- November 14, 2025
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What is this? Danica and Chase Hillner were amazed to see their slime come to life.
Kai La Chiana, Logan Bruggeman and Alejandro Diaz ran the circuit boards together.
Kids were curious as they peeked through microscopes to see 4-day-old shrimp up close.
Ella Napotnik and Mara Chamberlin worked in the slime lab. They said it was a chaotic station but fun.

Senior Alexa Garcia held the container of brine shrimp Foundation’s students grew for Science Night.
Luka Radakovich and Philip Rossin beamed with excitement as they touched the Van de Graaff generator. The machine sends a jolt of electricity and it’s comparable to when socks are rubbed on carpet.
Sisters Sabrina and Cristina Beltran worked together to color paper which they later turned into a cube.
Foundation’s robotics team opened its door to children and let them control the robots the team brings to competitions.
In the slime lab, kids waited patiently as volunteers dyed their slime different colors and bagged it for safe transportation.
Joshua Wong went fishing. He smiled seeing the different species he caught.
The children used remote controllers to direct the robots and the goal was to throw the ball into the red bin.
Eli Prince got in touch with his senses. He had to smell flavors through a jar and match it with the correct box. He was spot on with all of them!
Alejandro Diaz taught the kids how to use the circuits to launch flying propellors. One landed right on his shoulder.
Foundation’s coding teacher Josh Holley and ninth grader Colin Sanders controlled the robots through the computer. They liked teaching kids about coding and informing them what it’s all about.
Foundation’s event planner Joy Penna, robotics instructor Courtney Haberman and Tilden Campus Principal Sarah Reynolds loved seeing all of the activities take place. Reynolds said it’s her favorite event every year to be a part of.
Brayden Smith blindly reached in boxes to guess what the hidden object was.
Saoirse Meyers looked with wonder at the rotating earth around the sun.
After kids finished the passport Alejandro Pedraglio greeted them with a prize. He’s a senior and wants to go to college for computer engineering.
Ellie and Emmalynn Elliott worked together to make a bridge out of spaghetti noodles and marshmallows.
Luka Radakovich and Philip Rossin were amazed to see the propellor fly off the circuit board.
Children unlocked their inner scientist at Foundation Academy’s fifth annual Science Night Tuesday, Oct. 28.
The kids were handed a passport to show them along their journey of discovering all science holds. From slime to shooting rockets to robots, there was something for everyone to enjoy.
It was run by Foundation’s upperclassmen and faculty. Senior Alexa Garcia said she enjoys volunteering to see the Lions’ community come together and supporting the teachers. She guided children on their microscope journey as they discovered the 4-old brine shrimp.