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Camphill Primary School, Ballymena
We have 3 winners!!! Our Valentine's Quiz was a huge success, thank you to everyone who entered! A big congratulations to The McKendry family who received 1st prize winning a £250 Galgorm voucher. Well done to 2nd prize winners the Murphy family winning a £50 Grouse voucher and to 3rd prize winner Lola Kirk winning a £20 Corner Bakery voucher. Enjoy! | P6/P7 congratulations!! What a show! Over 700 pupils and families enjoyed a show this week that was nothing short of spectacular. Photos/videos will follow after half-term.  | P6 parents - please see information out via Parentmail on Weds. 4th Feb about the possibility of a SKI Trip in January 2027.  | P7 parents - Swimming (Block 2) starts on Monday 16th Feb - after Half-term - Block 2 payment should now be paid via Parentmail 'shop'.  | P7 parents - EA Portal for Year 8 applications is open - closing on Thursday 19th February at 12noon. All information can be found on Parentmail sent (20/1/26) and on the P7 class webpage. | Senior & Junior Choir 'Ballymena Festival' permission form - out via Parentmail on Monday 2nd Feb.  | Half- Term Holidays - School is closed from Monday 9th Feb - Fri 13th Feb (inclusive).  School will open again on Monday 16th February.  | World Book Day is coming on Thursday 5th March.... information out on Thursday 5th February (see NEWS below)
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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!