No single star points towards Polaris.
North star also called Polaris
The North Pole points toward the North Star, also known as Polaris. This star sits almost directly above the Earth's true North Pole, making it a useful navigational tool for determining direction.
Currently the Earth's pole points toward Polaris in Ursa Minor. 5000 years ago it pointed towards Vega.
Currently, the north end of the Earth's rotation axis points toward a point in the skythat happens to be only about 1/3 of a degree from a relatively bright star. The resultis that the star seems to never move, and is called "The North Star".
Polaris is the north star.
The Little Dipper (Ursa Minor) can be just about anywhere depending on your location, the season and the time of day that you are looking at it. It appears quite close to Polaris (the North star) and points toward Polaris.
The constellation points to the pole star (Polaris).
The Northern Star is also known as Polaris. This is the star that the Earth's axis of rotation approximately points to.
The North Star is Polaris.
The north end of the earth's axis points toward a point in the sky that's a little less than 1/3 of a degree from Polaris. That's why, as close as we can tell by our eyes, Polaris appears to mark the north pole of the sky, everything else we can see appears to circle Polaris, and we call Polaris the 'North Star'. The south end of the earth's axis points to a spot in the southern sky with no comparably bright star nearby to mark it.
Polaris
It is called the North Star, the Pole Star, Alpha Ursae Minoris.