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Ooey Gooey Goopy

Slime Makes Ideal Science Lab

There’s a slime-making craze oozing through preteen circles and leaving many a parent wondering, “Who ya gonna call?” when gooey trails are left on tables and goopy blots on countertops. The answer isn’t Ghostbusters but high school science teacher David Prindle.

In Prindle’s classroom, he will tell you, making slime is science, and a great way to teach about chemical processes– a Next Generation Science Standards requirement. Though many youngsters started DIY slime-making after watching YouTube and Instagram videos, Prindle has been making it with his students for years.

Darien Adams squeezes his slime

“It’s a fun way to get hands-on with stuff and show them how things compound together,” he said, while students in his Earth and Chemical Systems class stirred Elmer’s glue with Borax. He made things extra fun, challenging them to add water tinted with color from highlighter markers to give their slime a neon sheen and the ability to glow under a blacklight.

In Prindle’s class students stretched, plopped and squished their slime, considering their creations. “It’s messy,” said senior Ian Kohlhoff. “It’s something kids can do that’s safe. It’s nice being able to learn something and actually see it happen.”

Senior Vanessa Lezama said she likes toying with the consistency of slime, and said squeezing it offers comfort. “I like seeing the different strengths of the slime,” she said.

It also has offered a cool bonding experience in a non-chemical way. Prindle’s students recently made slime with help from their cognitively impaired peers, a suggestion from junior Nate Jones. “They are pretty cool kids. They are so sweet,” Nate said. “I thought they would enjoy something like that.”

From left, Zurial Leal and Vanessa Lezama follow the slime recipe

The Basics

The recipe for slime includes white Elmer’s glue, which is made up of polyvinyl acetate, a polymer that “flows,” Prindle said. When mixed with water and Borax, or sodium tetraborate — a product with many household applications including laundry detergent — the polymers slow down and slime is formed. Creative children have taken the basic recipe and run with it, adding shaving cream, cornstarch, glitter, play sand, scents and other enhancements.

Borax can cause skin irritations if overused, but Pringle said making slime is not dangerous. Just don’t do it every day, he cautioned.

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Time for Slime – Chemistry for Kids

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Erin Albanese
Erin Albanese
Erin Albanese is managing editor and reporter, covering Kentwood, Lowell and Wyoming. She was one of the original SNN staff writers, helping launch the site in 2013, and enjoys fulfilling the mission of sharing the stories of public education. She has worked as a journalist in the Grand Rapids area since 2000. A graduate of Central Michigan University, she has written for The Grand Rapids Press, Advance Newspapers, On-the-Town Magazine and Group Tour Media. Read Erin's full bio

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