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1voteThe Center for Evaluation and Education Policy in the Indiana University School of Education will partner with a Washington, D.C.-area company for a first-of-its kind, $3.1 million project examining how current and emerging technologies are being used in classrooms and how to prepare new teachers to best use these tools.
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1voteVisionlearning Library is an award-winning collection of peer-reviewed learning modules written by professional educators and scientists. These modules provide text, interactive animations, glossary definitions, current news and research, scientist biographies and practice exercises to provide a rich and complete learning environment.
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1voteoin us for a series of Web Seminars developed in collaboration with the National Science Digital Library (NSDL) focusing on a variety of science topics and targeting K-12 grade level educators. All web seminars will include information and resources for educators available on the NSDL website. Presenters are well-respected, veteran educators from NSDL and other professional organizations with diverse backgrounds and experience. During the live web seminar presenters share their science expertise and answer questions live from the participants.
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1voteCI-Team program page
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1voteFastlane home page for NSF PIs
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1voteNSF Science of Learning Center.
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1voteThe US National Science Foundation may soon have to supply lab equipment to poverty-stricken high schools. David Goldston explains why some politicians want the agency to pay for Bunsen burners and test-tubes.
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1voteAn Internet-based education project at North Dakota State University (NDSU) provides a new virtual environment in which high school or college students can learn about a variety of topics including cell biology, computer programming and geology. One even runs the Oscar-winning software used to create the popular movies "Stuart Little" and "Toy Story II."
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1voteWelcome to Classroom Resources -- a diverse collection of lessons and web resources for classroom teachers, their students, and students’ families. Materials are arranged by subject area to help you quickly find resources in your interest area, and then use them to create lesson plans or at-home activities.
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1voteSome of science’s most powerful statements are not made in words. From the diagrams of DaVinci to Hooke’s microscopic bestiary, the beaks of Darwin’s finches, Rosalind Franklin’s x-rays or the latest photographic marvels retrieved from the remotest galactic outback, visualization of research has a long and literally illustrious history.
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