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The Best New Year’s Eve Music Playlist

December 31, 2015 by Dana Hinders

THE-BEST

What’s a New Year’s Eve party without great music? If you’re looking for tunes for your New Year’s Eve bash, Play. Party. Pin. can help. They’ve put together a playlist that includes popular songs like:

Uptown Funk by Mark Ronson FT Bruno Mars
Cheerleader by Omi
Take Me To Church by Hozier
Love Me Like You Do by Ellie Goulding
Sugar by Maroon 5
Shut Up & Dance by Walk the Moon
Thinking Out Loud by Ed Sheeran
Lips are Movin by Meghan Trainor
Sorry by Justin Bieber
Believe by Mumford
Run Away with Me by Carly Rae Jepsen
Hello by Adele
Bad Blood by Taylor Swift

Visit Play. Party. Pin. for the full list, a streaming link, and a download for a printable “name that tune” party game.

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Moss and Lichen Unit Study

I guess moss and lichen are more things that you see in the spring than in the summer, but there are some deep shady parts of our yard that stay mossy all year, and summer is a fine time to look for plants that like to live in shady, wet areas.

Raising Up Wild Things has a really pretty set of printables to use for a moss and lichen unit study.

And just in case you’re like me and don’t really know the difference, moss is a plant that grows in damp wooded areas, while lichen is a combination of fungus and algae that live together. Lichen can live in different environments but are often found in places where you would find moss, too.

The printable includes drawings of some common moss such as sphagnum moss and wood moss, as well as common lichen shapes (crusty, leafy and shrubby). There are good sized images you can print out and laminate to use to compare to specimens you find when you are exploring nature.

There’s also a forest floor coloring page and a printable journaling page where kids can write or draw their observations and there are a few questions older kids can answer.

You can use these when you go on a walk in the woods (or the back yard) to talk about what you are seeing, or combine them with other resources to talk about things that live in the forest. Check them out at Raising Up Wild Things.

This PDF from the Morton Arboretum has a bunch of pictures of different kinds of moss and where to find them, which could also be helpful in your studies. Learn more about lichen, including what they are and what they are not, in this article from the US Forest Service.

[Photo: Raising Up Wild Things]

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