Recommended for middle school students! A collection of quick science project ideas you can do in a short time.
Are you struggling to choose a topic for your middle school independent research project? In fact, with a small twist, you can easily do interesting experiments using everyday items like smartphones, mouthwash, and even bread! In this article, we’ll share tips for independent research—from original ideas to classic experiments—that will make everyone say “Wow!” All of these experiments let you experience the wonders of science, such as programming and chromatography.
Through your summer vacation project, you’re sure to make exciting new discoveries!
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Recommended for junior high school students! A collection of quick independent research project ideas (61–70)
Let’s try making old-fashioned food.

Dishes that are prepared using cooking methods unique to a specific region and widely passed down are called “local cuisine” or “regional dishes.” In our grandmothers’ generation, these dishes were commonly made as everyday side dishes.
However, due to the effort involved or changes in taste preferences, they are being made less and less.
To rediscover the value of these regional dishes—and to learn about their history—let’s cook and present them.
Continuing the history of our predecessors’ wisdom in this way is truly wonderful, isn’t it?
Making a planetarium

Fill your room’s ceiling with stars! How about making your own planetarium? You can use a DIY kit that’s available for purchase, or you can create an original planetarium using cardboard or thick paper.
Bath bomb making

Making bath bombs is fun to create and delightful to use.
All you need are baking soda, citric acid, and potato starch.
You can add food coloring for tint, shape them into hearts or stars, and come up with all kinds of bath bombs depending on your ideas.
It might also be nice to add some flower petals.
Making a bird skeletal specimen

We will collect the bones from chicken wings and make a specimen.
It requires a bit of money and time because you have to eat a lot of wings, but it’s a good learning experience about biology, so please give it a try.
It may also deepen your understanding of life.
Fossil hunting in the city

Fossils can actually be found near our homes.
How about going to look for them as a summer break independent research project? Easy places to search include large rocks along riverbeds and nearby hills where layers of strata are exposed.
Dinosaur bone fossils might be hard to find, but leaves and shells could turn out to be surprisingly easy to collect.
I tried expressing sound with salt

Have you ever used a tuning fork in a science class? There’s an experiment where you place two tuning forks side by side with a screen between them and strike one of the tuning forks.
The result shows that sound carries vibrations through the air to the other tuning fork, creating resonance.
How about a free research project where you visualize sound vibrations using salt? The patterns in the salt change with pitch, which is quite fascinating, and you could also study factors like room temperature and differences between instruments that produce the sound.
Doing this research might make you more sensitive to the “don-don” sound of drums!
The mechanism of a pencil

There are many questions about pencils that we’ve casually used for ages, such as “Why are most pencil shafts hexagonal?” So, take a look at how pencils are made and try investigating the secrets of pencils that you usually don’t think about.



