Come for the volcano, stay for the fun. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI) recently opened their latest installation, Pompeii: The Exhibit. You might not think of ancient Rome as a way to keep your kids entertained, but that’s exactly what this exhibit will do. Starting with a short movie focused on the infamous Mount Vesuvius, you and your kids will be taken on an epic Roman adventure. Read on to find out more.

photo: Bess Dwyer

Introducing Pompeii
The tour starts off with the introductory video that describes Pompeii before the eruption: a Roman city that lived cozily next to Mount Vesuvius. The citizens had no idea that the mountain was a volcano, so when it blew, it took the city by surprise—and buried it in 13 – 25 feet of ash that managed to preserve the it in a truly unique way.

After the video, the doors open up to a whole different world.

What Your Kids Will Love
Why will the kiddos care about this? Because they will get a chance to see what life was like for people in 79 A.D., and they will be shocked at how similar life was back then compared to now. Ask your kids to point out items they recognize—chances are, you and your children will be surprised at how many there are!

OMSI has also worked its magic and added some additional interactive aspects to the displays, like a chance to build roman arches or recreate the famous mosaics that proliferated the city. The Museum also has pocket demonstrations and cart demonstrations throughout the day, so your kids can get even more hands on with the artifacts.

 

photo: Bess Dwyer

The Exhibit
The exhibit is full of fascinating artifacts, (Note: some of which are so fragile that strollers aren’t allowed inside.) The subject matter may be sensitive for some young scientists, so we suggest that you take a look at some of the previews online in advance to get a sense of what is and is not appropriate for your particular young ones before you go. Your kids will find most of the artifacts mesmerizing and some of them even provide great teachable parenting moments like bodies that were encased in ash laying near jewelry and gold treasures. A great reminder to us all that not all of our personal belongings are worth going back for when there’s an emergency.

Near the end of the exhibit, you’ll get a chance to experience captivating video (with extra cool special effects!) that shows what the day of the eruption probably looked like. That video alone will keep your kids talking about their trip to the museum for weeks to come.

photo: OMSI

A Volcano Lesson
Possibly the best learning spot comes at the end of the exhibit, in the Volcanology Field Office. Here, your kiddos will get the opportunity to learn about how Mount Vesuvius is similar to the volcanoes that surround us here in Portland. There are geological samples, including ash from Mt. St. Helens, and 3D sculptures of local volcanoes. But your young explorers might just have the most fun with the “spider” — a volcanology tool that records just about everything related to eruptions and related earthquakes. Your littles can even try jumping around to see if they can make the earth move!

Keep looking throughout the museum, and you’ll see that the Pompeii connections don’t end in the field office. There are tie-ins throughout the museum, like the experiment in the chemistry lab explaining how even the air changes when a volcano blows its lid.

photo: OMSI

This exhibit is a great way for your kids (and you) to learn more about life in Roman times, and offers a perfect opportunity to tell them about Mt. St. Helens and our own local PNW ring of fire.

OMSI
1945 SE Water Ave.
503-797-4000
Dates: Through Oct 22
Online: omsi.edu
Cost: OMSI Members: Adults $16; Youth (ages 3-13) $10; Seniors (ages 63+) $12
Non-members: Adults $26; Youth (ages 3-13) $17; Seniors (ages 63+) $22

What are your family’s favorite stories about the local volcanoes? Share them with us in the comments below. 

—Bess Dwyer

“Joy to the World” takes on quite a new meaning when couples find out they’re expecting. Whether you just found out you’re pregnant or are about to pop, the holiday season is the best time to share your excitement with loved ones. Here are 6 of our favorite holiday pregnancy announcements that’ll cue the tears of happiness.

1. The Elves on the Shelf

Photo: Flickr user Dan McGinty

2. The Christmas Song Lyrics

Photo: Lily + Val

4. Debut the Baby Stocking

Photo: All Because of a Little Chemistry

4. Christmas Pregnancy Announcement Ornament

Photo: Christmas pregnancy announcement ornament

5. The Ultrasound Announcement

6. No More “Silent Nights”

How will you be announcing your pregnancy? Tell us in the comments below!

Budding brainiacs, super scientists, and mini mathematicians will burst with delight when they visit the latest D.C. museum dedicated to tiny lab coats and big fun. Designed to foster a love of Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (aka STEM) learning, kiddos won’t know which Children’s Science Center Lab station to stop at first. They’ll learn all about friction, drag, chemical reaction, wind energy—and they won’t have any idea they’re being schooled because it’s so much fun. Are your brain waves buzzing yet? Here are the museum’s must-visit-first stations.

