This is a blog entry from a blog site about using content standards for enhance teaching. I thought how they were planning to incorporate this book into their classroom was interesting.
This is a really cool article that shows the uses of activated carbon other than as a catalyst, and actually talks about biochemical breakdowns and Van Der Waals forces.
This is an actual video of a slor flare that NASA has determined is headed our way. This would be an awesome thing to share with students to guage interest in science using astronomy.
This site has various resources for elementary, middle and high school grades. Something especially interesting is the free video series titled "Women Are Scientists."
The Art Institute of Chicago's site has lesson plans, student projects, and other resources that connect art to science, which I really like. Again, another way to make science relevant to students!
This website has an interactive/clickable periodic table that shows photos, wikipedia articles, and podcasts (which are actually pretty neat) for each element.
A neat live underwater audio stream from under the antarctic sea ice. Includes links to research papers and explanations of how the data is being used. See if you hear any whales!
This is about the history of chemistry, and specifically talks about the life and finding of Max Planck. Any Chemistry or Physics teacher trying to make quantum mechanics more relevant to students will find this useful.
Article about how campuses are using technology and if it is really up to par with the world. Shows how we are being prepared to use technology so that we can use it with students of our own.