A Selection of Useful Science and Science Education Resources
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21st century skills, Animals in the classroom, Assessment, Bloom's taxonomy, Books, Careers, Certification, Citizen science, Classroom management, Clearinghouses of Resources, Common Core, Competitions, Concept maps, Constructivism, Controversial
issues, Cooperative learning, Cross-cutting concepts/ideas,Curriculum, Data, Data
visualization, Demos, Differentiated instruction, Disabilities and science education, Engineering, Eduspeak, ESL,
Ethical and Legal Issues,Evolution, First year science teachers, Flipped Classroom, Freebies, Fun, Games, Gender,Grants, History of Science, Holidays, Human Subjects (IRB), Humor,Icebreakers, Identification of
plants and insects, Images, Infographics, Inquiry, Intellectual Property, Jobs, Jokes, Journals, Laboratory activities, Learning Management systems (LMS), Learning modalities, Learning environment, Learning Theories, Lesson plans (Biology, Chemistry, Earth and Space Science, Physics,Interdisciplinary, Other), Library, Living organisms, Misconceptions, Models, Motivation, Multicultural Science, Multimedia, Nature of Science, News, New York, New York City,New Science Teachers, Online science courses, Open Source Software,Organizations, Philosophy of Teaching, Philosophy of Science, Planning, Plants, Professional development, Problem Based learning (PBL), Project based learning, a Private Universe, Reading and Science Research, Review, Rubrics, Safety,Science fairs and competitions, Science literacy, Simulations, Songs,Sounds, Sports and science, Standards, STEM, STS Issues, Students, Supplies, Science, Sociometry, Technology, Teacher certification, Teacher evaluation, Textbooks,Tutorials, Unifying concepts, Videos, Virtual labs, Volunteer Computing Projects, Wait time, Web design, Websites, Women and science
21st century skills
Animals in the classroom
- Alternatives to dissection
- Dissection
- Care of animals
- Animal activities
- Animal rights
- Invertebrates
- Vertebrates
- Other
Assessment
- Alternative assessment
- Assessment of college readiness
Bloom's taxonomy
Books
- Free books
- Education, general books
- Top education books
- Bruner, Jerome S. The process of education. Vol. 115.
Harvard University Press, 1977.
- Dewey, J. (1916). Democracy and education.
- Kozol, J. (2012). Amazing grace: The lives of
children and the conscience of a nation. Broadway.
- Kozol, J. (2012). Savage inequalities: Children in
America's schools. Broadway.
- Kozol, J. (2006). The shame of the nation: The
restoration of apartheid schooling in America. Three Rivers
Press.
- Kozol, J. (1967). Death at an Early Age: The Destruction
of the Hearts and Minds of Negro Children in the Boston
Public Schools.
- Educational technology books
- Top educational technology books
- Bergmann, J. (2012). Flip Your Classroom: Talk To Every
Student In Every Class Every Day Author:
- Jonathan Bergmann, Aaron Sams.
- Berners-Lee, T., & Fischetti, M. (2001). Weaving the
Web: The original design and ultimate destiny of the World
Wide Web by its inventor. DIANE Publishing Company.
- Carr, N. (2011). The shallows: What the Internet is doing
to our brains. WW Norton.
- Cuban, L. (1986). Teachers and machines : the classroom
use of technology since 1920. New York: Teachers College
Press.
- Cuban, L. (2003). Oversold and underused : computers in
the classroom Harvard University Press.
- Gleick, J. (2011). The information: A history, a theory, a
flood. Fourth Estate (GB).
- Haynes, C., & Holmevik, J. V. (1999). Mooniversity: a
student’s guide to online learning environments (1st ed.)
Needham Heights, MA, USA: Allyn and Bacon.
- Johnson, S. (2010). Where good ideas come from: The
natural history of innovation. ePenguin.
Kelly, K. (2010). What technology wants. Viking Press.
- Kennepohl, D., & Shaw, L. (2010). Accessible Elements:
Teaching Science Online and at a Distance. Au Pr.
- Khan, S. (2012). The One World Schoolhouse: Education
Reimagined. Twelve.
- Lanier, Jaron. 2010. You are not a
gadget. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
- Margolis, J., & Fisher, A. (2003). Unlocking the
clubhouse : women in computing The MIT Press.
