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SCIENCE LINKS
This page is made
to provide you with links to all kinds of exciting science subjects.
- Access Excellence has a great site on
Biology and Education
-
Science up Close is an AWESOME grade 1-6 web site. It is a
resource by Harcourt book publishers. They have
resources for other areas
as well.
-
Great
site for Anatomy from the University of Minnesota
- Teach your students about the phases of the moon and the
rotation of the moon around the earth at this visual site. (Great for Elem.)
- Frank Potter's Science
Gems
- K12
Science.org - This Web site from the Center for Improved Engineering and
Science Education at Stevens Institute of Technology acts as a user-friendly
interface for educators.
-
SeaWorld Offers Online
Environmental Teacher Guides, Activities
-
FrogGuts is a really good visual frog
dissection page. (Outstanding!!) They now sell this project
on CD... but they do have a few nice demos on their site.)
- National Science Teachers Association has an
excellent site -- Scilinks.org
(Must have Scilink code from science textbooks to obtain links.)
- Medline plus
is an excellent government site for medical information
- The American Museum of Natural History: The
online counterpart to New York's renowned museum.
- Amusement Park Physics:
The physics behind coasters, carousels, bumper cars, and other amusement park
rides is explained here.
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Cells Alive: Another
site featuring stunning microscopic photographs, of everything from red blood
cells to common soil bacteria
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Conceiving
a Clone: This site offers a uniquely well-rounded, nonpartisan perspective
on the subject of cloning.
- Dr. Kunkel's Microscopy:
Awesome microscopic pictures. Science and technology through the eyes of a
microscope.
- Evidence: The True
Witness: Interested in forensic science? Evidence: The True Witness
contains detailed information about the different fields.
-
Glacier: Antarctica is a fascinating place. Here, you can check out the weather and
tag along on an expedition.
-
Hurricane Hunters: Fly into the
eye of a hurricane with the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, better known
as the Hurricane Hunters of the Air Force Reserve.
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Innovative
Transportation Technologies: Provides information about unconventional
(therefore innovative) transportation technologies.
-
National Inventors Hall of Fame:
The National Inventors Hall of Fame™ honors the women and
men responsible for the great technological advances that make human, social and
economic progress possible.
- National Laboratories:
Serious science work at the U.S. Department of Energy Labs.
- The Mad Scientist Network: A volunteer
crew of more than 500 scientists worldwide answer science queries. You can
ask your own questions or also view thousands of other people's questions and
answers.
- Mars News: A daily dose of updates on
the red planet, from new NASA images to the status of would-be expeditions.
- Microsoft Research: The goal
is to push forward the state-of-the-art in computer science, and they do this by
seeking out difficult computer science problems and trying to solve them in an
innovative and practical way. It also gives you a taste - a smorgasbord actually
- of some of what is to come in software.
- NASA: You probably know, what is waiting for you at this page: All kinds of
information about space and the things around us. This page even includes fun
things like a virtual
tour through the International Space Station ISS.
- National Geographic: Like the
magazine itself, this page offers you the articles about all kinds of countries
and countrysides,
including all the beautiful pictures from the magazine.
- National Geographic News: This site
offers you a new article each day. The topics are about the same kind that are
written about in the magazine (countries, nature, enviroment etc.)
- Nine
Planets: Provides a wealth of information and beautiful images covering the
sun and the planets in our solar system.
- Nova Online: Nobody does science
exploration on TV like PBS's Nova Series. It's stories, illustrations, and
videos can take you on a virtual balloon flight, a visual tour of the space
station Mir, or to the moon. There's even a special area for
teachers.
-
Sandlot Science: An
interactive guide to optical illusions, from ambiguous illusions such as barber
polls and spinning wheels to living creatures and games.
- Science Daily: Gives you a varied
taste of the discoveries and technologies that will shape our world.
- The StarTrails Society: A
NASA-sponsored program designed to get amateur scientists involved in and
contributing to scientific research projects in astronomy, astrobiology,
and other natural sciences.
- TerraServer: Microsoft's
astonishing rich collection of aerial and satellite images of places on earth
- Volcano World: The Web's premier
source of volcano information
- The Why Files: If it's in the
news and involves science, chances are the Why Files will be ready with some
in-depth, answers that five you the perspective that the headlines can't.
- Yahoo links to different Science subjects:
This list is excellent if you are looking for a special subject, but it is also
very good if you just want to surf around and have fun.
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Houghton Mifflin Science Discovery Works --
http://www.eduplace.com/science/dw/index.html (K-6)
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Solar System Live
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Views of the Solar System
(http://solarviews.com/eng/homepage.htm)
Contains much information on all the planets and other heavenly bodies with
exceptional photos and animation. -
The Visible Human Project
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Getsmarter.org offers a nice looking
web site that allows you to test students knowledge in Math or science and
then compare those test results against other students.
-
ESU7's list of
Science resources
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Esu5's list
of Science resources
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Take the Competitive Enterprises Institute (CEI)
online environmental quiz.
-
Nebraska
Wildlife Descriptions (http://www.ngpc.state.ne.us/wildlife/critters.html)
Not just for Nebraska. 23 animals described, tells habitats, habits,
descriptions and more, contains picture and sound file...links to wildlife
homepage. -
Plants & Animals (http://www.kids.gov/k_plants.htm)
Many links to sites such as Children's Butterfly Site, NASA for Kids,
National Zoo, Recycle City, Fantastic Forest, etc. -
Science & Math (http://www.kids.gov/k_science.htm)
Learn about rockets, weather, the human body, outer space, science fair
projects and more. -
www.sciencespot.net
(Checkout the science classroom.)
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Experience
Apollo 11 mission stage by stage. Awesome site and experience.
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Nice science link for the science classroom for
space photos and exploration.
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Google Body
Labs is an awesome 3-D body model with many overlays.
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Kidwings has a great elementary site for Owl Pellet
Dissection.
http://www.kidwings.com/owlpellets/flash/v4/index.htm
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The JASON Project connects
students with great explorers and great events to inspire and motivate them
to learn science.
http://www.jason.org/
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60 Second Science - quick science lessons from Scientific American
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