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Meet Lisa, a curious three-year-old who loved asking questions. One day, she saw a beautiful rainbow in the sky after rain. "Daddy, why do rainbows appear?" she asked. "Well..." Dad scratched his head. "Because... um... magical sky fairies paint them!" Lisa wasn't sure about that answer. She remembered seeing something different about rainbows in her picture book. What should Lisa do?
🤔 Tell Dad he's wrong and rainbows come from light and water
🌈 Pretend to believe the fairy story
📚 Get her picture book to check together with Dad
Lisa ran to get her favorite science book. She climbed onto the couch next to Dad and opened the rainbow page. "Look, Daddy! The book shows that rainbows come from sunlight hitting water drops in the sky. See these pictures?" Dad looked surprised. "Oh! I didn't know that. I guess Daddy was wrong about the fairies." Lisa felt proud but also confused. She thought grown-ups knew everything! Now she wanted to learn more. Should she:
🤔 Ask Dad if there are other things he doesn't know
📖 Show Dad more interesting facts from her book
🌈 Go look for more rainbows outside with Dad
"Do you not know everything, Daddy?" Lisa asked carefully. Dad laughed and hugged her. "No one knows everything, sweetheart. That's what makes learning so fun! Even grown-ups learn new things every day." Lisa thought about this. She remembered how Mom had to look up a recipe yesterday, and how Teacher Sarah sometimes checked her phone to answer questions. "But if grown-ups don't know everything," Lisa wondered, "how do we find answers?" What should Lisa and Dad explore together?
🔍 Look up more science facts online
📞 Call Grandma to ask what she doesn't know
📝 Make a list of questions to find answers to
Dad got paper and crayons, and they wrote down Lisa's questions: 'Why do leaves change color?' 'How do birds fly?' 'Where does rain come from?' Lisa felt excited. 'Can we find all the answers, Daddy?' 'We can try! That's what scientists do - they ask questions and look for answers. Sometimes they find them in books, sometimes by watching carefully, and sometimes they need to do experiments.' Lisa smiled, feeling like a little scientist herself. How should they start their investigation?
🔍 Look for answers in more picture books
🌱 Do an experiment with leaves and water
🎨 Draw pictures of their questions to share with Teacher Sarah
Lisa and Dad spent the afternoon looking through her picture books. They found out that leaves change color when days get shorter, birds have special light bones to help them fly, and rain comes from clouds full of water drops! 'You know what, Daddy?' Lisa said while closing the last book. 'I like that grown-ups don't know everything. It means we can learn new things together!' Dad smiled proudly. 'That's right! And tomorrow we can learn even more. Maybe you'll even teach me something new again!' From that day on, Lisa became more curious than ever. She realized that not knowing something wasn't scary - it was the start of an exciting adventure to learn something new.

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