- McCaughey, M., & Ayers, M. D. (Eds.). (2003).
Cyberactivism: online activism in theory and practice.
London: Routledge.
- Negroponte, N. (1995). Being digital Knopf.
- Neilsen, J. (1999). Designing web usability: the practice
of simplicity. Indianapolis: New Riders.
- Papert, S. (1980). Mindstorms : children, computers, and
powerful ideas. New York: Basic Books.
- Postman, N. (1992). Technopoly : the surrender of culture
to technology. New York: Knopf.
- Rheingold, H. (1994). The virtual community : homesteading
on the electronic frontier. New York: HarperPerennial.
- Rheingold, H. (2000). The virtual community: homesteading
on the electronic frontier The MIT Press.
- Rosen, L. D. (2010). Rewired: Understanding the
iGeneration and the way they learn. Palgrave Macmillan.
- Stoll, C. (1995). Silicon snake oil : second thoughts on
the information highway. New York: Doubleday.
- Stoll, C. (1999). High tech heretic: why computers don't
belong in the classroom and other reflections by a computer
contrarian Doubleday.
- Stoll, C. (2000). High-tech heretic : reflections of a
computer contrarian Anchor Books.
- Tufte, E. R. (1997). Visual explanations : images and
quantities, evidence and narrative. Cheshire, Connecticut:
Graphics Press.
- Tufte, E. R. (2006). Beautiful evidence (Vol. 23).
Cheshire, CT: Graphics Press.
- Turkle, S. (1984). The second self : computers and the
human spirit. New York: Simon & Schuster.
- Turkle, S. (1995). Life on the screen : identity in the
age of the internet. New York: Simon & Schuster.
- Turkle, S. (2011). Alone Together: Why We Expect More from
Technology and Less from Each Other. Basic Books.
- Science books
- Biology books
- Benyus, J. M. (2002). Biomimicry: Innovation inspired
by nature. William Morrow Paperbacks.
- The Science of Skin -http://sciencenetlinks.com/media/filer/2011/10/25/si_skin_book.pdf
- George,
J. C. (1992). Who Really Killed
Cock Robin? (Vol. 25).
HarperCollins.
- Lewis, R. (2012). The Forever Fix: Gene Therapy and the Boy Who
Saved It. St
Martins Press.- Teacher's guide: http://www.rickilewis.com
Ricki's bloghttp://blogs.plos.org/dnascience/
- Carson,
R. (2002). Silent spring.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
- Dinerstein,
E. (2005). Tigerland and other
unintended destinations. Island Press.
- Tallamy,
D. W. (2007). Bringing nature home.
- Chemistry books
- Earth and Space Science books
- Top Earth Science books
- McGuire, B. (2012). Waking the Giant: How a
changing climate triggers earthquakes, tsunamis, and
volcanoes. OUP Oxford.
- Physics books
- Interdisciplinary science books
- Benyus, J. M. (2002). Biomimicry: Innovation inspired
by nature. William Morrow Paperbacks.
- Other books
- Diamond, Jared M., and Doug Ordunio. Guns, germs, and
steel. New York: Norton, 1997.
- Kuhn, T. S. (1970). The structure of scientific
revolutions. Chicago and London.
- Science education, general books
- Biology education
- Louv, R. (2008). Last child in the woods: Saving our
children from nature-deficit disorder. Algonquin Books.
- Chemistry education books
- Earth and Space science education books
- Physics education books
- Other science education books
- NSTA
Science Store
- Newport, C. (2005). How to win at college: Surprising
secrets for success from the country's top students.
Broadway.
- Newport, C. (2006). How to Become a Straight-A
Student: The Unconventional Strategies Real College Students
Use to Score High While Studying Less. Broadway.
