Mole Day projects, anyone?

<p>What is your chemistry student making/doing for Mole Day? Daughter and I will be up late doing hers, I fear!</p>

<p>Only thing I remember either doing were little stuffed moles dressed in outfits, with pun names – daughter did “Mole Vaulter,” I remember.</p>

<p>My daughter painted Rufus, the naked mole rat from “Kim Possible”, on a t-shirt for Mole Day, everyone loved it!</p>

<p>Tonight we’re creating “Mole-zart.” The pattern pieces are sewn together but we need to add eyes and stuff it, then do a wig (gotta find something for a mole powered wig!), tri-cornered hat and sheet music. Trying to discourage Daughter from attempting a harpsicord!</p>

<p>oh, missypie, your d sounds like mine. I remember asking her “was the assignment to make a box or a piano?” Trying to keep them inside the box is very hard…</p>

<p>They all do t-shirts and my son made a cake and decorated it (on his own). Happy Mole Day all.</p>

<p>Wow. I bet the cake was wildly popular!</p>

<p>(Funny that my post responding to your cake post came up first!)</p>

<p>t-shirts and posters. i think d made a stuffed mole too.</p>

<p>Just realized that today is actually Mole Day. Our school has block scheduling, so classes are every other day; daughter will celebrate Mole Day tomorrow.</p>

<p>DD2 used a template the teacher provided for a stuffed mole which she crowned with a Mole-hawk haircut, put in a large martini glass to make a Mole-atav cocktail.</p>

<p>My son and his lab partner made a video. His lab partner wrote a song for the video. My son pretended to be a professor talking about Avogadro and Moles. Then at the end of the video there are a lot of mole pictures and posters from various mole day events. It’s really cute.</p>

<p>D (and I) made Sherlock Molmes complete with plaid cape and fold-up hat and a pipe. The mole is <em>very</em> soft fleece and about 2’ long so I’m guessing after he comes home some older stuffy will lose a spot on her bed:)</p>

<p>Mole Day??? I have never heard of it! Would someone please enlighten me :)</p>

<p>Years ago, D’s chemistry class (well, at least some brave souls) got together for a little cake party at 6 am on “Mole Day”!</p>

<p>Sorry, Kelowna, I did not see your question. Here it is:</p>

<p>[Mole</a> Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_Day]Mole”>Mole Day - Wikipedia)</p>

<p>[National</a> Mole Day Foundation, INC.](<a href=“http://moleday.org/]National”>http://moleday.org/)</p>

<p>Celebrated annually on October 23, Mole Day commemorates Avogadro’s Number (6.02 x 10^23), which is a basic measuring unit in chemistry mole.</p>

<p>My daughter made a stuffed mole dubbed “Anne Moleyn” with starched, white ruffled collar, etc.</p>

<p>Appreciate it :)</p>

<p>I wish I had seen this thread yesterday!</p>

<p>Now son tells me, yeah, they celebrated in Chemistry class yesterday.</p>

<p>I remember one S had to make a mole a few years ago. Some of the visual puns are great.</p>

<p>Mole-zart turned out to be adorable, with a white “wig” and tri-cornered hat. And yes, Daughter stayed up late making the harpsicord, and shrunk down “sheet music.”</p>

<p>At our school, the kids get up early and at 6:02 am, walk 6.02 laps around the track, and then breakfast is served.</p>

<p>Lol, I remember doing this project sophomore year. Our class included a mole-ar bear, mole-cha frappuccino (mine), mole-riah Carey, and about ten mole-poleon Dynamites.</p>