Top News & Resources for Science Teachers

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August 14, 2017
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NSTA Conference Daily
Science teachers aren't the only ones excited about the August 21 eclipse; people everywhere are expected to flock to towns and cities to view totality. You still have time to download and prepare with a number of NSTA resources for teachers, parents, and children to learn about and experience this amazing phenomenon.
 
Also visit the NSTA Learning Center for a special collection of resources.
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NSTA Press' Back-to-School gift to you is 20% off any of our top 20 books if you order during August 10–30, 2017. Take advantage of this great offer and stock up on books that cover all grade ranges and span science disciplines.
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Health Professions Week
Working with young children in a camp setting, early childhood science education expert Peggy Ashbrook notes that "sharing materials encouraged negotiation and supported developing social skills. It is satisfying to see children exploring motion and trying to work out how to make the materials do what they want them to. This engagement is the beginning of a science inquiry." Read more.
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Sign up by Friday, September 1, for earlybird registration for the NSTA Baltimore Area Conference on Science Education. With more than 300 sessions to choose from—spanning grade bands and disciplines—we're confident you'll walk away with new ideas and lesson plans, while feeling motivated and inspired. Join us in Baltimore, October 5–7.
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Science Supply guide info
Do you want to increase your school and district capacity to support implementation of the Next Generation Science Standards and three-dimensional instruction? Then join us in one of three cities listed below for a Discover the NGSS Train-the-Trainer Workshop.
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NGSS Baltimore workshop info
NGSS Milwaukee workshop info
NGSS New Orleans workshop info
Browse all the lessons and tips NSTA Press authors offer teachers for the first days of school in this month's issue of NSTA's Book Beat. From the "Earth Hounds" lesson on observations and inferences to a "Peanut Butter and Jelly Science" lesson on the importance of clear writing in science, you'll glean new strategies for your classroom toolkit. Through August 30, 2017, you can also save 20% off 20 bestselling NSTA Press books by using promo code 202020 when you order through the online Science Store.
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Sponsored by The American Museum of Natural History
AMNHEarn graduate credit at classes taught by the Museum's world-class scientists and experienced course educators with the Online Teacher Education Program. Get access to cutting-edge research and powerful classroom resources with these easy-to-navigate, accessible courses.
 
Fall Session 1
Sept. 18 – Oct. 29
Registration deadline: Sept. 4
Register by August 21 to save $50
 
Fall Session 2
Oct. 30 – Dec. 10
Registration deadline: Oct. 16
Register by Oct. 2 to save $50
 
Visit http://www.amnh.org/learn to learn more.
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Two NSTA Press authors from Ohio have children's books bound for the International Space Station as part of an educational reading program. The works by Jessica Fries-Gaither and Emily Morgan will be aboard SpaceX Falcon 9, a rocket scheduled to launch Sunday from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Space station astronauts will record themselves reading the works aloud as part of the Story Time From Space program, which is designed to excite children about science. Notable Notebooks: Scientists and their Writings by Fries-Gaither and Next Time You See a Sunset by Morgan are both published by NSTA. Read the article featured in The Columbus Dispatch.
Larry Plank, director for K–12 STEM education for Hillsborough County Public Schools in Florida, explains how many school districts struggle with how to expand students' interest, excitement, and achievement in STEM. Without the right approach, the result is often random acts of STEM that do little to show students how fascinating or relevant these subjects really are. He offers a few of the strategies that his district implemented to give students hands-on, inquiry-based STEM learning experiences that are preparing them for college and careers. Read the article featured on Smart Brief. 
What started as simply stargazing with her Girl Scout troop as a 7-year-old in New Mexico has since turned into careers at NASA, IBM, Apple, and Dell for Sylvia Acevedo. In May, she was named the CEO of the Girl Scouts of the USA, the organization she belonged to growing up. Her mission: to ensure STEM learning is a part of every young woman's life. Despite being one of the few girls in her science and math classes through grade school, Acevedo says she was "able to persist" because she realized she was both interested in and good at the subjects. Acevedo was one of the first Hispanic students to earn a master's degree in engineering from Stanford University, but to afford it, she simultaneously worked at IBM as an engineer. Today, she is using her work experience to address the lack of exposure girls have to science, technology, engineering and math. Read the story featured on the CNBC website. 
You don't have to be inherently interested in epidemiology to catch the science bug—just sit next to a bunch of other high school students fascinated by the topic, says a new analysis. The study finds that new college students are more likely to say they plan to pursue STEM careers when they were surrounded by other enthusiastic scientists-to-be in high school;—even controlling for factors like interest in science, previous achievement in the field, or parental support for studying science, says the study, which appears in the open-access journal Science Advances, a publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The study is based on a survey of a nationally representative population of students in 50 college and universities in the United States. Read the article featured on Education Week Curriculum Matters blog.
 
Check out the Education News Roundup for a selection of the week's top education news stories.
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August 14
Registration opens today for these free 30-minute, live webcasts from the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History that bring scientists into your grades 6–8 classroom.
August 15 & 17
BirdSleuth presents a free webinar that lets elementary and middle school teachers dissect owl pellets with the world's bird experts.
September 1
Starting today, teachers can apply for $2,000 monetary grants to support an edible educational garden on the grounds of a K–12 school.
 
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