Category: Weather (Page 2 of 3)

Groundhog Day Science

Our science activities and lessons today are inspired by the children’s picture book Groundhogs (Pebble Plus: North American Animals) by Chadwick Gillenwater. With Groundhog Day just two weeks away (February 2, 2013), it would be a great time to learn more about groundhogs and do some science activities relating to shadows and weather. For more about the book and other books for the celebration of Groundhog Day, visit Wrapped in Foil.

1. Learn about groundhogs or woodchucks and create an age-appropriate fact sheet.

Groundhogs, also called woodchucks, are rodents belonging to the marmot family. Their scientific name is Marmota monax. They live throughout the eastern and northern parts of North America, all the way north to Alaska.

Groundhogs live in burrows they dig in the ground. They come out of the burrow to eat plants during the summer. Often you can see them alongside highways grazing on the road banks or sitting up looking for danger. Sometimes they climb small trees or shrubs to escape from enemies or to explore new types of food.

In the winter groundhogs hibernate deep underground. Sometimes they will come out of hibernation to search for food. This has become part of the Groundhog Day story.

Groundhogs are also called whistle pigs because they whistle to communicate with each other. The Marmot Burrow website has a recording of a male groundhog whistling.

In this video, you can see a young groundhog and learn more about their habits.

For a longer and more extensively narrated video about a woodchuck family, see Groundhogs 2005-2008 An uncommon look at a common animal. The link takes you to the video at YouTube (sharing has been disabled). Update:  See the videos on the new website.

You also might want to read some of the books listed below. When you are done, create a fact sheet about groundhogs to share what you have learned. Include drawings of the animals and their homes.

2. Science of Shadows

A. Preschool-K Level:  Exploring Shadows

Gather:

  • flashlights
  • bare, light-colored wall in a darkened room (ceiling is fun, too)
  • assorted objects to cast shadows, including a wide-toothed comb or hair pick, and a ball

Darken a room somewhat and then use the flashlight to explore shadows. Move an object closer to the flashlight and then farther way. Move the flashlight closer to the object and pull it away. What happens? What happens when you hold the comb in front of the flashlight? Now turn on a second flashlight. Shine the two flashlights on an object. Slowly move the flashlights apart. What happens to the shadow(s)?

Older children will enjoy making shadow animals and/or shadow puppets.

How about a groundhog shadow puppet to celebrate Groundhog Day? Cut out a groundhog shape and glue it to a craft stick with white glue. Now take it outside and see if the groundhog will see its shadow.

B. Elementary:  Chasing shadows

Need:

  • Hard level surface out of doors large enough for each participant to record their shadows
  • Sidewalk chalk of different colors
  • Yardstick or measuring tape (optional)
  • Compass (optional)
  • Sunny day

Start by going outside in the morning. Have the children chose a place to stand. Draw a circle of chalk around their feet and then write their initials inside the circle. Now, have them stand with their back to the sun. Have a helper draw a line around their shadow. Measure the length of the shadow. Check the direction of the shadow using the compass (optional).

Return and repeat the process around noon and later in the afternoon. How have the shadows changed? Discuss how the shadows might be different in the different seasons as the sun appears to be higher or lower in the sky due to the Earth’s tilt.

C. Older:  Make a sundial

There are many great websites that show how to make an explore a sundial. Here are just two:

D. Older:  Use a shadow to measure a tree.

To find out more about Groundhogs, try these nonfiction children’s books:

Groundhogs (Pebble Plus: North American Animals) by Chadwick Gillenwater

Library Binding: 24 pages
Publisher: Capstone Press (August 1, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1429686731
ISBN-13: 978-1429686730

 

Groundhog’s Burrow (Science Slam: the Hole Truth!: Underground Animal Life) by Dee Phillips

Orphan The Story of A Baby Woodchuck by Faith McNulty

For more about Shadows, try these nonfiction children’s books:

What makes a shadow? (Let’s-read-and-find-out science) by Clyde Robert Bull and illustrated by June Otani

Publisher: Scholastic; Revised edition (1998)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0590275933
ISBN-13: 978-0590275934

Shadows by April Pulley Sayre and illustrated by Harvey Stevenson


Reading level: Ages 4 and up
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR); 1st edition (March 1, 2002)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0805060596
ISBN-13: 978-0805060591

Light: Shadows, Mirrors, and Rainbows (Amazing Science) by Natalie M. Rosinsky  and illustrated by Sheree Boyd

Reading level: Ages 5 and up
Paperback: 24 pages
Publisher: Picture Window Books (January 2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1404803327
ISBN-13: 978-1404803329

Light and Shadows (Science@School) by Brian J. Knapp

Moonbear’s Shadow (Moonbear Books) by Frank Asch (One of our favorite fiction books about shadows).

