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By Kim Vij

Sunshine and Solar Energy for Kids: Fun Facts, Experiments, and Activities!

Discover fun facts & activities about sunshine and solar energy! Learn how the Sun powers our world with hands-on experiments for curious kids.

Solar Panels on House for kids to learn about the sunshine and solar energy

This post contains Amazon affiliate links.

  • Learning about Solar Energy with Kids
    • Here are five fun facts about solar energy for kids:
    • Our Personal Story with Solar Panels
  • Sun Activities for Kids Learning about Solar Energy
    • 1. Sun Prints
    • 2.  Clothesline Fun
    • 3. Experiment with Solar Powered Lights
    • 4. Sun Craft
    • 4. Solar Powered Oven
    • 5. Sun Shapes with Math
    • For more SOLAR IDEAS WITH KIDS

Learning about Solar Energy with Kids

The sun is a pretty amazing and powerful bundle of energy.  It can turn your skin pink if you do not protect yourselves, it can make fabric color lighter if left on the clothesline too long, it heats things up, and it can even power homes.

  • National Geographic Sun Facts
  • Views and Movies of the Sun from Solar Views

Here are five fun facts about solar energy for kids:

  • The Sun is a Giant Power Plant! – The Sun gives off so much energy that just one hour of sunlight could power the entire Earth for a whole year!
  • Solar Panels Turn Light into Electricity – Solar panels are made of special materials that capture sunlight and turn it into energy we can use to power homes, schools, and even cars!
  • Solar Energy is Clean and Renewable – Unlike coal or gas, solar power doesn’t create pollution, and we will never run out of sunshine!
  • Plants Use Solar Power Too! – Plants use the Sun’s energy in a process called photosynthesis to make their own food and give us oxygen to breathe.
  • Solar Energy Can Be Used in Space! – Satellites and even the International Space Station use solar panels to collect energy from the Sun and keep working far away from Earth.

Our Personal Story with Solar Panels

We are dedicated to raising thoughtful, informed, happy children. We love gardening, eating healthy, being active and playing outside.

Several years ago, we made a choice to “go solar” to not only harvest this powerful, renewable energy source, but also to make an investment in our environment to hopefully help make the world a better place for our children as they grow up.

Many people watch or listen to meteorologists’ predictions about the weather to determine how they will dress, plan trips, and decide on things like what to plant in their gardens.

We don’t just watch for sunny days, we track them too! Here is a collection of graphs from our solar panel recording. We use most of what the panels make to run our household. Each city has different programs when it comes to Solar Energy.

We are fortunate to live in a community where “going solar” is very popular and many homes, businesses, libraries and even schools are harnessing the power of the sun!

In our case, if we make more than what we use, the electric company buys back the extra energy. Often times, we don’t make enough to meet our needs and we must buy electricity from our electric company.

The graphs below can show how the sun’s energy varies throughout time. In the top left quadrant is a graph from yesterday. You can see that at 12:00 noon, our panels produce the greatest amount of electricity. Why? This is a great question to discuss with your kids!!! The top right corner shows a graph from the last week.

All sorts of things play into the amount of energy we can collect from the sun, weather plays a HUGE factor. Some people with large systems can even see small dips in their energy collection when a plane passes over. Cloudy, rainy days are not high producing energy days at all.

The bottom left graph shows our energy collection for the span of last year. One may think that the summer months of June and July would be the biggest producers of energy. Solar panels, however, do not function as well with the heat of the summer sun.

The spring months with sunny days and a little cooler weather are optimal for our system. The bottom right quadrant is a screenshot of our lifetime statistics.

Solar Panels on Home in Garden

As of this morning, we have produced 11.057 MWh of energy and avoided 6745.1 kg of CO2. If you compare this to a large system, it is not a lot, but we are of the philosophy of if everyone takes small steps and makes small changes, then the world will be a better place. Your small step and my small step may mean something entirely different. The most important thing is that you make that step.

Are you ready for some hands on ideas for learning about solar energy with kids? We LOVE sunny days!

Sun Activities for Kids Learning about Solar Energy

Let’s celebrate sunny days and the gifts that the sun’s energy gives us!!! What can you do???

sun print paper project for kids with flowers and fern leaf

1. Sun Prints

You could talk to your kids about the sun and have them make sun-prints. We used the solar sun print kit, but should have just bought the re-fill package ($5.99 vs $10.49) as we just used the paper.

The extras in the kit were not necessary! In 4 easy steps we had beautiful prints from the sun!

  1. You first gather items from nature with different shapes.
  2. Then, you set them on the paper in a dark room and bring them out to the sun.
  3. When the paper starts to turn white (after 1-3 minutes) you rinse it in a container of water for 1 minute.
  4. Last you set it out on a flat surface to dry!

2.  Clothesline Fun

Hang your clothes up on the line to dry. Sing a song with your kids while you do it. We sing this one..

