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Structures - Around the World - The Exploratorium

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3 to 8
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Here's a collection of hands-on experiments for elementary students involving creation of structures such as bridges, beams, poles, and pins. The experiments use a variety of improbable...more
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Here's a collection of hands-on experiments for elementary students involving creation of structures such as bridges, beams, poles, and pins. The experiments use a variety of improbable materials to show structural design principles. Great site for introducing experiments to elementary students.

In the Classroom

Teacher instructions are clearly presented in step-by-step fashion.

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Reeko's Mad Scientist Lab

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4 to 7
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A collection of science experiments which can be done at home or school. No guides as to how they might fit into curriculum, but plenty of warnings regarding parental supervision. ...more
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A collection of science experiments which can be done at home or school. No guides as to how they might fit into curriculum, but plenty of warnings regarding parental supervision.

In the Classroom

Search the site before class and examine the free activities provided in the webpage. (some of the experiments may not be age-appropriate, so it is best to get familiar with the site before you let your students loose on it.) Save the games and activities you like to the desktop, and use it as a learning center or station. Kids will love the mad scientist appeal of the website, along with the interesting ideas for science at home!

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Newton's Apple - Teachers' Guides - PBS

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1 to 8
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This site contains lesson plans and teacher guides from the past six seasons of the Newton's Apple PBS series. A good source for ideas, experiments, and follow-up sources. ...more
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This site contains lesson plans and teacher guides from the past six seasons of the Newton's Apple PBS series. A good source for ideas, experiments, and follow-up sources.

In the Classroom

Bookmark this on your computer to use when planning lessons and units about gravity. Take advantage of these free lesson plans, for any unit in a physics class. Search the site to find the appropriate lesson tools, and bring them up on an interactive whiteboard or projector. A lot of the activities can be used for a class activity, or you could also break students up into cooperative learning groups and have them complete them seperately. Make sure to post this site on your teacher web page to allow students to access it both in and out of the classroom for review.

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NSF Classroom Resources - National Science Foundation

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4 to 12
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This is a collection of science and math lessons and web resources ranging from how the Internet works to nanoscience, engineering, biology, and principles of physics and chemistry....more
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This is a collection of science and math lessons and web resources ranging from how the Internet works to nanoscience, engineering, biology, and principles of physics and chemistry. The content is predictably detailed, "real science" based on topics and phenomena that will interest students. These are the best of the best lessons and resources with applicability to lots of settings.

In the Classroom

Bookmark this site as a reference site for finding further material. Under each subject find a varity of formats from forums and articles, to videos, interactives, podcasts, experiments and more. Some of the resources on this site may lead to a starting point for individual or group projects. Use parts of this site at a center. Share this site with staff (especially new teachers) and parents looking to extend science and math activities at home.

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Lesson Ideas from the Science Museum of Minnesota

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3 to 8
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This regional science museum has collected several sets of lesson ideas, examples, and submissions by students and teachers. The site also includes information on how to create simple...more
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This regional science museum has collected several sets of lesson ideas, examples, and submissions by students and teachers. The site also includes information on how to create simple experiments using commonly available equipment. There are a number of idea starters, but you'll need to fill in the details to make the lessons work in your classroom.

In the Classroom

This site could not be any more perfect for a learning center or station. There are quite a few digital "labs" available on the site, pick the corresponding one for your unit and save it as a favorite on your desktop. Allow students to explore the site in pairs. The section of the site entitled "simply Science" offers some free activity ideas for in the home or in the classroom activities that would add some variety to any science unit. Note: a lot of the outdoor activities are geared towards those cold Minnesota winters, so if you're in a warmer area they may be less usable.

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Global Warming

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4 to 12
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Students gather information about global warming and climate changes in preparation for future lessons on the Greenhouse Effect. From Michigan State University & Ameritech. ...more
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Students gather information about global warming and climate changes in preparation for future lessons on the Greenhouse Effect. From Michigan State University & Ameritech.

