The Smithsonian's goal for science resources in grades PK–12 is to provide a well-rounded, inquiry-based, and engaging educational experience that nurtures scientific literacy, critical thinking, and ...
The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is changing every aspect of our lives—from culture to business, science to design. The breakthroughs and innovations that we uncover lead to new ...
and on the influence of science and technology on both society and the environment. Courses will emphasize the hands-on nature of science. This requirement pushes students to explore questions about ...
Religious thinkers across the ages have written that merely showing that something is natural puts it within the influence of God, the creator of all nature. By definition science cannot address ...
The Halloween science worksheet is a great way to combine science with holiday fun, helping kids practice chemistry while enjoying the spooky season. Designed to engage children with a unique periodic ...
The extraction of iron, which led to the Iron Age, is a chemical process which early metallurgists developed without understanding any of the science involved. Nevertheless, they were still able ...
"The incidence of diagnosis and treatment of mental health disorders is less the greener the environment people live in." ...
Yale physicist Eduardo H. da Silva Neto led an experiment that supports the existence of a new type of superconductor.
The Science of Cooking, a documentary from The Nature of Things, goes deep inside the kitchen to reveal why science is the key to becoming a better home cook. Guest host Anthony Morgan is a ...
Scientists believe that success is a social phenomenon. The Science of Success, a documentary from The Nature of Things, unravels the secrets of success, shows a new understanding of how society ...
With exhibits featuring everything from dinosaur bones to Egyptian mummies, the Denver Museum of Nature & Science inspires learning in the young and young at heart. This impressive facility houses ...
Biologist Kathy Willis spoke to Live Science about how touching wood makes us calmer, why looking at a picture of a savanna is calming and how walking through a forest changes our gut microbes.