- Tik Liem's books
Careers
Certification
- Certification in New York State
Citizen
science
Classroom management
Clearinghouses of Resources
Common Core
Competitions
Concept maps
Constructivism
Controversial issues
- Evolution - an accepted scientific theory
- Non-science beliefs that should not be taught in science
classrooms
- Genetically modified organisms
Cooperative learning
Cross-cutting concepts/ideas
Curriculum
- New York State Science curricula
- New York City
Data, science
Data visualization - Tools
to visualize data, charts, graphs
Demos, science
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Earth and Space Science
- Physics
- Interdisciplinary
- Other
- Tik Liem's books
Differentiated
instruction
Disabilities
and science education
- Hearing impaired students
- NSTA Position Statement - Students
with Disabilities
- LAW AND EXCEPTIONAL STUDENTS - PL94-142
- (Science Activities for the Visually Impaired/Science
Enrichment for Learners with Physical Handicaps) - Savi-Selph
Eduspeak, jargon
Engineering
ESL and science
Ethical and Legal Issues
Evolution
First
year science teachers
Flipped Classroom
Freebies
Fun
- Cartoons
- Comics
- Jokes
- General
- humor, general
Games
Gender and Science
Grants
History of Science
Holidays and science
- African History Month
- Earth Day
- Groundhog Day
- Halloween
- Halloween Science
link
- Halloween Science
Holidays provide a great
way to spark interest in science. You can look at the
various features of the holiday and then try to link these
to science concepts, skills, techniques or ideas. In
this page we will use Halloween as an example.
- Jot down a list of all
the things that come to mind when you think of
Halloween. Here are a few examples: spiders and
cobwebs, bats, vampires, pumpkins, jack o lanterns, witches
on brooms, the color orange, costumes, ghosts.
You can also do some research on the history
of Halloween to
come up with ideas.
- The next step would be to try
and come up with science activities related to the different
Halloween ideas. for example, why are pumpkins
orange?
- Do some research on pumpkins.
- Pumpkins
and more
- What
makes pumpkins orange?
- This could lead to many
different activities, e.g. use chromatography to isolate
the orange pigments from pumpkin flesh
- Now do some searching for
activities related to Halloween and the various ideas you came
up with. Here are a few examples:
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Physics
- Earth Science
- Science
- Tonight's spooky pre-Halloween
activity:
- Turn out the lights and use a Jack-o-Lantern
image (Creative
Commons licensed images from flickr.com) as your sole source
of light
- You could have inserted your
jack o lantern image on a blog post or web page and then have
a student come up to the smartboard and "click" on the jack o
lantern to bring up the Halloween sound effects such as
creaking doors, etc.:

- This photo is fromhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/halloweenstock/with/5122312692/
- Mole Day - National Mole Day is October 23rd -http://www.moleday.org/
- New Year's
- Chinese New Year
- Happy New Year Bingo 新 年 快 樂 Xīnnián
kuàilè Bingo
- Happy Chinese New Year! Use the following links to
find out when which animal rules over the year in which you
were born.
- Pi Day - march 14th is National Pi Day - http://www.piday.org/
- Spring and science
- Thanksgiving
- World Turtle Day - May 23rd
- Valentine's Day
Human Subjects (IRB)
Humor
Icebreakers
Identification of plants and
insects
Images
Infographics
Inquiry
Intellectual Property
Jobs
- General
- Interview for a science teaching job
- Resumes
- Teaching philosophy statement
Jokes
Journals
Learning (Course) Management Systems (LMS)
Lab activities
Learning
management systems
Learning modalities
Learning environment
Learning theories
- Overview
- List
- Ausubel
- Bandura
- Bruner
- Gagne
- Gardner
- Guildforc
- Karplus
- Novak
- Piaget
- Rowe, Mary Budd
- Wait time 1 and Wait time 2
- Skinner
- Vygotsky
Lesson plans
How to write a
lesson plan
How to write a unit plan
Sources and examples of lesson plans
- Biology lesson plans
- Chemistry lesson plans
- Earth
and Space Science lesson plans
- Physics lesson plans
- Interdisciplinary
lesson plans
- Other lesson plans
- Save Fred - an activity developed by SEPUP
- Useful techniques for planning science lessons
- Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, Evaluate (Five Es)
- Predict Observe Explain (POE)
- The Learning Cycle -
developed by Robert Karplus
- Vee Diagrams
Library
- Queens College
- Science
education books and journals in the QC library
- Tour of the science education resources in the QC library:
- Enter at the Main Floor (3rd floor). You will
need to have a picture ID to enter (preferably your Queens
College ID). Your first stop will be to look at some
Science Education Reference Materials (located in the aisle
between Q1 and QA36) . Examples of reference books
are handbooks of research on science education,
National Science Education Standards, science education
statistics, etc. (You can look at these in the library
but you cannot check them out.)
- Next you can go up to the 5th floor where you can find
circulating science education books and Peterson Field Guides.
