Official Kids Mag

December 2021

Official Kids Mag is specifically written for kids ages 5 to 12. It contains activities and stories ranging from kid heroes, cooking, gardening, STEAM, education, fun facts and much more every month.

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Official Kids Mag www.kidscoop.com © Vicki Whiting December 2021 Name: Kids Mag 4 x 2" Customer Name: FLOWERS N FRIENDS Ad Number: 112821NWR9201 479-846-2137 www.flowersnfriends.com Best of Northwest Arkansas the Serving Northwest Arkansas Designs by Flowers make great teacher gifts! Tis the season... 8 What kind of candy is William eating? To find out, unscramble the letters in the "sweet" taste buds to spell the answer. The sense of taste starts with the thousands of tiny taste buds on your tongue. Taste buds are the tiny bumps you can see if you look in the mirror while holding a magnifying glass to your tongue. Taste Buds: The Taste Detectors Taste is our weakest sense. In fact, our sense of taste needs the help of our sense of smell. Hold your nose tight next time you eat something. What can you taste? Then let go of your nose and try the same food again. Food doesn't have much taste when your nose is closed or you have a cold. Smell and Taste Together Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions. When you are hungry and you smell something cooking, your mouth begins to get wet with saliva. That's why we call something that smells good mouth-watering. In fact, your tongue must be wet for the taste buds to work. Here is an experiment that shows this fact: Mouth-watering Experiment Wipe your tongue dry with a clean towel. Now put a little sugar on the driest part. Can you taste it? Your entire tongue can sense all tastes equally. Your taste buds send taste information to your brain. Follow the instructions to color the tongue. Salty: Color the spaces with a triangle in blue. Bitter: Color the spaces with a circle in orange. Sour: Color the spaces with a square in green. Sweet: Color the spaces with a diamond in red. Umami (Savory): Color the spaces with a rectangle in purple. When a taste bud senses the kind of taste it is able to detect, such as sweet or sour, it sends a message to the brain. Some flavors are actually a combination of several tastes. For example, the taste of chocolate is a combination of the bitter taste of chocolate and the sweet taste of sugar. The brain takes messages from the bitter taste buds and the sweet taste buds, puts them together and thinks, "Chocolate!" Communication Central Standards Link: Life Science/Health: Students recognize that body systems are interrelated. P P P E E R M I N T M E L I C O F F E E C H S I P Five Basic Tastes

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