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Provided by: Science Journal for Kids |Published on: October 23, 2025
Articles/Websites
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Synopsis
This report from Science Journal for Kids describes a low-cost, smartphone-powered device that disinfects water via electrochemical disinfection.
Students will understand the need for making water safe to drink, what makes this method more accessible, and the limitations and outcomes of the study.
The resource also includes links to additional materials teachers can use to piece together a lesson plan.
The article makes engineering design tangible by linking a familiar device to a practical global-health solution, supporting authentic problem solving and data literacy.
Clear visuals (device schematic and agar plates) enable quick entry to evidence-based reasoning about how electric current and copper ions reduce bacterial colonies.
Prerequisites
Students should know the basics of pathogens vs. safe drinking water, electric currents and ions, and how to read simple experimental figures.
Teachers will need to create a free account to access the Teacher's Key.
Differentiation & Implementation
Students can compare alternative point-of-use methods, such as boiling, iodine, UV, and filtration, with a decision matrix considering cost, speed, energy, maintenance, and safety.
Teachers can link this study to climate change by discussing the impacts it may have on access to drinking water. To help build middle school students' background knowledge on this connection, teachers can use this podcast episode.
To make connections to the Sustainable Development Goals, teachers can use this article to demonstrate how innovation can be used to address more than one of the SDGs. Specifically, teachers can point to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being, and SDG 6, Clean Water and Sanitation. If students are unfamiliar with the goals, teachers may find this curriculum guide useful.
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Science Journal for Kids
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