In the Classroom

Students will be researching Global warming. If your students need an introduction or review of research skills you may want to parallel the POV lesson with R4S: Research for Success, reviewed here. As you work through the lesson, ask students to keep a journal about what they are learning and questions they still have. Subtitute paper and pen journals for a digital journal using a tool like Penzu, reviewed here; with Penzu you can add images or your own artwork as illustrations. As a culmination activity modify student's understanding by having them put together an interactive infographic about their learning for you and their peers using Infogram, reviewed here.

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Exploratorium Science Snacks - The Exploratorium

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1 to 12
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This is an extensive collection of science lessons and laboratory procedures compiled by the Great Lakes Collaborative and the University of Kansas. The site offers a highly detailed...more
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This is an extensive collection of science lessons and laboratory procedures compiled by the Great Lakes Collaborative and the University of Kansas. The site offers a highly detailed outline of science concepts, and it provides a selection of different lessons and lab resources for each concept. All lessons are available as Adobe Acrobat PDF files which can be downloaded and printed on your printer. The index page groups these by topic, and each page includes instructions and illustrations. Many of the projects are suitable for "do at home" activities. Great resource!

In the Classroom

After introducing this site to your students, you can choose an activity to complement an area your are studying, or allow students choose an activity to pursue. Challenge students modify their learning by creating "visual" lab reports using Jimdo, reviewed here, to document experiments or illustrate concepts, such as the water cycle.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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Consumer Testing in the Classroom

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5 to 8
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Put the scientific method to work in your classroom. This site offers project ideas for your students to design their own scientific experiments to test household products. ...more
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Put the scientific method to work in your classroom. This site offers project ideas for your students to design their own scientific experiments to test household products.

In the Classroom

Take advantage of the ideas here for your classroom. Have students enhance their learning by creating blogs sharing their learning and understanding using Telegra.ph, reviewed here. This blog creator requires no registration. If you are teaching younger students and looking for an easy way to integrate technology and check for understanding, challenge your students to create a blog using Seesaw, reviewed here.

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Building Big projects - PBS

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4 to 8
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This is the teacher's guide to the PBS "Building Big" series which describes the engineering methods required to create a variety of huge structures. The exercises and demonstrations...more
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This is the teacher's guide to the PBS "Building Big" series which describes the engineering methods required to create a variety of huge structures. The exercises and demonstrations let students try their hand at small models that demonstrate the same principles used for larger structures. Lots of "hands-on" stuff for different grade levels and topics. Well worth a visit.

In the Classroom

Introduce the site to the class with a projector or interactive whiteboard. Bookmark the interactive activities on learning center computers for students to explore together. Have students extend their learning by writing and drawing about it using a blog tool like Penzu, reviewed here. With Penzu you can add images or your own artwork as illustrations.

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Science Explorer - Exploratorium

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2 to 12
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This site is a comprehensive collection of natural science resources for teachers. Teachers can use this site to browse through the outline format to research a specific area of natural...more
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This site is a comprehensive collection of natural science resources for teachers. Teachers can use this site to browse through the outline format to research a specific area of natural science. This site takes some time to go through and lesson plans are not easily available; however detailed bibliographic information is provided and all material is based on national science standards.

In the Classroom

Allow students to choose from the activities offered on this site to learn more about natural science. Post a link on your class web page or newsletter for parents and students to use at home. With younger students, take photos, or have older students take photos, of the the steps and results of their experiment they make and post them on your website for parents to see. Older students could enhance their learning by posting the photos with and explanation using a portfolio tool such as Mahara, reviewed here. Mahara also offers tools for incorporating blogs. Alternatively, students could transform their learning by annotating images taken of their activities with text, URL's, or videos using ThingLink, reviewed here.

