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Camphill Primary School, Ballymena
Colour Run - This Thursday starting at 7pm... A ticket, T-shirt and wristband will be home with pupils attending on Weds. 17th June. Pupils are reminded to come wearing old bottoms/footwear and they may also want to wear sunglasses. | Breakfast Club - This Thursday parents can join their child at Breakfast Club - see details in 'Take 5' Celebration Day in NEWS below (15/6/26)  | P1 parents - last day to order your child's Camphill school bag for P2 is this Friday..... All pupils will receive their own bag on their first day of school in August.  | P4 parents - Have you paid your child's Class Trip to W5 next Tuesday? Last day to pay is this Friday. | P6 parents - a deposit is due before next Wednesday if your child is planning on going on the P7 Residential Trip in June 2027. | P1-P6 parents - Information out on Wednesday in the ‘End of year’ letter about an early closure at 1pm next WEDNEDAY 25th June.  | Have you completed the Safer Schools NI 'Digital Proficiency course' ? - there is still time to complete this - all details have been sent out via Parentmail last week.  | Have a look inside our school building by viewing our new 3D TOUR on the HOME page of our website..... go on a tour by clicking and following the little person icon... | 'Free School Meal and Uniform allowance' applications for the 26/27 new school year OPEN via the EA Connect portal - see NEWS - 2/6/26.. | School Uniform - online shop (under PARENTS area) now open for orders up until Friday 24th July.
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P7AS Cartesian Diver Experiment

23rd Jan 2026

As we are starting our theme, ‘Unsinkable,’ we carried out an investigation into floating and sinking.  Using a plastic bottle, a straw, a paper clip and some blu tac, we made a ‘diver’ and then popped it into a bottle filled with water.   By squeezing the bottle, we were demonstrating the property of buoyancy.  An object is buoyant in water because it displaces or pushes aside a weight of water greater than the weight of itself.  That is how very heavy ships like Titanic managed to float.  


When we squeezed our bottle, we increased the pressure of the air bubble in the straw reducing its size.  As the bubble got smaller, the ‘diver’ became less buoyant therefore sank. When the pressure was released, the ‘diver’ rose to the top of the bottle.


You could try this at home!