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Mid Rivers Newsmagazine 4-5-17

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16 I SUMMER CAMPS & OPPORTUNITIES I<br />

April 5, 20<strong>17</strong><br />

MID RIVERS NEWSMAGAZINE<br />

@MIDRIVERSNEWS<br />

MIDRIVERSNEWSMAGAZINE.COM<br />

Summer camp STEM<br />

Scientific crafts make learning fun<br />

Duchesne High School<br />

Summer Camps<br />

During June and July, DHS hosts a variety of<br />

athletic and academic camps for students<br />

entering grades K through 8 to explore:<br />

Register online today!<br />

duchesne-hs.org/summercamps<br />

For more information,<br />

call 636-946-6767.<br />

Scientia<br />

Virtus<br />

et<br />

ESTABLISHED 1924<br />

By JESSICA MESZAROS<br />

For some kids, making homemade<br />

slime and craft stick towers isn’t just a<br />

temporary distraction; it’s a crafty introduction<br />

to basic chemistry and an early<br />

lesson in engineering and architecture.<br />

Crafts are a long-standing summer<br />

camp tradition, plus some crafts can teach<br />

children valuable life skills in a way that’s<br />

more hands-on than a textbook lesson.<br />

For students with a passion for science,<br />

technology, engineering and math<br />

[STEM], crafts can serve to jumpstart<br />

valuable lessons outside the school environment.<br />

Summer camp is usually an outdoor<br />

experience, which means campers are<br />

literally surrounded by lessons in science<br />

and biology in all directions. Science lessons<br />

can be as simple as making a Discovery<br />

Jar of local plants or exploring<br />

constellations on a clear night.<br />

In addition to outdoor activities, crafts<br />

like homemade slime combine fun with a<br />

sneaky chemistry lesson. Slime kits can<br />

be purchased at many local craft stores or<br />

can be made from scratch by mixing glue<br />

and gradual amounts of liquid starch.<br />

Kids can customize their experiments<br />

with food coloring and glitter. For older<br />

campers, adding powdered black iron<br />

oxide creates “living” slime that can be<br />

manipulated with a magnet.<br />

Summer camp is usually seen as a<br />

chance to step away from technology.<br />

However, when it comes to STEM skills,<br />

educational mobile apps can serve as<br />

inspiration for crafty creativity. Apps<br />

like Scratch and Scratch Jr. provide elementary<br />

and middle school students with<br />

interactive stories, games and animations<br />

to explore. For older kids, apps like App<br />

Inventor allows young enthusiasts to<br />

invent their own app, and DroidScript<br />

allows aspiring code writers of any<br />

age and experience level to learn basic<br />

Javascript used for creating Android and<br />

Apple apps.<br />

It’s easy for kids to build small structures<br />

that highlight engineering skills<br />

without the use of toxic or dangerous<br />

components. Kids can build a variety of<br />

easy and harmless structures from craft<br />

sticks, clothespins, rubber bands and<br />

clips. Crafts that showcase engineering<br />

might also serve a functional purpose by<br />

teaching kids to work with their hands.<br />

Craft stick catapults and harmonicas<br />

require only craft sticks and rubber<br />

bands, and can be used as lessons about<br />

basic construction and physics.<br />

Math activities aren’t just limited to<br />

flash cards. One of the easiest ways to<br />

engage campers, or kids at home this<br />

summer, is to create a craft that focuses<br />

on counting, sorting or organization.<br />

Math Scavenger Hunts are a popular way<br />

to get kids to explore their environment.<br />

Ask kids to find math-related items in<br />

the world around them. A basic list of<br />

what to include on the hunt could include<br />

a percentage, a bar graph, a fraction, a<br />

polygon, a price with dollars and cents,<br />

a line longer than two inches, a number<br />

greater than one million and so on. The<br />

scavenger hunt can be adjusted depending<br />

on the math lesson and be done both<br />

indoors and outdoors. Baking is another<br />

activity that gradually teaches kids mathematical<br />

vocabulary and measurement<br />

skills all while working with various<br />

ingredients that can turn chemistry into<br />

tasty treats.

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