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The National Inventors Hall of Fame, Akron, Ohio

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5 to 12
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Use the Inventors Hall of Fame site to read about famous inventors. The site is indexed and searchable. Students could easily use these biographies to start a research project, or ...more
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Use the Inventors Hall of Fame site to read about famous inventors. The site is indexed and searchable. Students could easily use these biographies to start a research project, or you can post them on a bulletin board. Help inspire your students! You may also want to search through the camps and programs offered to see if there is one of interest being held near your community. Alternatively, you could suggest to your administrator that your school sponsor one of the programs. There is no cost to the hosting school/district.

In the Classroom

Open the tab on the top menu bar for Inductees and scroll down to the most recent year for inductees. Display this page on the interactive whiteboard or projector, and use it to create an inspiring discussion about inventions with students. Ask students to choose an inventor and/or invention of interest to them and research how the inventor went about discovering his/her invention. Look through the programs and camp offerings for ideas for a science fair project. Ask students to look around at home and school to find something that needs to be invented!

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The Galapagos Islands - Adaptions - Kyrene

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4 to 12
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The National Science Teachers' Association developed this elegant PDF about the Galapagos islands and the abundance of species still found on the island. In addition to excellent photography,...more
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The National Science Teachers' Association developed this elegant PDF about the Galapagos islands and the abundance of species still found on the island. In addition to excellent photography, there are questions and discussion ideas for the species presented. Great site for a study of ecology or natural science.

In the Classroom

Introduce this activity with a projector or on an interactive whiteboard to show students how to navigate the site. Then, in your flipped or blended classroom (or at a computer center), have students explore on their own. Have students take notes on the material and write down questions they still have and topics that confuse them. They can do this with pen and paper or online. If you want the assignment online, explain to students they need to open a new tab in their browser window and take notes with a tool such as Webnote, reviewed here; tell students to be sure to save the URL to share their notes and questions with you and their peers. As a final assessment and to transform student learning, have small groups choose to make an interactive website using Webnode, reviewed here, or an interactive infographic using Canva Inforgraphic Maker, reviewed here, as if they are updating this site with a current look and using newer technologies.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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At Home Science - The Exploratorium

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3 to 8
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The Exploratorium designed these simple science experiments primarily for use in the kitchen, but many could be adapted for classroom use. Most are very simple, a few are intentionally...more
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The Exploratorium designed these simple science experiments primarily for use in the kitchen, but many could be adapted for classroom use. Most are very simple, a few are intentionally "yucky," and they all demonstrate serious science which is explained in simple, kid-friendly terms. A wealth of good illustrations helps retain interest. Teachers, students, and parents will all like this one.

In the Classroom

Bookmark this site as a resource for interesting, classroom-friendly science experiments. Share a link to experiments on your class web page for families to complete at home. Consider taking photos of the different stages of an experiment your students are doing in class. For all age students, use Sharalike, reviewed here, to display them on your webpage for students and families to view at any time. Enhance learning by having older students write blogs, documenting their understanding using a tool like Telegra.ph, reviewed here. With Telegra.ph you just click on an icon to upload images from your computer, add a YouTube or Vimeo, or Twitter links. This blog creator requires no registration.

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Physics Lecture Demonstrations

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6 to 12
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This rather long page has a list of puzzling demonstrations (many with simple materials) you can use to spark student interest and challenge their powers to explain what they observe....more
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This rather long page has a list of puzzling demonstrations (many with simple materials) you can use to spark student interest and challenge their powers to explain what they observe. A great resource.

In the Classroom

Bookmark this site for use all year, and use to build it build simple models that you can use to demonstrate physics concepts to your science students! Encourage them to build some as well.

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Trebuchet.com

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6 to 12
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This privately published site documents and illustrates the history of the trebuchet, a marvel of medieval physics that could hurl heavy things great distances. Students can learn how...more
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This privately published site documents and illustrates the history of the trebuchet, a marvel of medieval physics that could hurl heavy things great distances. Students can learn how to build their own miniature version, and they can study why the trebuchet worked so efficiently. This one's both fun and instructional.