Format: Paperback
Publication Date: 3/1/2000
Pages: 32
Reading Level: Age 5 and Up

Come visit the STEM Friday blog each week to find more great Science, Technology, Engineering and Math books.

Weekend Science Fun: Be a Meteorologist

NASA image courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Michon Scott.

Ever watched the weather report and wondered what it would be like to be a meteorologist? Here’s a fun way to learn about the weather and try out being weather scientist at the same time:  Dress up as a meteorologist and give a pretend weather report.

Gather:

  • a camcorder/video camera
  • poster paper and markers to make weather maps
  • local weather information
  • dress up clothes

Step 1. Do some research about meteorologists and what they do.

Did you know meteorologists stand in front of a green screen (called a chrome-a-key) and point to weather fronts by looking in a nearby monitor? The Weather Wiz Kids website has information about Becoming a Meteorologist.

2. Learn how to read a weather map and prepare a weather report. Kids Online Resource (KidsOLR) has a Meteorology page with tons of weather links to help with your research (this page does have Google ads at the top). You can use the weather words list below to get you started, too.

3. Make posters showing cold fronts, warm fronts, the current weather conditions, and the local weather forecast.

4. Dress up like you are going to be on television. Then have a friend or family member take a video of you presenting the weather.

Extension:  Some television stations have tours or information days. Check to see if you can visit one of your local meteorologists to learn more.

Weather Words:

  • air mass – air moving in large blocks
  • atmosphere – the blanket of air that encircles the earth. It is a mixture of gases, liquids and fine solids. Living things can also be found in the atmosphere, such as algae, bacteria and fungi. The atmosphere contains 78% nitrogen and 21 % oxygen.
  • blizzard – heavy snow with high winds, 35 mph or faster
  • cloud classification -clouds are classified by shape and height and given names such as cumulus, cirrus, stratus, etc.
  • condensation – process of water vapor changing into a liquid
  • dew point – temperature at which air becomes saturated with water vapor and condensation occurs (keep in mind that warm air holds more water vapor than cool air)
  • drizzle – fine precipitation with water droplet sizes smaller than rain
  • evaporation – changing liquids into vapor or gas at temperatures lower than the boiling point
  • flood – water levels rising above normal, often quickly
  • fog – technically a very low-lying cloud
  • fronts, cold front – cold air mass approaches warm air mass and lifts it
  • warm front – warm air meets cooler air and rises over it
  • hail, hailstones – chunks of ice produced by updrafts in thunderstorms
  • humidity – amount of water vapor in the air
  • hurricane -large-scale, violent wind and rain storm that forms in the Atlantic Ocean.
  • isobar – line drawn on a weather map to indicate points of equal air pressure
  • isotherm – line drawn on a map to connect points of equal temperature
  • jet stream-  a fast-moving river of air high in the atmosphere
  • lightning – huge electrical charge forming during storms
  • meteorologist – person who studies weather
  • monsoon – heavy rain resulting from a prevailing seasonal wind pattern
  • nimbus – dark clouds full of water vapor
  • precipitation – water falling from clouds
  • relative humidity – amount of water vapor in the air compared to the amount needed for saturation at that temperature
  • shower – brief period of precipitation
  • sleet – snow that melts in the air and then refreezes as pellets
  • snow – ice crystals that form in clouds and fall to earth
  • sun – the star that is at the center of our solar system
  • temperature – amount of hotness or coldness as measured by the kinetic energy of the atoms or molecules
  • thunder – lightning passing through air causes a shock wave heard as the loud noise called thunder
  • tornado – violently rotating column of air
  • typhoon – large-scale, violent wind and rain storm that forms in the Pacific Ocean
  • wind -moving air

If you like your video and upload it, be sure to send us a link.

Looking for more information about weather? See our growing list of weather children’s books at Science Books for Kids.

Weather-books-for-kids

Weekend Science Fun: Building a Weather Station

The weather has been in the news this weekend, so it might be a perfect time to build a weather station.

Background:

Because the weather changes from time to time and place to place, scientists use instruments to measure the weather conditions. They often group the instruments at one location, called a weather station. The scientists use the information they collect from many stations to make weather forecasts.

