What, No Soil?!

Hydroponics, in its simplest
form, is growing plants by supplying all necessary nutrients
in the plants' water supply rather than through the soil.
The word derives from the Greek root words hydro and
ponics, meaning water working. Growing plants
hydroponically helps gardeners and farmers grow more food
more rapidly in smaller areas (greenhouses, living rooms,
classrooms, and rooftops, for instance) and to produce food
in parts of the world where space, good soil, and/or water
are limited.
When youngsters explore how to grow plants hydroponically
(without soil), fruitful questions bloom: How can we provide
support for plants without soil? How do plants grown with
just water and nutrients compare with plants grown in soil?
How can we get the tallest plants using a hydroponics setup?
These types of questions can lead to active investigations
and problem solving. Record-keeping becomes a natural outgrowth
of these endeavors. Concepts related to basic plant parts
and needs, nutrition, food production, recycling, agricultural
technology and other areas come to life in these soilless
growing environments. These studies may even lead to classroom
business opportunities or fuel student career interests. Not
the least of the benefits is the joy of students harvesting
a crop of their own incredible edibles!
This guide features a synthesis of information from hydroponics
experts and from people who have explored hydroponics with
children in classrooms. It presents basic how-to information,
suggestions for helping students discover concepts through
investigations, plans for simple hydroponics setups, and stories
from classrooms where students and teachers have investigated
this growing technique.
Let the discoveries begin!

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