You can pick out a science education book here.
- On the 4th floor just beyond the juvenile (Pre-K-12)
collection, you will find science textbooks and teacher
editions, and assorted science books. The books in the
Juvenile section are arranged by topic.
- Finally go down to the first floor to see the educational
curriculum center in Room 109B. Most of the
materials here are older or for elementary education.
You will notice many metal filing cabinets. These
contain microfiche of ERIC documents. You probably can
find most of these documents online but it is here, just in
case.
- After visiting the center, you can browse the science
education journals that are located online and also at
the following locations on the first floor
- Remember, do not hesitate to ask the reference librarians
for help if you can't find something.
- Science Education books in the QC library
Living Organisms
Misconceptions
Models
Motivation
Multicultural Science
Multimedia
- merlot.org
- Scientific
visualization challenge 2012
- Royalty free music - http://incompetech.com/m/c/royalty-free/
- More free music - http://www.danosongs.com/
- software tools available to create and edit media:
- images - digital cameras, smart phone, scanner, the GIMP,SumoPaint, FlockDraw
- drawings - Dia, Inkscape, Google Sketchup, FlockDraw
- sounds - Audacity
- animations - Scratch, Squeak, Goanimate
- video - Flip digital camera, smart phones, there are many
video editors available
Nature of Science
News
- Educational Technology
- Science
- Science Education
- Technology
- Other
New Science Teachers
New York
- Assessment
- Regents Exams
- Regents exam review websites
- Review for the Intermediate science exam
- Sample test kits
- School report cards
- Standards
New York City
Online science courses
- Examples of Online science courses
- How to teach science online using Moodle
- Types of
online learning activities:
- hands-on,
inquiry activities,
- exploration
of authentic science data,
- simulations,
- virtual
labs,
- group
projects,
- cooperative
learning,
- webquests,
- small
group discussion,
- problem
solving,
- creation
of images, drawings, songs, poems, stories, video,
- interactive
multimedia such as scratch, Flash animations, goanimate,
- geocaching,
- keypals
- Open source tools
to author e-learning activities
- examples of online science alternative
assessments
- Google
Spreadsheets - Form tutorial
- http://sites.google.com/site/sciencequestpd/google-tools/google-form-tutorial
- Screencast using Cam Studio or Jing and link to it on
your Google site
- Webcast using justin.tv or ustream
- Examples of online science courses created by QC students:
- Online course websites and Science Moodle courses
- Online courses in Science Moodle
- Prezi presentations
Open Source Software
- The Open Source Definition (Annotated) -http://opensource.org/osd-annotated
- Some useful open source applications:
- Chemistry open source applications
- Chemistry drawing applications
- Earth science open source applications
- Physics open source applications
- General science open source applications
Organizations
- Education, general
- Educational technology
- the Bad Ass Teachers Association
- Science
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Earth and Space Science
- Physics
- Other
- Science education, general
- Biology education
- Chemistry education
- Earth and Space science education
- Physics education
- Other science education
Private Universe
Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Teaching
Planning
- How to develop curriculum
Plants
Problem
Based learning (PBL)
Professional development
- International
- Long Island
- New York city
- Science Council of New York City (SCONYC)
- New York state
- Online
- United States
Project-based learning
Queens College
- Useful links
- Library
- Science
education books and journals in the QC
library
- Tour of the science education resources in the QC library:
- Enter at the Main Floor (3rd floor). You will
need to have a picture ID to enter (preferably your Queens
College ID). Your first stop will be to look at some
Science Education Reference Materials (located in the aisle
between Q1 and QA36) . Examples of reference books
are handbooks of research on science education,
National Science Education Standards, science
education statistics, etc. (You can look at these in
the library but you cannot check them out.)
- Next you can go up to the 5th floor where you can find
circulating science education books and Peterson Field
Guides. You can pick out a science education book
here.
- On the 4th floor just beyond the juvenile (Pre-K-12)
collection, you will find science textbooks and teacher
editions, and assorted science books. The books in the
Juvenile section are arranged by topic.
- Finally go down to the first floor to see the educational
curriculum center in Room 109B. Most of
the materials here are older or for elementary education.
You will notice many metal filing cabinets.
These contain microfiche of ERIC documents. You
probably can find most of these documents online but it is
here, just in case.
