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Tag Archives: steam

Exploring Kits

Posted on August 5, 2020 by GPL

You might have noticed a new addition to our website – Kids Kits. We’ve had requests for a list or even a menu of kits, and it seemed like the perfect time, especially now that our kits can be put on hold.

We have three main sections of kits – Early Learning, Beginning Reading, and STEAM. Here’s a few of my favorite kits from each section. If you need a kit recommendation or want to learn more, our librarians are happy to help.

 

Early Learning: Princess

Newly updated with fun bedtime books and even a Princess cookbook! The cape fits all ages – yes, even I can put it on.

 

 

 

Early Learning: Black and White

Our babies aren’t born with fully developed eyes. They slowly gain the ability to see color and focus on objects farther from their face. Providing high contrast black and white books is a great way to engage our littlest ones, especially during activities like tummy time!

 

 

Beginning Reading: Hot Dots

Hot dots are a fun way to learn words and sounds. With the smart pen enabled, kids can press the dots on each page, and the pen will tell them whether their guess is right.

 

 

Beginning Reading: Word Family Tiles

These fun tiles can be used to make different words. Best of all, they’re magnetic –– you can put a few on the fridge, dishwasher, or even a cookie sheet and let your kids sound out words to their hearts’ content.

 

 

STEAM: Capacity and Volume

Okay, serious question here: What kid doesn’t like playing with water? This fun, approachable kit lets your kiddos learn more about capacity and volume with hands-on measuring tools.

 

 

STEAM: Dinosaur Fossils

This is by far one of our favorite, best-circulating kits. Take a look at fossil replica teeth and claws, make rubbings of fossil arrangements, and learn more about dinosaurs. It’s the perfect kit for your budding paleontologist.

 

 

Posted in Books & More, Kids Korner | Tags: Katherine R., kids, kits, steam | Leave a comment |

Where Has All the Charmin Gone? STEAM Play During a Pandemic

Posted on April 28, 2020 by GPL

I stood in the grocery store aisle not long ago perusing the long rows of empty shelves that, just a few weeks before, had been stacked high with hundreds of packages of extra strong, extra soft, ultra absorbent, pillowy, billowy, good enough for angels and bears toilet paper. This “white gold” was suddenly at the top of everyone’s shopping list, and I wondered what exactly everyone was doing with all that excess tp.   It struck me that, as we shelter in place, someone had stumbled upon one of the best kept secrets of the paper goods trade—the educational and entertainment value of toilet paper.  A little research confirmed this versatile household product will provide hours of fun for the whole family!

So what exactly can you do with a collection of toilet paper rolls?  Have a TP Engineering Throwdown Challenge!  Who can build the tallest tower?  The biggest wall?  The best castle?  How high and wide can you build a tower using a single roll as a base?  Who can knock it down first with a well-lobbed wiffle ball?

Sharpen your pencil or pull out your calculator and get ready to do Toilet Paper Math!  Skip the 9=36 and 12=48 claims for the moment and go straight for the sheet count (listed on the package.)  How many sheets are in a roll?  How many rolls are in a package?  What is the total number of sheets in a package?   Pull out your ruler and get ready to measure!  What are the dimensions of  a single sheet?  How many sheets are on a roll?  How many feet long would a roll be if unrolled?  How many rolls would it take to reach a mile? 10 miles?  The moon?

If you have a kitchen scale you can weigh two different brands or types.  Is there a weight difference  between a roll of ultra soft compared to a roll of ultra strong?  Which roll contains the most sheets?

We won’t need a lab coat to run this kitchen science experiment to discover how absorbent a certain brand is.  Our friends at Lemon Lime Adventures have an easy To Do at Home experiment using 3 jars, several squares from two or more brands of toilet paper, 3 rubber bands, 3 cups of water and a handful of pennies.  Check it out here:   

And of course, toilet paper rolls begat toilet paper tubes. With spring here, one of my favorite recyclable uses for these handy little leftovers is to use them as seedling pots.  They are easy to make, and you can find a quick tutorial here from the folks at Kitchen Counter Chronicles.

You can easily make a fun toy launching machine as well using 2 toilet paper tubes (or 1 paper towel tube cut in half), 2 rubber bands, a pencil, some tape, and a cotton ball.  Challenge someone to a Cotton Ball Launching Contest to see just how far you can send your fluffy missile flying.

Or, come up with your own projects and share!  Let us know what fun and creative ways you find to use this staple with other common, household items at hand.   If you are interested in learning more about engineering and inventing, toys and games, science projects or even planting and seeds, please check out the wonderful resources of Overdrive  hoopla and kanopy kids on the GPL website.

Posted in Kids Korner | Tags: Linda M., school age, steam | Leave a comment |

STEAM for Toddlers

Posted on June 14, 2018 by GPL

STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Math) is all the rage in children’s programming at the moment. If you’ve been to our Children’s Department, you’ve seen our STEAM wall with kits full of fun activities that build these skills. We regularly offer STEAM programming for our elementary-aged kids on Mondays, and I wanted to extend some of these concepts into our Terrific Two’s class.

Both of my parents were chemists, and I was raised in what would now be considered a STEM-heavy environment. My brother and I heard lectures on space, chemistry, physics – whatever struck my father’s fancy when he drove us to school in the mornings. We were encouraged to be curious, ask questions, and experiment to learn more. To me, those are the core motivations in STEAM programming. I’ve always loved sharing STEAM stories in my baby/toddler storytime, Jump Start. We’ve talked about the chemical reaction that makes cakes rise in the oven, why trees change color in the fall, and so much more. Extending these STEAM concepts into our activities during Terrific Two’s seemed like a natural step.

This spring, I started including explanations behind the activities that we do, and the ways in which they connect with various STEAM concepts. Now, our activities have their usual signs that include additional information on the inside. I’ve also started adding more STEAM-heavy activities. For example, one of our activities was building a “bee hive.” I had a stack of yellow hexagons and children were encouraged to arrange them so that they fit together. In this activity, children were learning about shapes, an early math concept. They were also developing special relations, figuring out how to arrange the shapes to have them fit together. The end result created a pattern, also giving kids an opportunity to learn from what they’ve completed and predict future outcomes. And, of course, the biology inherent – how bees create hives using this pattern. The activity itself is basic, but the skills it develops are core to STEAM skills.

Our children are already learning STEAM concepts by playing and interacting in the world. But the knowledge of what they are doing allows us to scaffold these moments. Scaffolding in children’s education is using what children are already doing and building upon it – making suggestions, asking questions, and pushing them a little further. If they are already using basic engineering concepts to build a tower, you could make the suggestion that a larger base will help them create a sturdier structure. If they are playing with a toy car, ask them what they think may happen if the wheels were removed (and, if possible, try removing them to show the difference). Use scaffolding to encourage experimentation and curiosity. Answer questions, prioritize play, and – most of all – support your little scientist.

One of my favorite resources for creating these STEAM activities is “Let’s Talk, Read and Sing About STEM,” a tip-sheet created by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Education in 2016. If you want to learn more about STEAM programming for you children, especially ways in which you can encourage this type of learning, this is a great starting place.

https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ecd/learning-about-stem

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Kids Korner | Tags: Katherine R., steam | Leave a comment |

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