
Teachers Did an Experiment to Show the Power of Handwashing, and You Won’t Be Able to Stay Unimpressed
Sometimes a visual is better than words — especially when it comes to explaining something to children. That’s exactly what Jaralee Annice Metcalf, a behavioral specialist, and her colleague Dayna Robertson, a teacher at Discovery Elementary School in Idaho Falls, decided to do to show their pupils the importance of washing their hands properly. And now the whole world is following their example!
At the beginning of winter, when flu season had just started, Jaralee shared that she was tired of always being sick. Although the spread of bacteria is inevitable, she wanted to show the kids why they needed to wash their hands to kill germs.
The point of the experiment
To explain how bacteria spread and why it’s important to wash your hands well and often, Jaralee came up with a simple classroom activity with her students: she asked several kids with various levels of hand cleanliness to touch 5 pieces of white bread that were taken from the same loaf, at the same time. Then, they put the bread in individual plastic bags to observe what would happen over the course of one month.
Steps of the project
“We took fresh bread and touched it.” — explains Jaralee in her Facebook post that has been shared about 70K times.
The first piece was rubbed on all of the classroom laptops. The second one was a control piece — it wasn’t touched, it was placed immediately in the plastic bag and labeled “Fresh & untouched.” The third piece of bread was touched by the whole class using unwashed hands. For piece #4 the whole class washed their hands with warm water & soap and, again, touched the slice. And for bread piece #5, they cleaned their hands with hand sanitizer and then touched it.
A slice wiped on laptops
One month later the Chromebook-rubbed slice looked worse than all the other specimens. As the teacher explains, at their school they do sanitize the laptops, obviously they didn’t do that for the project.
The effect of soap & warm water
The only slice of bread that didn`t have the obvious bacteria on it was example #4. It was the one that was touched by hands that were just washed with warm water & soap, which clearly showed the children why they should wash their hands often.
The “dirty hands” slice
Example #3, the “dirty hands” slice, was covered in spectacular mold growths one month later and didn`t need any additional explanation.
The “hand sanitizer” slice
One interesting thing is that specimen #5 — the “hand sanitizer” slice — turned out to have a lot of bacteria too. So this is a clear example that hand sanitizer can’t replace proper hand-washing with soap. Jaralee shared the results of the project on Facebook to tell parents teach their kids to wash their hands well and this simple project immediately spread to hundreds of other schools and families.
The hand sanitizer slice shook us a little! How about you? How do you teach your kids that they need to wash their hands properly? We’d be happy to hear from you in the comment section below!
Comments


Still a great way to engage kids in science and to get them to wash their hands.
Al, MSc Microbiology
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