Activities for Kids
Daisy Petal: Friendly & Helpful
Girl Scouts Harper and S’mya continue to help Daisy Girl Scouts earn their petals. Here’s the 2nd video on how to earn your yellow petal.
Watch the Video:
Activities for Kids
Girl Scouts Harper and S’mya continue to help Daisy Girl Scouts earn their petals. Here’s the 2nd video on how to earn your yellow petal.
Watch the Video:
Activities for Kids
Harper and S’mya read the 3rd chapter of the Girl Scout Daisy Petals. Also known as the green petal for Considerate and Caring. Follow along to earn this petal.
Watch the Video:
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This article is so awesome. Here’s a quick excerpt, but be sure to check out the full info by clicking here.
“…when you wash your hands with soap and water, you’re not just wiping viruses off your hands and sending them down the drain. You’re actually annihilating the viruses, rendering them harmless. Soap “is almost like a demolition team breaking down a building and taking all the bricks away,” says Palli Thordarson, a chemistry professor at the University of New South Wales, who posted a viral Twitter thread on the wonders of soap.
In a recent phone call, he explained why soap is such an effective Covid-19 killer and why it’s so important to soap your hands for at least 20 seconds.
The soap takes care of the virus much like it takes care of the oil in the water. “It’s almost like a crowbar; it starts to pull all the things apart,” Thordarson says.
One side of the soap molecule (the one that’s attracted to fat and repelled by water) buries its way into the virus’s fat and protein shell. Fortunately, the chemical bonds holding the virus together aren’t very strong, so this intrusion is enough to break the virus’s coat. “You pull the virus apart, you make it soluble in water, and it disintegrates,” he says.
Then the harmless shards of virus get flushed down the drain. And even if it the soap doesn’t destroy every virus, you’ll still rid them from your hands with soap and water, as well as any grease or dirt they may be clinging to. Soap will also wash away bacteria and other viruses that may be a bit tougher than coronavirus, and harder to disintegrate.
The trick is this all takes a little time to happen, and that’s why you need to take at least 20 seconds to wash your hands.”
(Read on)
Academics
In honor of Women’s History Month, the team at BestColleges.com put together a series of guides that celebrates and supports women who choose to earn a degree. The Women’s History Month series features top programs, a plethora of scholarships and resources specifically for women, and highlights of women scientists.
Their goal is to share these resources and get them in front of both women and girls to inspire future generations of STEM leaders, global advocates, and college graduates. Please take a look below:
Top Programs:
https://www.bestcolleges.com/features/top-womens-colleges/
Scholarships & Resources:
https://www.bestcolleges.com/resources/scholarships-and-resources-for-women/
Women Leaders in Science:
https://www.bestcolleges.com/blog/10-women-who-made-scientific-history/
A note for Girl Scout Ambassadors: These resources pair well with the College Knowledge badge!
Activities for Kids
Members of the tourism and attractions community continue to provide online content for entertainment and educational purposes during the coronavirus pandemic, which has shut down schools and theme parks alike. Add offerings from Orlando-based SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment and the Crayola Experience to the options.
SeaWorld Orlando and its sister park Busch Gardens Tampa Bay have made public some of its (mostly) animal-driven resources that are tailored to students between kindergarten and 12th grade.
Included are a series of fact sheets called Animal Bytes, which spotlight dozens of species; a broader InfoBooks series; information about careers that involve working with animals; the Saving a Species series and a series of playable animal sounds.
With just a casual browse of the offerings, I learned facts about the blue tang (and that there’s a bony fish called the lookdown), consider saving the cheetah and heard the cries of a camel, a gibbon and a Clydesdale. (Most unnerving: the sounds from a beluga whale and a Florida panther.)
The information is available through seaworld.org.
Meanwhile, Crayola Experience, which has an Orlando location inside Florida Mall, is offering crafting instruction, games, apps, coloring pages and science experiments using household items.
To sign up for their downloads, go to crayolaexperience.com/athome.
Other experiences will be posted on the social media platforms for both Crayola Experience and Crayola.
Activities for Kids
All Kindergarten and 1st graders will enjoy this Flower Friend story to begin earning their “Honest & Fair” Daisy Petal.
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Helpful info from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
View the full resource here.
Consider the real risk of harm to yourself and others around you. The public perception of risk during a situation such as an infectious disease outbreak is often inaccurate. Media coverage may create the impression that people are in immediate danger when really the risk for infection may be very low. Take steps to get the facts:
Speaking out about your needs is particularly important if you are in quarantine, since you may not be in a hospital or other facility where your basic needs are met. Ensure you have what you need to feel safe, secure, and comfortable.
Health care providers and health authorities should provide information on the disease, its diagnosis, and treatment.
If you’re unable to work during this time, you may experience stress related to your job status or financial situation.
Reaching out to people you trust is one of the best ways to reduce anxiety, depression, loneliness, and boredom during social distancing, quarantine, and isolation. You can:
If you are in a medical facility, you may have access to health care providers who can answer your questions. However, if you are quarantined
at home, and you’re worried about physical symptoms you or your loved ones may be experiencing, call your doctor or other health care provider:
Activities for Kids
This course is a project of the Woman in Aviation International Chapter at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University – Worldwide. It is a self-paced Massive Open Online Course (MOOC), designed for learners 8-17 that celebrates Girls in Aviation Day! In the course, ERAU-WW provides learners with some of the best information related to aviation and aeronautics available. We hope you learn a lot, explore what we have to offer, and have loads of fun!
Sign up your young learner today and get excited about girls in aviation.
To be eligible for enrollment in this course learners must be at least 13 years old or must have a parent or guardian sign up for this course on the behalf of their child.
Target Audience: Children 8-17 years old.
Course is offered by Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
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Helpful info from the Institute for Disaster Mental Health.
View the full resource here.
One of the things we know from research is that social support is very important to resilience and recovery during times of stress. The more isolated and alone we feel, the more likely it is that our mental health will be negatively affected. This is likely to be particularly true during this time of self-quarantining, isolation, and social distancing.
So, do what you can do to stay connected to your social support network of family, friends, and colleagues. Even staying in regular contact with a single person can be beneficial. Obviously we may need to connect in different ways than we’re used to doing, but it’s important to stay connected nevertheless. You don’t have to spend time talking about the stress of the current situation (although that can be helpful for people who feel the need to talk about it), but just be intentional about reaching out and making time to be together, in person or virtually.
Featured
Helpful info from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
View the full resource here.
Everyone reacts differently to stressful situations such as an infectious disease outbreak that requires social distancing, quarantine, or isolation.
People may feel anxiety, worry, or fear related to:
If you or a loved one experience any of these reactions for 2 to 4 weeks or more, contact your health care provider or one of the resources at the end of this tip sheet.