Experiment Bar
Choosy kids can belly up to the Experiment Bar where they’ll ponder what kind of experiment they want to do with the help of an ever rotating menu of choices (on iPads no less!). Whether your little Einstein wants to channel her inner Ben Franklin or team up like Watson and Crick, she can sample from chemistry, biology, physics, and more. Fundamental science made fun? Awesome.

Inspiration Hub
If the apples of your eyes are always asking when they’ll use school stuff in real life then this center should be your first stop. With areas like Power the City, Catching the Wind (they can design real wind turbines!), Chain Reaction (hurray for magnets!), Gear Table, and the Keva Plank Construction Zone (think Lincoln Logs on steroids) little ones will learn exactly why 2 + 2 = 4 is so important.

Tinker Shop
Tinkers, engineers, counters and the like will love the Tinker Shop. They can build, bust, create and doodle till closing time. The space is intended to foster engagement with real world engineering problems so kiddos never know what they’ll be helping to solve. There’s even an automated art drawer. Pint sized tinkers can help test ideas in the vertical wind tube, operate on toys, and build circuitry boards. You know your little one is the next Leonardo Da Vinci right?

Discovery Zone
Fear not if your kiddos can’t quite say their ABCs or count to 10. Five and unders will have a ball in the Discovery Zone where shadow puppets come alive, giant foam building blocks beg to be built with, and tons of books are just waiting to be devoured.

11948L Fair Oaks Mall (Fairfax, Va)
Cost: $12; Free/2 and under
Open: 10 am–6 pm
Online: childsci.org

Have you been to Children’s Science Center yet? Tell us about it in the comments below. 

—Hilary Riedemann

Photos: Children’s Science Center via Facebook 

Tinkerers, thinkers, budding scientists and curious kids have a new place to go: The Laboratory has opened in Bucktown. With kids’ classes and camps in everything from robotics to Harry Potter wizardry, it’s a happy-go-lucky place that takes science seriously (its founders are National Board Certified teachers and one is a PhD Research Scientist!). Here’s the scoop on what’s going to be your favorite place for extra-curricular excitement.

The Scene
Owners Amy and Ed Kang want to make science exciting for kids and show how it can be a meaningful part of everyday life. That means giving young learners an awesome space in which to experiment and throw ideas around. The Laboratory’s big butcher blocks are designed for group collaboration and students are encouraged to draw on the walls. It’s the kind of place big brainstorms are born in. And the lab coats and safety goggles make things more authentic and fun.

The Laboratory offers adult classes, too, and the entire environment encourages curiosity, movement and collaboration, no matter your age. For inspiration, just look to the main wall that features original artistic diagrams of Illinois native plants, types of snowflakes, examples of Illinois animal footprints and a diagram of the brain — all rendered by an Art Institute of Chicago student. The shelves are filled with plants, art supplies and modern science books, which are always up for grabs. What’s more, students also have access to a 3-D printer, microcontroller and solderless electronics.

The Classes
Everything is built around inquiry, exploration, problem-solving and troubleshooting, and students work hands-on and collaboratively to create. A variety of technology and materials is at their side. For example, in the Intro to Robotics class, instead of having students put together a pre-made kit, they’ll start with the basic elements (gears, circuits and electronics) and be encouraged to use critical thinking to understand how they move in different ways and make something light up. Kids will leave the class having made their own mechanical ‘bot.’

Other classes for young learners include Spa Chemist, which involves using elements of chemistry to create fragrances and bath bombs. Open to kids in grades 3-6, it will delve into the history of fragrance dating back to Egyptian times; they’ll re-create a fragrance similar to what Cleopatra would have worn and will learn why perfumes were so important in Marie Antoinette’s court. Keep a lookout for an upcoming “Frozen” class, in which kids will make crowns and Sven’s antlers that will light up.

The Harry Potter Camp
The sorting hat? It’s real, and it’s at The Laboratory. For the Spring Break Camp, Welcome to Hogwarts, kids start their adventure by being sorted into houses and making their own wands. Through the week, your Muggles will study topics such as Care of Magical Creatures, Herbology, Arithmancy, Potions and Defense Against the Dark Arts. Students are given their very own stuffed pet owl that delivers them coded messages each morning when they arrive. Practically, kids will learn the chemistry behind how potions work and create their own creatures.

The Bottom Line
Instructors encourage independence and creativity, and emphasize that there is no right or wrong answer. Above all, they make science interesting and give kids a real hand in the process. Where else can tots scribble all over the walls and get rewarded for it? Have fun, young scientists!

The Laboratory
2349 W. North Ave.
Bucktown
630-880-6458
Online: thelaboratorychi.org

What do you think of this new place for kids’ classes? Let us know in the Comments!

— Kelly Aiglon