- After visiting the center, you can browse the science
education journals that are located online and also at
the following locations on the first floor
- Remember, do not hesitate to ask the reference librarians
for help if you can't find something.
Reading and Science
Research
Educational
research, general
Educational
research, technology
Educational
research, science education
Quantitative
Qualitative
Other
Reports
Research, general
- Humor
- Issues with research
- Journal of No results
References
- Tools to manage references
Science research,
general
Review
Rubrics
Safety
- Flinn website
- MSDS Sheets
- Safety contracts
- Safety videos
- Biology
- Other
Safety and liability
School chemistry laboratory safety guide
Lab safety institute
- NSTA Position statements:
Other
useful safety resources:
Science
fairs and competitions
Science literacy
Simulations
- Biology
- Evolution
- OpenWorm -
- Virtual dissections
- Chemistry
- Earth Science
- Physics
- Other
Sociometry
Songs
Sounds
Sports and science
Exploratorium - Sports science
The Science of Baseball
The Science of Basketball
The Science of Football
The Science of Soccer
(football)
Standards
- National Science Education Standards
- Next Generation Science Standards
- New York State Science Standards
- New York City
Statistics
- U.S. Education
- U.S. Science Education
- International Science Education
- Statistics resources
- Software
- Tutorials
STEM
resources
STS Issues
- Science, Technology, Society issues
Students
- Help for undergraduate students studying science
- Blogs
- Books
- Newport, C. (2005). How to win at college:
Surprising secrets for success from the country's top
students. Broadway.
- Newport, C. (2006). How to Become a Straight-A
Student: The Unconventional Strategies Real College
Students Use to Score High While Studying Less. Broadway.
- Websites
Supplies, Science
Technology
- 3D design tools
- 21st century skills
- Animations
- Apps
- How to make apps
- Educational apps
- Arduino
- Blogs
- Examples of science blogs:
- Examples of Science Education blogs:
- What is the origin of the term "blog"? Answer: The
History of Blogging
- Case studies
- Cloud
computing
- Coding
- Cybersafety
- Data
- Digital Bloom's taxonomy
- Digital divide
- Digital natives
Types of technology tools
and examples of how they might be used in science:
- 3D design tools
- Apps
- iPhone or Android apps
- blog, create a blog, example
- computational knowledge engine, example
- Cool
tools for schools
- drawing software, example
- Flashcards
- glogster
- Google apps such as Google docs, groups, etc.
- Google
Street View - virtual hike in rainforest
- float
down a tributary of the Amazon
- image editing software, example
- Interactive white boards, Smartboard
- learning management system, example
- micro-computer based labs, example
- multimedia development, scratch, squeak
- Open source software, example
- podcasts, example
- Online poll
- presentation software, example
- simulations, example
- sound editing software, example
- tumblr, http://www.tumblr.com
- twitter, start a twitter account, example
- video, example
- virtual worlds, example
- Web 2.0 apps, example
- web conferencing, example
- a webquest, example
- a website, create a website, example
- a wiki, create a wiki, example
- software tools available to create and edit media:
- images - digital cameras, smart phone, scanner, the GIMP,SumoPaint, FlockDraw
- drawings - Dia, Inkscape, Google Sketchup, FlockDraw
- sounds - Audacity
- animations - Scratch, Squeak, Goanimate
- video - Flip digital camera, smart phones, there are many
video editors available
- Intellectual property
- Interactive White Boards
- Epson Brightlink
- Prometheus
- Mimio
- Smartboards
- Javascript
- Learning management systems
- merlot.org
- Mezoped
- Online science fairs
- Google Science fair
- ICE2000
- Open Source software
- Linux
- Ubuntu
- Introduction to Open Source Software
- Online course information for students and instructors
- First Steps for students in a hybrid or online course
- Read through the entire course outline and assignments
carefully.
- Ask the instructor questions if you aren't sure.
- Get organized. Create a calendar using Google
calendar or 30boxes.com. Put
the due dates for each assignment on your calendar and set
up reminders. Create a folder for all of your
assignments. Give each file a descriptive name and
keep your files organized with multiple backups. If
you are working on a major assignment such as a paper or
project, you can save the project and include the date in
the filename. This way, if you want to go back to an
earlier version you will have it.
