Severe Thunderstorm Watch issued March 22 at 5:43PM EDT until March 23 at 12:00AM EDT by NWS Wilmington OH (details ...)
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH 73 IN EFFECT UNTIL MIDNIGHT EDT TONIGHT FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
IN INDIANA THIS WATCH INCLUDES 8 COUNTIES
IN EAST CENTRAL INDIANA
FAYETTE UNION WAYNE
IN SOUTHEAST INDIANA
DEARBORN FRANKLIN OHIO RIPLEY SWITZERLAND
IN KENTUCKY THIS WATCH INCLUDES 3 COUNTIES
IN NORTHERN KENTUCKY
BOONE CAMPBELL KENTON
IN OHIO THIS WATCH INCLUDES 32 COUNTIES
IN CENTRAL OHIO
DELAWARE FAIRFIELD FAYETTE FRANKLIN HOCKING LICKING MADISON PICKAWAY UNION
IN SOUTH CENTRAL OHIO
ADAMS HIGHLAND PIKE ROSS SCIOTO
IN SOUTHWEST OHIO
BROWN BUTLER CLERMONT CLINTON HAMILTON WARREN
IN WEST CENTRAL OHIO
AUGLAIZE CHAMPAIGN CLARK DARKE GREENE HARDIN LOGAN MERCER MIAMI MONTGOMERY PREBLE SHELBY
THIS INCLUDES THE CITIES OF ABERDEEN, ADA, ALEXANDRIA, AURORA, BATESVILLE, BEAVERCREEK, BELLEFONTAINE, BELLEVUE, BLANCHESTER, BRIGHT, BROOKVILLE, BURLINGTON, CAMDEN, CELINA, CHILLICOTHE, CIRCLEVILLE, COLDWATER, CONNERSVILLE, COVINGTON, DAY HEIGHTS, DAYTON, DELAWARE, DILLSBORO, DOWNTOWN CINCINNATI, DOWNTOWN COLUMBUS, DOWNTOWN DAYTON, EATON, ERLANGER, FAIRBORN, FAIRFIELD, FLORENCE, FORT THOMAS, FRANKLIN, GEORGETOWN, GREENDALE, GREENFIELD, GREENVILLE, HAMILTON, HIDDEN VALLEY, HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, HILLSBORO, INDEPENDENCE, KENTON, KETTERING, LANCASTER, LANDEN, LAWRENCEBURG, LEBANON, LIBERTY, LOGAN, LONDON, MANCHESTER, MARYSVILLE, MASON, MIDDLETOWN, MILAN, MILFORD, MINSTER, MOUNT CARMEL, MOUNT ORAB, MOUNT REPOSE, MULBERRY, NEW BREMEN, NEWARK, NEWPORT, OAKBROOK, OSGOOD, OXFORD, PEEBLES, PICKERINGTON, PIKE LAKE, PIKETON, PIQUA, PLAIN CITY, PORTSMOUTH, RICHMOND, RIPLEY, RISING SUN, SEAMAN, SIDNEY, SPRINGBORO, SPRINGFIELD, ST. MARYS, SUMMERSIDE, TIPP CITY, TROY, URBANA, VERSAILLES, VEVAY, WAPAKONETA, WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, WAVERLY, WEST COLLEGE CORNER, WEST JEFFERSON, WEST UNION, WHEELERSBURG, WILMINGTON, WINCHESTER, WITHAMSVILLE, AND XENIA.
32° 32° Mon 47° Mon 47° 29° 29° Tue 53° Tue 53°
Wednesday, April 22nd, 2015

Kids learn math, science can be fun - and messy

By Shelley Grieshop
Photo by Shelley Grieshop/The Daily Standard

Stacy Heitbrink and her son, Brayden, make a bouncy ball during a free STEM night at Wright State University-Lake Campus, Celina.

