Teachers say that talking about COVID-19 in science class can provide real-world examples of biological processes, start conversations about information literacy, and give students a space to process ...
On the night of a big storm, I was trying to shift my son’s focus from his fear of severe weather to an exercise in counting. Using a trick I had learned as a child, we started measuring the time ...
Jose Rivas, who teaches physics and engineering is one of the cohort of the 2017 Educator Collaborative. Credit: David Cohen What does it take to bring science and engineering to life for students?
How would you dance the ocean tides? That’s a question that several ten-year-old pupils at Portuguese schools have had to think about, as they took part in a pilot project that uses dance in geology ...
This past academic year, more than 1 million students experienced Mystery Science in their classrooms. Elementary teachers in more than 10% of schools in the U.S. are using this program because the ...
As wildfires will continue to challenge Nevada and the West for decades to come, educators and firefighting agencies are teaming up to make sure teens gain an understanding of the complex issues ...
Was this week's news from the Mars Curiosity mission overhyped? Or did it illustrate what happens when the scientific process collides with today's revved-up media maelstrom? "We're doing science at ...
All eyes were on the sky Wednesday morning as dozens of eighth-graders gathered on the field at Bear Valley Middle School to launch soda-bottle rockets in a science lesson that achieved great heights.
From Play-Doh to Barbie, major toy companies have long sought a foothold in the education marketplace by offering branded classroom materials and educational videos teachers can use. But now, one ...
Thousands of Queensland students have used their love of learning to break the Guinness World Record for the largest ever practical science lesson. Loading Instagram content A total of 2,895 students ...
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. ZAC: Hello, I'm Zac Devans and now it's time for The Science Part. Have you ever looked up at the Moon ...