16
Episode 17Episode 17 Episode 17 Episode 17
Episode 18Episode 18 Episode 18 Episode 18
Episode 19Episode 19 Episode 19 Episode 19
Episode 20Episode 20 Episode 20 Episode 20
Teacher Notes Teacher Notes Teacher Notes
Student Work Student Work Student Work
The Great Grains Cook-Off The Great Grains Cook-Off Great Grains Cook-Off

Osmosis Activity

Some plants put a lot of sugar into their cells. These sugary cells can then pull water into them by a special process called osmosis. You can see osmosis at work in the following experiment.

What do you need?

  • Dried apricots, sultanas or other dried fruits
  • Bowl of water

What to do:

  • Taste a bit of the dried fruit - is it full of sugar?
  • Choose one or two pieces of fruit. Weigh them and/or measure their circumference.
  • Place the fruit in a bowl of fresh water.
  • Watch what happens to the fruit over a 30 minute period, and measure the changes in it's circumference and weight.

Does the circumference increase or decrease?

The changes you see are due to osmosis. Look up the meaning of the word "osmosis" in a dictionary - it's a very important thing.

back to episode 16
[ go back to episode sixteen ]

[ teacher notes ]

 

 


Last updated 29 Oct 2004 16:18
Location:  http://www.clima.uwa.edu.au/page/1123
Page Information | Printer Friendly Version