Don’t close this browser tab!

This Mystery is being downloaded to your device so you can play it at home without an Internet connection.

Keep this tab open once it's downloaded in order to play the Mystery.

If you experience problems, please talk to your teacher.

0% Cancel
How can stars help you if you get lost?

How can stars help you if you get lost?

Lesson narration:
Scroll for prep
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
# Optional Activity: Where Is North?

Your teacher has labeled the walls of the classroom with North, South, East, and West. Discuss:

  • To go to the front of the room, which direction would you walk: North, South, East, or West?
  • Which direction would you walk to go toward the clock?
  • What is closest to the west wall of the classroom?

Suppose you could walk through the wall labeled North and keep on walking in a straight line. Discuss:

  • Where would you end up if you kept walking North?
  • Where would you end up if you kept walking South?
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen

Look at a globe of the Earth.

  • Find where you are on the globe.
  • Find the North Pole and the South Pole on the globe. If you walked North, you’d end up at the North Pole. What places would you go through on your way there?
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
# Extensions

Below is an for extending this topic beyond the activity & exploration you just completed.

Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

star


1 of 7

a bright light that can be seen in the night sky
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

telescope


2 of 7

a tool used to make very distant objects look closer, often used to look at outer space
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

north


3 of 7

one of four main directions; when you face north, west is to the left and east is to the right
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

east


4 of 7

one of four main directions; if you are facing north, it is to the right
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

south


5 of 7

one of four main directions; if you are facing north, it is the direction behind you
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

west


6 of 7

one of four main directions; if you are facing north, it is to the left
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image

pattern


7 of 7

something that happens again and again and again in a way that can be predicted
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Lesson narration:

Activity Prep

Print Prep

Switch to non-narrated version

In this Read-Along lesson, Ryan’s camping trip with his dad includes a night of stargazing, and a mystery to solve. The lesson includes a short exercise where students imagine what they might see looking through a telescope. You can extend the lesson with the optional activity, Where Is North?, that helps students learn the cardinal directions.

Preview optional activity

Extend this lesson