- Create good work habits that will make sure that you use
your time wisely. For short work sessions, a simple
checklist like nowdothis.com can
help keep you on task. Lifehacker is
a great website that has good advice on how to be
productive, especially with technology. Here
is a link that describes some useful checklist software.
- Other useful technology tools:
- PowerPoint
- Programming (coding)
- Raspberry Pi
- Scratch
- Screencasting
- Tools to make screencasts
- Free open source tools to make screencasts
- Search engines
- Software science
- Squeak
- Simulations
- Chemistry
- Earth Science
- Physics
- Other
- Theories of educational technology
- Tutorials
- Virtual field trips
- Black
Holes: Gravity's Relentless Pull
Virtual
Trips to Black Holes and Neutron Stars
- Virtual
Field Trip: Supporting Geological Exploration Throughout the
World -
virtual field trip to Shark Bay and the Pilbara, Western
Australia, from NASA in collaboration with the Macquarie
University, the Australian Centre for Astrobiology and the ICT
Innovations Center at Macquarie University
- Virtual
Field Trip - Kiama, NSW -
prepared by UniServe Science as an example of a local area
study
- Big Bend
National Park -
Virtual Field Trip, from Texas Christian University
- Virtual
field trip in Hawaii
- Marine
Virtual Explorer - from Stanford University
- Ecosystem
at Risk Virtual Fieldtrip -
Minnamurra Rainforest, from HSC Online, Charles Sturt
University
- Towra
Point Mangrove Excursion - from the School of
Biological Sciences, The University of Sydney
- Virtual
mangrove fieldtrip - produced by Jane West, OTEN
- Geology
Field Excursions: Introduction - from the
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Edinburgh
- Kioloa
Virtual Field Area - from Australian National
University
- Geology
of the Smith River: A Virtual Trip Through The Josephine
Ophiolite -
from College of the Redwoods, Eureka
- A Virtual
Field Trip to the Stone Forest, Kunming, Republic of China -
from John Butler
- Global Trek - http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/globaltrek/
- Google Lit Trips
- The Louvre
- Making our Chocolate -
Hersheys factory
- the Moon
- Mount
Everest
- NASA virtual field
trip
- Panoramas of the World
- Polar Husky - http://www.polarhusky.com/
- Seven Wonders of the
World
- Smithsonian Natural
Museum of History
- the White House
- Virtual learning spaces
- Virtual worlds
- Visualizations
- Web 2.0 apps
- Webinars
- What is the difference between
a webinar and a webcast?
- How does a webinar compare to a
face to face classroom lecture?
- Educational technology
webinars
- How
to create a webinar.
- Try out BigBlueButton,
an open source web conferencing application
- Web design
- Webquests
- Wiki
Teacher certification
- Certification in New York State
- Old certification exams in New York State
- New certification exams in New York State
- Required seminars in New York State
- Completion of (4) Seminars for First certification
- All Seminars provided by Continuing Education.
- Register at Kiely Hall – Room 111 (718) 997-5704
- Copies will be collected in your last semester
Teacher evaluation
Textbooks
- High School Science textbooks
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Earth and Space Science
- Environmental Science
- Physics
- Interdisciplinary
- Other
- Science education textbooks
- Behold the Ostrich - Stories of Science Teaching - Coming
Soon!
Technology
Tutorials
Unifying concepts
Videos
- Bill
Nye Worksheets
- Cell Beach - animation
that describes how HIV and AIDS affect the body
- Education, general
- Educational technology
- Movie worksheet database
- Science videos
- Biology
- Bacteria
- Digestion
- Embryology
- Evolution
- Genetics
- Immunity
- Microbes
- Nervous system
- Reproduction
- Skin
- Chemistry
- Earth Day videos
- Earth and Space Science
- Physics
- Interdisciplinary
- Other
- Science education videos
Virtual labs
Volunteer
Computing Projects
Wait time
Web design
Websites
- Top Science Education websites
- Biology
- Access Excellence - http://www.accessexcellence.org/
- Anatomy and physiology
- Animal
- Bacteria and Protists
- Biomimicry
- Classification
- Climate change
- Food web activities:
- Ecology
- Evolution
- Genetics
Women and science
Henrietta Lacks has made an
enduring contribution of incalculable value to all of humankind.
Examples of
women scientists who have made important contributions to
science:
Biology
Chemistry
Earth Science
Physics
Sites related to females
and science, and science education
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