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Karen Innes
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A fabulous free site with resources for grades 1-9. Videos, comics, games, and activities on a range of Science topics.
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This site contains a great collection of resources for Science teachers. Select from Science Inquiry, Physical Science, Life Science, and more...
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Karen Innes
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How to Smile is a great place for teachers to find ideas and directions for hands-on math, science, and engineering lessons. Teachers can contribute their lessons and materials for others to use. You can search for lessons by keyword or by browsing the popular activities lists. How to Smile has a free iPhone app that you can use to search for lessons. Applications for Education Whether you're looking for a brand new lesson plan or are just looking for some ideas to tweak your existing lessons, How to Smile could be a great resource for you. It appears that the majority of the lessons are geared toward the P-8 audience. This post originally appeared on Free Technology for Teachers http://bit.ly/IHkp30.
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TED Talks In a zippy demo at TED U, AnnMarie Thomas shows how two different kinds of homemade play dough can be used to demonstrate electrical properties -- by lighting up LEDs, spinning motors, and turning little kids into circuit designers.
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Karen Innes
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Here's a fab online game that teaches students the relationship between energy production and consumption. Students manage a virtual city and learn about sustainability and environmental management.
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Karen Innes
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Karen Innes
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Available for free in the JASON Mission Center, these online games and digital labs are designed with the practical realities of the classroom in mind. Teachers can search for games and labs by state standards in the JASON Mission Center Web site, where you will also find worksheets and handouts. Games include: The Operation: Resilient Planet Game, Coaster Creator, StormTracker, and Mini Labs where students can review content and collaborate with a teacher.
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The University of Pennsylvania Health System provides over 100 video animations and explanations of body systems, injuries, and diseases. The animations are concise which makes them good for general reference purposes. Source: Free Technology for Teachers.
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Anatomy Arcade makes basic human anatomy come ALIVE through awesome games, interactives and videos.
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Searchable by age group, resource type, and topic. Chemistry resources for both teachers and students from the Royal Society of Chemistry.
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A study on how ‘heavy lifter’ cells react under crises shows they also make red blood cells, leading to new ideas of how blood cells form.
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Dedicated Science YouTube channels with some really great videos covering pretty much all topics within the curriculum.
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ScienceFix.com -more than 100 demos from middle school science classes.
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The Science Muse contains resources and ideas for K-8 classes, organised into grade level [K-5 and 6-8] and subject [Biology, Chemistry, and Environmental Science].
Expand your knowledge about the world in an enjoyable method using your Apple tablet through these educational ipad apps for science. ...
Via Ana Cristina Pratas
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Crash Course's YouTube channel currently has 6 Biology videos - all around 10-12 minutes in length. Humerous, entertaining, and informative. I would suggest these are suitable for middle-upper secondary school.
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WatchKnowLearn has indexed over 33,000 educational videos and placed them into a directory of over 3,000 categories. Users can search for videos by subject, subcategory, and age level. Videos are sourced from YouTube, TeacherTube, Vimeo, SchoolTube, National Geographic, and many more sites...
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A study guide to human anatomy, human physiology, anatomy and physiology, and human body systems. Included are many anatomy and physiology quizzes, tutorials, animations, and diagrams.
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BodyMaps is an interactive visual search tool that allows users to explore the human body in 3-D. Eight layers, skin down to skeletal and you can hover over a body part to view a description.
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In Sponge Lab Biology's Build a Body students construct a human body system-by-system. To build a body students drag and drop into place the organs and bones of a human body. Each organ and bone is accompanied by a description of the purpose of that bone or organ. The systems that students can build in the Build a Body activity are the skeletal, digestive, respiratory, nervous, excretory, and circulatory systems. Source: Free Technology for Teachers http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/02/sponge-lab-biology-offers-interactive.html
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