Sanity Savers: Star Jars

Sponsored by National Grid

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

Supplies ideas:

Empty clear jar
Small light (led candle or any light that will fit in the jar)
Tape
Paint brush
Tin foil

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

Length:

10-15 minutes

Academic Subjects:

Science
This lesson supports the following standards:  
ESS1.B: Earth and the Solar System – The orbits of Earth around the sun and of the moon around Earth, together with the rotation of Earth about an axis between its North and South poles, cause observable patterns.

Directions for Star Jars:      

Today is National Space Day! It is a day to celebrate all that is STEM. The goal of National Space Day is to promote science, technology, engineering, and math to young people and inspire them to follow career paths in STEM. Today we are focusing on space, and in this project we will be creating a Star Jar that will light the night with stars in the comfort of your own home.
1.) Measure your empty jar’s circumference and height. Add a few centimeters to the top and bottom of your measurement and cut the foil.  

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

2.) Next lay your piece of foil on top of a towel or wash cloth. This will help with the next step.  

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

3.) Using the back of a paint brush, poke holes into the tin foil. You can poke as many holes you want. I picked out a few constellations and poked them into the sheets.     

4.) Roll the piece of foil over the outside of your jar. The foil can go up to the lid, if it’s a little longer on the bottom, you can fold the foil under.   

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

5.) Place your led candle or small light into your jar. Once it’s dark enough, turn your light on and marvel at the stars!

Sanity Savers: Star Jars

Vocabulary:

Constellation– a group of stars forming a pattern that is traditionally named after its apparent form or identified with a mythological figure. Celestial- positioned in or relating to the sky, or outer space as observed in astronomy.

Astronomy– the branch of science which deals with celestial objects, space, and the physical universe as a whole.

Check out our other Sanity Savers posts here!

Storytime: Eric Wood reads Where do Jet Planes Sleep at Night

Eric Wood reads Where do Jet Planes Sleep at Night? by Brianna Caplan Sayres

Where do Jet Planes Sleep at Night? Did you know that the first jet plane was invented in Buffalo, NY?! The Bell Aircraft Corporation designed and prototyped this aircraft right here in the Tri-Main building! Great stories of innovation like this can be found at the Museum in the Lighting Buffalo’s Imagination play zone!

Have you ever traveled in any of the types of planes we saw in the story? If you could travel on a plane today, where would you go? Who would you bring with you?

For more Storytime stories click here.

Storytime: Claribel Gonzalez lee “Monstruo Rosa”

Claribel González lee “Monstruo Rosa” por Olga de DiosMonstruo Rosa es muy diferente a los demás. Ella embarca en una misión para encontrar un nuevo lugar en donde vivir. 

Claribel González reads  “Monstruo Rosa” (Pink Monster) by Olga de Dios Pink Monster is very different from others so she embarks on a mission to find a new place to live.

For more Storytime Stories check here

Sanity Savers: El Dia del Niño- Make your own One Page Book

supported by the Peter C. Cornell Trust

Kelsey Capruso
Membership Coordinator  

Materials:

1 piece of paper
Scissors
Decorating supplies
Write your own story template (optional)  

Length:

5 minutes
Set up: 0 minutes
Inactive Time: n/a
Activity: 5 minutes 

Academic Subject(s):

English Language Arts, Arts

April 30th is “El Dia del Niño” or the Day of the Child! This celebration began in Mexico in 1925 and continues to be celebrated to this day! In 1996 libraries, universities and grassroots organizations worked to incorporate literacy and language skills into the celebration of El Dia del Niño. Each year the Hispanic Heritage Council of WNY leads the charge to share the goals of this annual celebration to:

  1. Recognize and honor the importance of children and childhood;
  2. Promote literacy and the importance of reading by linking children to books, languages, and culture in the home and at school;
  3. Honor home languages and cultures by promoting bilingual and multilingual literacy in this multicultural nation, and global understanding thru reading and art;
  4. Influence parents to become involved in the education of their children; o Encourage healthy eating habits for nourished bodies and healthy minds;
  5. Show our children the value of character, community, and good citizenship.

Today we are teaching you how to make your own book in celebration of El Dia del Niño!

Let your creativity SHINE in this simple one-page book. Whether you’re writing, journaling, doodling, or making a new comic series, these pages are the perfect platform. This project uses just one piece of paper to make five page book where you can let your imagination run wild. This Spring, I have been using my pages to track all the fun plants and animals I have noticed popping up in my yard.

 Directions: 

Step 1: Grab your supplies! 1 piece of paper and scissors. Be sure to grab an adult if you need help cutting. Optional supplies include colored paper for a book cover, a glue stick, and coloring supplies.  Step 2: Fold the paper in half horizontally. Crease. Refold in the opposite direction. Crease.  
Step 3: Fold the short sides of the paper into the center fold. Crease. Refold in the opposite direction.  
Step 4: Fold the paper in half vertically. Crease. Refold in the opposite directions.  
Step 5:  Fold the paper in half horizontally. Cut along the center fold to meet the next fold.  
Step 6:  Fold the paper in half horizontally. Accordion your pages, creating a book by bringing all of the pages together in one hand.  
Step 7: Get creative.   

Ready, set, CREATE! I can’t wait to see all the fun things you fill the pages of your book with. Share your creation with us on our Facebook page

Check out our other Sanity Savers posts here!

Storytime: Gary Earl Ross reads Dots

Gary took a moment to explain the history behind his book, Dots,

“Dots is a book commissioned by the Erie County Fair Housing Partnership to explain the concept of fair housing to children. They reached out to me for a recommendation of a children’s author. The woman I asked had just lost her husband and turned down the offer. Then I had an idea and wrote the book myself. The illustrator was a student in my UB summer course. Anwar Morse now works as an artist in NYC.  Alligator Pie by Dennis Lee was a book my children loved. It had lots of tongue twister poems. The poem I read was everyone’s favorite. “

For more Storytime Stories check here

Explore & More will be closed to the public May 8-10.