Gigahurtz said:
What are some experiments that you would recommend?
I don't know much about the experiments myself, but the link that jtbell posted above looks like a good start.
Another thing you might want to include is the following very easy* proof that invariance of the speed of light implies time dilation: Imagine a train moving at speed v with a laser attached to the ceiling, aimed straight down. The laser is switched on, and hits the floor a time t
0 later according to a clock on the train, and a time t later according to a clock on the ground. These times can't be the same, because to an observer on the train, the distance the light moved is ct
0, and to an observer on the ground, the distance the light moved is ct. The times can't be the same because these distances can't be the same. The observer on the ground will agree that the light moved a distance ct
0 straight down, but he will also say that it also moved a distance vt to the side.
This means that you can draw a right triangle such that the lengths of its sides are "the distance the light moved in the train's rest frame", "the distance the light moved in the ground's rest frame" and "the distance that the train moved". If you express those distances in the form "velocity*time" (as I did above), you can use the pythagorean theorem to find the relationship between t and t
0.
*) Very easy for those of us who spent years studying physics at the university, but probably not so easy but still doable for an 8th grader.