Shiro explains how his robot-friend is moving around on the soccer field to kick the soccer ball into the goal. Shiro’s teacher comes to check on his progress and asks Shiro about his project idea. Shiro scans each block carefully using the KIBO robot’s embedded barcode scanner and then runs his program. Shiro wonders, “What will my KIBO look like? I like to play soccer, so I want KIBO to play soccer with me.” He looks at the programming blocks and begins to assemble a program: Begin, Forward, Turn Left, Turn Right, Shake, End. His teacher had just read aloud the book Pete the Cat: Robo-Pete and tasked the class with a final project to create their own KIBO robot-friend. In the kindergarten classroom down the hall, Shiro sits down with his KIBO robotics kit, excited to return to his final project. The project ends in a bedroom (third scene) where character-Elisa wakes up, realizes her space birthday party is all a dream, and exclaims with a text bubble, “That was a strange dream I had!” After the cake triples in size, it jumps, makes a pop noise and spins away. This jellyfish brings out a blue gigantic birthday cake that gets bigger every time Elisa taps on the cake. As soon as the rocket lands on the moon (second scene), character-Elisa and her friends are greeted by an alien that looks like a jellyfish. A voice recording plays, “Please come to my birthday party,” after which a purple rocket flies off into space. Elisa starts her program with the green flag. The first scene is at the street in front of her house. Using the paint editor tool on ScratchJr, she customizes her characters: a girl who looks like and represents herself, a rocket, aliens, a birthday cake, and friends. Elisa has a complex plan to include multiple scenes in her project. She wants to create a ScratchJr project where she throws a birthday party in space and invites her classmates to eat a birthday cake with aliens.