Depends on the age of the kids as I don't understand the term 'grade-school'. 
What I did for kids around 10 yesrs old or so was to go to the Butchers and get 
some Ox kidney, heart and liver. I prepared slides from them, took a microscope 
to let them see the structure and also took scapels for them to cut up the 
animal tissue. Odd how many kids haven't handled animal organs or raw meat. 
Anyways be careful of the scapel maybe you risk adverse Americans ought just to 
use scissors or a pen knife. Ask the kids they might be carrying a blade!! 
(joke, joke, honest).





 

-----Original Message-----
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Kim Merriam
Sent: 22 July 2009 14:58
To: Histonet
Subject: [Histonet] histology for kids

Hello All,

My company is hosting an in-house science awareness day for local grade-school 
students.  I would love to teach them about histology, but all of the 
demonstrations need to be done in our conference room (thus, nothing 
hazardous).  Does anyone know of any house-hold dyes (grape juice, food 
coloring, beet juice, etc) that would stain tissue elements on slides?  I would 
like to bring down some deparaffinized tissues and stain them with something 
and throw a coverslip on (water-mounted) so that they can look at the tissue 
with a microscope.  I will also bring some already prepared slides (wtih real 
stains) for them to look at.

Any ideas?

Thanks,
Kim


Kim Merriam, MA, HT(ASCP)QIHC
Cambridge, MA


      
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