Archive for the 'science' Category


Students put bears in space

Cuddly astronauts M.A.T and K.M.S and two bear colleagues were decked out in custom-made space suits and blasted 19 miles above Earth on a two-hour expedition by local students with help from Cambridge University’s Space Flight science club.
Talk about hands on learning, engaged students, and more awesomeness than most could hope to shake a stick [...]

Fly Stick Van de Graaff Levitation Wand

Something that every science teacher needs.

This battery powered wand features a mini Van de Graaff generator inside. Push a button on the handle and the static charge built up in the wand causes the included 3D mylar shapes to levitate at your command. Pick it up from Think Geek.

Google Apps explained

An excellent tutorial video produced by Google for their suite of products. [via Free Technologies for Teachers]

HealthMap opens door for students to discover epidemiology

HealthMap, dubbed as the ‘global disease alert map’, links news regarding disease outbreaks from around the world into a searchable Google Map interface. The service recently detected the salmonella outbreak in the U.S., which had sickened over 1,000 people, long before the Centre for Disease Control announced that it was happening.
HealthMap integrates outbreak data [...]

Animal Migration on Google Earth

I do love the Google Earth product, as seen by at previous post where I share a method to help students visualize the vast size and distances that exist in our solar system. TechCrunch has written today about the increasing number of scientists who are using Google Earth to visualize their information. I find Google [...]

Technology in the science classroom

A post today by Brian at ‘Learning is Messy’ has engaged some of my over-arching thoughts on technology in education. I am a strong proponent of technology in the classroom, but I carry a mighty asterisk when I say that, because what I actually support is meaningful technology in the classroom. Brian correctly uses a [...]

Using Google Earth to visualize the size of the solar system

I am a huge fan of Google Earth, and use it extensively for geotagging photos, as well as general exploring of the miraculous planet we call home. I have also had great success with using Google Earth in the classroom, and one of the short activities I like to do is plotting the relative distances [...]

Andes had growth spurt of 2.5km over 4 million years

A group of scientists claim to have new evidence that shows the Andes grew 2.5km over a 4 million year span.
Carmala Garzione of the University of Rochester in New York State, US, and colleagues say the sudden rise was caused by a huge layer of dense rock dropping off the underside of the crust that [...]