Link to NSTA news NSTA Reports is the National Science Teachers Association’s newspaper published nine times a year as a free member service. In January, our Engineering Energy Efficiency Project…
A simple IR experiment to prove that the North Carolina Sea Level Rise Bill is just flat wrong Blog Post
…to a cup of freshwater (left) and a cup of saltwater (right). (b) An IR image taken after four minutes showing a downwelling column in the freshwater. (c) An IR…
…don’t *ever* want to attach a price to the materials, this may provide an out. *May* is the operative term, however, seeing as Apple has certainly been known to change…
…who look at the data and draw serious opinions. Serious skepticism is an important part of science. The deniers are “contrarian scientists, free-market think tanks, and industry [spokesmen, who have]…
…firewalls. The list of comments is quite interesting to read, as it pulls from both sides of the issue. As software designers for things we hope are used in schools,…
…on regular roads, including travels on highways, regular streets, and even down the famously twisty hills of Lombard St. in San Francisco. The New York Times says that the most…
…of Earth and Sky with Augmented Reality (CEASAR) Nathan Kimball, Robb Lindgren, Jina Kang, Emma M. Mercier, Brian Guerrero, James P. Planey, Christine Hart, Matt Lewandowski 8:15 – 9:45 AM,…
…way to concepts such as gas laws and their subtleties, nucleation, latent heat and solubility. Molecular Workbench also makes accessible concepts as diverse as quantum mechanics, electronics, DNA, proteins and…
November 14, 2012 Concord Consortium President and CEO Chad Dorsey introduces scientific and engineering practices from the Next Generation Science Standards and describes how free, technology-based activities can support students. Featured…
Dan Damelin presents Molecular Workbench and open-license lesson modules created by the Concord Consortium. Hundreds of Molecular Workbench models and activities are available for free. And, thanks to funding from…