This is the way we hang up the clothes,
Hang up the clothes,
Hang up the clothes.
This is the way we hang up the clothes,
Thank you sun for helping.

3. Experiment with Solar Powered Lights

Purchase solar-powered outdoor lights for your home walkway. Have your kids help you install them!

4. Sun Craft

Make a craft sun and sing, “Oh Mister Sun“(Kim did this every year with her kindergarten class!)

  1. Using two sheets of yellow paper have your child cut out a large circle on the first sheet.
  2. Then on the second sheet have your child cut strips of paper about one inch wide.
  3. Once they cut the stripes of paper have them fold the paper accordion style.
  4. Then attach to the circle for the sun rays.
    (This is meant to be an independent craft for older child but can be cut ahead of time for younger children to glue together.)
  5. Finish with a smiley face!
Solar Oven

4. Solar Powered Oven

Make a Solar Powered Oven, Like the one at PBS Zoom, or this one here, or better yet – have the kids design their own! Here’s how ours turned out.

5. Sun Shapes with Math

Connect the concept of the sun to your math lessons about shape, sizes, and colors.Make your own using pattern blocks (yes, you know we love these!)

We hope some of these ideas have inspired you to celebrate the sun!

For more SOLAR IDEAS WITH KIDS

Like this idea? Pin for later or share now with a friend!

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Filed Under: Science Tagged With: Amanda, Eco Living, grade school, Outdoor Fun, Preschool, Spring

About Kim Vij

Early childhood teacher, author, speaker and mom of 3. Kim shares ways to make learning fun and parenting an adventure by sharing developmentally appropriate activities.

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Comments

  1. MDB Solar says

    February 22, 2019 at 1:17 am

    I’m glad I stumbled upon your post, anything about happy children and go-green attitude uplift my spirit. I like all your suggested activities, I will try to do some with mine. I agree, solar panels are great investment, and I think teaching our children how to take care and appreciate their environment at an early age is one beautiful gift to enrich.

  2. Ajay Verma says

    February 3, 2019 at 11:07 pm

    Awesome collection of activities, They can help us to spend some time with our kids and we can give some idea of solar energy to them. This is everything that we need for our holiday time to spend with our little partners. I love this site. Worth to #BOOKMARK keeps sharing such things.

  3. Laura Nichols says

    January 30, 2019 at 12:35 am

    Great and helpful blog to everyone.. thanks a lot for sharing.

  4. Rinnie Hidy says

    January 24, 2019 at 7:42 am

    Amazing article. Sharing this on Pinterest!!

  5. Cost Of Solar In Las Vegas says

    December 12, 2015 at 9:43 am

    Solar panel are a clean, efficient and sustainable ways to power your home or business, By using solar energy you are also greatly helping our environment by producing clean energy from a Renewable source. We should encourage more people using it in the life.

  6. Chrissy @ The Outlaw Mom Blog says

    March 11, 2012 at 12:04 pm

    Oh, this makes me so nostalgic. I remember that paper from back in the day 🙂 Sounds like you all had a wonderful conversation and lots of fun!

  7. Mandi says

    March 8, 2012 at 2:01 pm

    We've never used solar print paper! I didn't even know it existed! I am so excited to pick some up and do this with my boys. This is right up their alley!!

  8. heather at wordplayhouse® says

    March 8, 2012 at 7:24 am

    A well thought-out collection of sun activities. We too want to put in solar panels here too. Each year the incentives get better and the costs come down. You are showing your children about the sun…and about taking care of our earth too.

  9. Ali says

    March 7, 2012 at 10:51 pm

    My eldest daughter loves looking at the weather radars on our computer when a storm is coming. She would love to learn all about those graphs you have for your solar panels. Great list of sun inspired activites.

  10. Growing a Jeweled Rose says

    March 7, 2012 at 10:46 pm

    Fantastic post full of great ideas! I love that you went solar! 🙂

  11. Rebekah says

    March 7, 2012 at 9:38 pm

    What a great collection of sunny day activities!! It brings back such fond memories for me since we had a sunny day play date with my daughter's old playgroup, and we did some of the same activities. We were singing "Mr Sun" for weeks after the play date. =)

    Oh, I wish we could get solar panels too. We researched it but, our electric company isn't as friendly to them and doesn't give credits and charges a pretty steep monthly fee for "maintenance", so it actually made it not economically feasible especially considering the cost of the panels. =(

  12. maryanne @ mama smiles says

    March 7, 2012 at 8:24 pm

    I love your sun, too! And I love line-drying clothes – can't wait for it to warm up enough to hang clothes out to dry here!

  13. MiaB says

    March 6, 2012 at 10:23 am

    your sun is cute:) I've pinned this already!!

    ~MiaB

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Early childhood teacher, author, speaker and mom of 3. Kim Vij shares ways to make learning fun and parenting an adventure by sharing all kinds of easy kid crafts, activities, recipes and even travel ideas for families!
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