In the Classroom

Share this site on the interactive whiteboard or projector to introduce a unit or lesson on the physics of throwing machines. Use this site to provide a historic example of their many uses. Teachers can focus simply on the history of mechanics of the machinery OR can have students attempt to create their own based on the directions and resources provided. This would be a great resource for either a History or Physics classroom.

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Skateboard Science - The Exploratorium

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6 to 12
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This site from San Francisco's Exploratorium offers a fascinating look into the physics behind all those bizarre skateboard tricks. Learn why riders and boards stay together and about...more
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This site from San Francisco's Exploratorium offers a fascinating look into the physics behind all those bizarre skateboard tricks. Learn why riders and boards stay together and about the forces that combine to make a successful trick. Along the way, there are links to other related topics.

In the Classroom

Share this site with students who like to skateboard to extend their knowledge about the dynamics of how the tricks work (and learn to relate force and motion in real life). Ask these students to share what they learned about their favorite trick with their peers by creating an annotated, narrated image (including text boxes and related links) using a tool such as Google Drawings, reviewed here. Google Drawings allows you to annotate an image with links to videos, text, websites, and more. Not familiar with Google Drawings? Watch an archived OK2Ask session to learn how to use: OK2Ask Google Drawings, here. The subject matter should make the hard work fun as it is all about the physics of the skateboarder and his board!

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Physics4Kids

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6 to 12
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This is an engaging, "real science" site with explanations and narrative designed to keep students involved. There are explanations of more than a dozen concepts, each in sufficient...more
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This is an engaging, "real science" site with explanations and narrative designed to keep students involved. There are explanations of more than a dozen concepts, each in sufficient detail that the site can serve as both an independent study and an enrichment resource.

In the Classroom

Teachers may also find the site a good resource for strategies on conveying abstract concepts.

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Building Big - PBS

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5 to 8
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Teach basic concepts of physical science by using the structures students see everyday. This companion site to a PBS television series examines bridges, domes, skyscrapers, dams and...more
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Teach basic concepts of physical science by using the structures students see everyday. This companion site to a PBS television series examines bridges, domes, skyscrapers, dams and tunnels, and the physical forces that affect them. After learning about each structure and "visiting" some well-known examples throughout the world, students can participate in a series of interactive online experiments that illustrate the impact that materials, loads, and shapes can have on a structure. Check out the Educators' Guide for suggestions on how to incorporate this site into your curriculum.

In the Classroom

Introduce this site with students on an interactive whiteboard or with a projector to show them how to navigate it. Allow pairs or small groups to choose from Bridges, Domes, Skyscrapers, Dams, or Tunnels for further study and exploration. As a substitute for handwritten reports have students create a blog sharing their learning and understanding using Telegra.ph, reviewed here. With Telegra.ph you just click on an icon to upload images from your computer, add a YouTube or Vimeo, or Twitter links. This blog creator requires no registration.

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Albert Einstein Biography - American Institute of Physics

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6 to 12
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From the American Institute of Physics - This page offers a commemorative biography of Einstein which highlights both his life and his contributions to the study of physics. Good term...more
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From the American Institute of Physics - This page offers a commemorative biography of Einstein which highlights both his life and his contributions to the study of physics. Good term paper material written from a scientific perspective.

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Antimatter Mysteries - CERN

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4 to 8
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Here's an introduction to the concept of antimatter for students. Nicely written text and colorful illustrations step users through a concept that's tough for many adults. Try this...more
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Here's an introduction to the concept of antimatter for students. Nicely written text and colorful illustrations step users through a concept that's tough for many adults. Try this one if you have a few students who need a little "something extra" to think about!

In the Classroom

Tackle the idea of "antimatter" with the information and graphics from this PDF. Make a pictorial response to what you have learned by going through this lesson.
 This resource requires PDF reader software like Adobe Acrobat.

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