If you mean raising them, then yes!
I think it would give them the opporunity to learn responsibility while at the same time learning about growth and life.
also i did that as a science experiment and it was very fun every one in the class pared up as if parents and names a chick like it was there baby! Also seventh graders are at the age where they think learning is boring. With something fun (the chick) they will love learning. I remember in seventh grade we had a pet duckling!
There would be no way to predict the outcome of this experiment. Too many factors can influence the outcome. Breed often determines hatch rate. Temperature and humidity of incubator. (number of times incubator is opened). Age of viable eggs before incubation. All this will effect the hatch rate.
Kirsty Stevens && Michelle Bowd are9.13am 30th September 2009 in science
white chicks
Gender ratio, rate of viable eggs white vs. brown. Temperature variation vs gender Note Higher temperature (101F) in the incubator will produce less hens and more cockerels).
chicks.
No ,you don't have to get chicks in the spring
Chicks as in baby chickens. Chicks are a yellow/blonde colour.
People DO NOT eat chicks.
there are190,225 chicks
Because.. In 1982, the salt concentration in Mono Lake was making it hard for Algae and Brine flies and these changes affected the California Gulls. Cayotes and Foxes would walk in and eats the eggs and chicks. Because the predators and the lack of food, the California gulls did not raise any chicks that year. hoped this helped! ( I had this in my science question I found this really hard!)
A lot of it has to do with seeing how the embryo grows and develops over time because of different factors, the main one being heat.
The plural form of "chick" is "chicks". A group of chicks is called a "clutch" or "chattering".