[ECP] Educational CyberPlayGround K12 Newsletters: NASA opportunities for the education community

K12 NASA opportunities Science

ECP] Educational CyberPlayGround K12 Newsletters:

NASA opportunities for the education community.
Full descriptions are listed below.
Continue reading “[ECP] Educational CyberPlayGround K12 Newsletters: NASA opportunities for the education community”

Why Teach Math? What's the Point? There are 3 Reasons.

1. Technical Jobs
2. Everyday Living
3. Logical Thinking – Mind Training – Habits of Mind
Learn Coding
“… I think understanding procedures and processes is important. But there’s a fantastic way to do that in the modern world. It’s called programming.”
— Conrad Wolfram
Conrad Wolfram: Teaching kids real math with computers
From rockets to stock markets, many of humanity’s most thrilling creations are powered by math. So why do kids lose interest in it? Conrad Wolfram says the part of math we teach — calculation by hand — isn’t just tedious, it’s mostly irrelevant to real mathematics and the real world. He presents his radical idea: teaching kids math through computer programming.

NASA opportunities for the education community.

Educational CyberPlayGround K12 Newsletters: NASA Free Planetarium Program for Your Computer (Grades K-12) — Looking at Our Earth From Above (Grades 4-9) — Mars Uncovered: Revealing the Geologic History of Mars (Grades 5-12) — Rocket Scientists Write? (Grades K-12)

NASA opportunities for the education community.

Check out the following NASA opportunities for the education community. Full descriptions are listed below.

Continue reading “NASA opportunities for the education community.”

Science.gov Debuts Image Search

Science.gov Debuts Image Search
Site now faster, easier to navigate
Oak Ridge, TN – Science.gov now quickly finds science images, including animal and plant, weather and space, and earth and sun images and more. The information is free and no registration is required. Go to www.science.gov and select the Image Search link under Special Collections.
Initially, three databases are being searched from one search box. More image databases will be added to Science.gov in the coming months. The current federated search includes:
* The National Biological Information Infrastructure (NBII) Library of Images from the Environment (LIFE), a collection of high-quality photographs, illustrations, and graphics covering a wide range of topics, including images of plants, animals, fungi, microorganisms, habitats, wildlife management, environmental topics, and biological study/fieldwork.
* The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) Image eXchange (NIX), a search engine of NASA’s multimedia collections, including images of space flight wind tunnel, solar system, aircraft, and education initiatives.
* The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Photo Library, a collection spanning centuries of time and much of the natural world from the center of the earth to the surface of the sun.
In addition to the image search, Science.gov has:
* undergone a significant software upgrade for quicker performance
* included both the Federal Register and Code of Federal Regulations in the basic search
* provided an author cluster on the results page
* upgraded the alerts service so you can manage your Science.gov alerts directly from your alerts email and get daily alerts rather than weekly
* added a Science.gov widget for download to your website or customized pages
* and provided more citation download options.
Science.gov is a gateway to more than 42 scientific databases and 200 million pages of science information with just one query, and is a gateway to over 2000 scientific websites from 18 organizations within 14 federal science agencies: the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, the Interior, and Transportation; the Environmental Protection Agency, the Government Printing Office, the Library of Congress, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Archives and Records Administration, and the National Science Foundation. These agencies represent 97 percent of the federal R&D budget.
Science.gov is the USA.gov portal to science and the U.S. contribution to WorldWideScience.org. Science.gov is hosted by the Department of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical Information, within the Office of Science, and is supported by CENDI (www.cendi.gov), an interagency working group of senior scientific and technical information managers.
Media Contact
Cathey Daniels
865-576-9539
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Tim Byrne
DOE/Office of Scientific and Technical Information
P.O. Box 62
Oak Ridge,TN 37831
Phone: 865-241-2358
E-mail: by****@**ti.gov
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