Allen Kurzweil's Potato Chip Science

Maggie Lange, GoLocalProv Correspondent

Allen Kurzweil's Potato Chip Science

I walk into Allen Kurzweil’s beautiful, old home on Providence's Benefit Street, and strewn among the attractive antiques and preserved architecture is a bright collection of plastic pieces, Styrofoam, and crinkly metal wrapping. As he gathers the spilled components of the bag, he says, “Well this is a metaphor for who I am. All over the place.” All over the place, but focused on creativity. The spilled contents around Kurzweil’s living room are the contents of his latest invention: Potato Chip Science.

Making science fun and delicious

The Potato Chip Science kit offers 29, deliciously fun experiments – all using something to do with potato chips. To teach about acoustics, Kurzweil creates an improvised yo-yo like contraption and pulls the strings at different speeds to make a whooshing, Zen-like sound.  He then makes a toy-bird from a Pringle’s can, and uses burnt potato chips to create fingerprint powder.

The kit's accompanying book encourages using a recycling bin as a laboratory.  It repurposes trash into cool products, encouraging both physically making something and working with what you have, rather than purchasing ready-made toys.  “The principal thing,” Kurzweil says, “is to make your own fun – with an emphasis on the making and the fun.”

From fiction to (saturated) fact

Kurzweil had been writing serious literary fiction, when he son proposed a few different suggestions for his father’s career.  “First he said I should write a book about Boston Red Sox,” Kurzweil says laughing, “and then, casually, he said I should write about potato chips.” So Kurzweil's children's book, Leon and the Champion Chip, inspired a how-to science project, and Kurzweil and his son headed to the basement to experiment and make prototypes. A few years later, the non-fiction Potato Chip Science was born.

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Kurzweil says that it’s easy to get kids excited about science, when science is cool. In Philadelphia, he says, he was teaching kids how to make Spud Crud, a non-Newtonian solid.  “A non-Newtonian solid means that when you pack it, it’s a solid, but when you let it go it begins to melt. This is how a bulletproof vest works; it allows the wearer to move, but when the bullet hits it, the vest becomes solid.”  With an experiment like that, Kurzweil says, Potato Chip Science can get video-game-playing-couch-potatoes into amateur chemists.

Potato Chip Science is available in stores throughout Rhode Island. For more information go to the Web site, here.

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