CELINA - Pint-sized students on Tuesday night invaded the local university to discover science, technology, engineering and math ... and got downright messy.
More than 100 area preschool through third-grade students - with parents in tow - created funky items such as monkey fart soap during the first-ever "Girls Just Wanna Have STEM and Boys Build it Bigger" event at Wright State University-Lake Campus.
"We had 140 kids registered and more on a waiting list," said Betsy Jo Crites, who teaches early childhood education at the campus to the 13 juniors who organized Tuesday's free event.
The evening was planned to give the college students hands-on experience working with children and parents and to introduce youngsters to the world of STEM, Crites said.
"They (college students) wrote lesson plans and came up with child-centered activities," she said. "You just can't get this type of experience with a lecture in class or reading from a book."
Children were able to visit seven learning stations in the crowded Dicke Hall where the college students helped them understand the science behind the projects they created.
"You're almost there. Stir just a little more," college student Kori York told 6-year-old Nora Moeller of St. Henry, as she blended a vanilla scent with dry, shredded goat milk over a small burner at the soap-making station.
The melted liquid was then poured into tree-, star- or animal-shaped molds and left to solidify on ice.
A long line of children waited patiently at the bouncy ball station where glue, coloring and borax were formed into small, round shapes by little hands.
"How you doing?" Crites asked participants as she approached the table.
"It's messy," the teacher-in-training told her.
"That's OK. It's science," Crites said with a smile.
Brayden Heitkamp, guided by his mother, Stacy, enthusiastically squeezed the slimy material in his hands until it formed a firm ball.
The St. Henry child's interest in math and science prompted his mother to bring him to the campus.
"They are his favorite subjects so I thought he would enjoy this," Stacy Heitkamp said.
A few yards away, 6-year-old twins Ashton and Caleb Lehman of Celina were making their own version of ChapStick from Vaseline and powdered Kool-Aid mix.
"The idea sounded like fun," their mother, Amy Lehman, told the newspaper when asked why she came. "The kids get to interact with science and I think it's important to get them interested. It's a good experience for them to see what's out there."
In a yard outside Dicke Hall, children took turns climbing two flights of stairs to drop eggs they attempted to secure in styrofoam cups, padded with coffee filters and plastic peanuts, and wrapped with rubber bands and tape.
Some eggs survived the fall; others did not.
Lilly Gonzalez of Celina was victorious.
"It's soft," the shy 5-year-old said, as she described the pink plastic peanuts that kept her egg from scrambling on the pavement below.
The supplies used for the event were paid for with an Ohio Space Grant and a human services mini grant from the College of Education at WSU, Dayton, Crites said.
Jack Snethkamp, 8, of St. Marys, and his brother, 6-year-old AJ, were drawn to the robotic Legos table where colorful creations were connected by cable to a laptop computer, waiting to be programmed into action.
"I have some (Legos) sort of like these at home but they can't move," Jack Snethkamp said.
His younger brother's eyes widened as he used the software program to make the ducks in his Lego vehicle come alive.
"This is great!" he said beaming with pride.
Photo by Shelley Grieshop/The Daily Standard

An early childhood education student shows Jack Snethkamp of St. Marys, center, and his younger brother, AJ, how to power up robotic Legos during a free STEM night at Wright State University-Lake Campus, Celina.

Additional online stories on this date
MINSTER - Two power companies have offered to pay commercial customers who are willing to cut power usage during emergency situations.
Village coun [More]
FORT RECOVERY - The way Jackson Hobbs and Wyatt Felver were pitching Tuesday, just one little hiccup could have decided the winner of the Parkway-Fort Recovery baseball game. [More]
Subscriber and paid stories on this date
FORT RECOVERY - Middle school principal Matt Triplett is confident a Senate committee he's on will improve state testing.
At Tuesday night's board
CELINA - Water rates will increase in June for 513 rural customers to help pay for future upgrades and operating/maintenance costs fielded by the county.
LIMA - The Third District Court of Appeals this week rejected an Ohio Department of Natural Resources challenge to a judge's order to make deposits to pay for damage from flooding due to the new West Bank spillway.
CELINA - Public and private sector job opportunities abound locally as some employers struggle to find suitable candidates, local leaders said.
Are
CELINA - A Celina company was hired to complete an estimated $275,000 wastewater pump station replacement project near the 4-H campground north of Grand Lake.
ROCKFORD - Ron Rutledge on Tuesday night took a seat on village council.
Rutledge, 45, who works at Crown Equipment Corp., was sworn in at Tuesday'
CELINA - At times, the wheels on the bus go round and round for the Celina softball team - the pitching is on, the bats are producing and the fielding is rock solid.
Tuesday's Local Roundup
Compiled by Gary R. Rasberry and Colin Foster
Isaiah Eichler scored the only run of the game as Celina improved to 4-0 in the Western Buckeye Lea
Local women open bridal exchange store in Celina
CELINA - Talonda Wells and Kellie Ashmore, owners of Kakes & Dreams Bridal Exchange invite women to come in and say yes to the dress.
The women ope