Option 2: you can choose to do an at-home experiment: test a plant for a tropism:
Examples of some experiments to test tropisms (you can research on the internet )
Phototropism: https://greensborosciencecenter.wordpress.com/2017/04/20/diy-science-light-maze/
Light is a stimulus that plants respond to. This is called phototropism (photo= light). Plants usually display a positive phototropic response to light, which means they grow toward a light source. Plant hormones called auxins play a part in phototropism. Auxin is a plant growth hormone. When light is shined on one side of a plant the auxins move to the dark side of the plant. The hormones stimulate the cells on the dark side of the plant to elongate, while the cells on the light side of the plant remain the same. This elongation on one side and staying the same on the other causes the plant to bend in the direction of the light. This bending allows more light to reach more cells on the plant that are responsible for conducting photosynthesis.
Source:
Biology of Plants, 6th ed. Raven, Peter H., Everert, Ray F., Eichhorn, Susan E. Worth Publishing 1999.
Geotropism/ gravitropism: look at experiment #2: https://www.biologydiscussion.com/experiments/experiments-on-plant-movement-botany/57249
thigmotropism: venus fly trap: (this is not an actual experiment.. but an animation)http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/1114/1141744/26_3_2a_plain.html
If you decide to do the experiment… take images of your experiment. Tell me what type of tropism you experimented with. Was the plant doing a positive or negative response?
Som