To make a weather station at home, consider the making or buying some of the following equipment:

  • Outdoor thermometer to measure temperature
  • Anemometer to measure wind speed
  • Wind or weather vane to record wind direction
  • Rain gauge to measure precipitation
  • Barometer to measure pressure
  • Hygrometer to measure amount of moisture in the air

Barometer

How to make an easy homemade barometer.

Thermometer

You may make a thermometer to see how one works, but you will probably need an outdoor thermometer to be able to take reliable readings outside.

Watch the video to see how to make a simple thermometer in this post about water and thermometers.

Water temperature science has more information about thermometers, too.

A Simple Weather Vane

Gather for each child:

  • A plastic drinking straw (body of vane) – straight, not the bendy kind
  • A pencil with a sturdy eraser (support the vane)
  • Index card, piece of file folder or heavy construction paper (for tail of vane)
  • Dressmakers pin
  • Scissors
  • Tape (optional)
  • Markers and/or crayons
  • Container about the size of a small flowerpot, or old flowerpot
  • Soil, pebbles or similar material to hold pencil upright in the container
  • Compass to find north, east, west and south, only one needed to share

Cut two slits across one end of the straw, about one inch long.

Make a decorative tail for the vane. Cut the index card or paper into a weather-related shape, such as a raindrop, a sun or a flat-bottomed cloud. Make it about two inches in length. Have the children color their decoration. Slip the midline of the tail into the slits in the straw. If it doesn’t fit tightly, add a bit of tape to keep it in place. If you plan to use it for an extended period outside, you might want to consider laminating the tail.

Fill the container at least part way with soil or pebbles. Place the pencil upright in the middle of the soil, with the eraser end up. Push into the soil until the pencil will stand up on it’s own, with the top eraser at least a few inches above the rim of the container. Add more soil as needed.

An adult will need to supervise this step for young children. Insert the dressmaker’s pin through the straw about two inches from the tail, in such a way that the fan is oriented up and down. The wind will be blowing from the side, so the tail should be positioned to catch the wind. Because the tail adds weight, the pin needs to be nearer the tail, rather than in the center, to balance. Once the pin is in place and oriented correctly, then push the pin into the top of the eraser. Blow on the weather vane to see if it can spin freely. If not, make the necessary corrections and try again.

To finish, take the weather vane outside where the wind might blow. Use the compass to determine the directions. Mark the container with north, south, east and west. Once the pot/container is marked, leave it in place. If it gets moved, be sure to correct the position with the compass. Record the wind direction as it changes over time.

Anemometer

You can easily modify the weather vane into an anemometer, which is a device to measure wind speed rather than direction. Or make another using the directions above.

Gather:

  • Weather vane and materials above
  • Large needle or sharp nail
  • Two pieces of cardboard about 1½ inches wide by about 18 inches long
  • Foil muffin tin liner cups, or bathroom-sized paper cups
  • Staples or tacks
  • Watch or timepiece with minute hand

Remove the pin/straw from the eraser, but leave the rest of the weather vane intact. Cross the two pieces of cardboard and mark the center. Cut a slit half way through the middle of each, turn one over and then slide the two pieces together. They should overlap and form an X-shape.

If you are using paper cups, cut the rims off to reduce the weight. Staple or tack the muffin cups or small paper cups to the ends of each strip of cardboard, so they are all facing the same direction, for example in a clockwise direction. These are the cups that will catch the wind and be pushed around. Chose one arm and color the cardboard with a marker. This will help you count how fast the anemometer is revolving.

An adult will need to help with this step. Take the needle or sharp nail and drive it through the center of the cardboard X in such a way that the cups will rotate around from side to side. Once the needle through, push the point into the pencil eraser as before. Blow on the muffin cups and see if they will spin. Adjust accordingly. You may have to replace the needle if it is too short, or trim up the cardboard arms. Add staples if it is out of balance. Make the hole in the center larger, if it is too tight.

Take the anemometer outside. Place on a table or other structure, so it isn’t on the ground. Count how many times the colored arm passes per minute as a measure of wind speed.

Rain Gauge

The Miami Museum of Science has easy steps for how to make a rain gauge, complete with a rain gauge ruler to print out.

Take your equipment outside at least once a day. Record the results. Check with local forecasts to see if your results match theirs. Note:  Often the official weather station is in a shed or box to prevent the equipment from being exposed to direct sunlight. How might that make their results differ from yours?

(Note: this activity has been posted on the Growing With Science website, but since I am making some modifications to the website soon, I decided to revise it and post here).

Looking for children’s books? Try our growing list of weather books at Science Books for Kids.

Weather-books-for-kids

« Older posts Newer posts »