ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related institutions.
*****************************************************************************
and a few more links to two comprehensive sites with many
earthquake-related activities for different grade levels:
NEES (Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation- an amazing network
of 14 research sites in the United States with equipment to test 50-foot
long pipes, shake bridges and buildings, "thump" soil, a tsunami
research facility, ..) has many links for activities, in a chart that
includes age and national science standards for each activity:
http://nees.org/education/for-teachers/k12-teachers/
NEES site includes instructions for building your own "shoebox seismometer":
http://nees.org/resources/2818
USGS (United States Geological Survey) has a website page "Earthquake
Topics for Education," where you can click on links to activities for
elementary, middle school, high school, or college ages. Once you choose
an age range, you can also search within the lists for specific topics.
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/
USGS (United States Geological Survey) has many different activities for
kids, including a long list of "Learning Links and Earthquake
Activities," puzzles and animations:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/kids/
We developed five short (~ 1 1/2 minute long) award-winning videos on
earthquakes and engineering for our traveling exhibition "When the Earth
Shakes" that are all on youtube:
What Does Happen in an Earthquake?
What Makes the Earth Shake?
Engineers Working to Make Us Safer
Exciting Earthquake Experiments
What's So Special About Pipelines?
Kathy Krafft
Traveling Exhibitions Curator
Sciencenter
Ithaca, NY
On 12/3/2013 12:20 PM, Barbara Flagg wrote:
> ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
> Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related institutions.
> *****************************************************************************
>
> Tabitha: If virtual earth science activities online are acceptable,
> National Geographic has a series of interactives related to their Forces of
> Nature film. E.g. make your own volcano
> http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/multimedia/interactive/forces-of-nature/?ar_a=2
> or make a hurricane, tornado, earthquake. Along with background info
> screens.
>
> You can also search their site for topics and associated hands-on
> activities by grade level.
> Barbara Flagg, Ed.D.
> Director, Multimedia Research
> 631-286-8925
>
> ***********************************************************************
> For information about the Association of Science-Technology Centers and the Informal Science Education Network please visit www.astc.org.
>
> Check out the latest case studies and reviews on ExhibitFiles at www.exhibitfiles.org.
>
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For information about the Association of Science-Technology Centers and the Informal Science Education Network please visit www.astc.org.
Check out the latest case studies and reviews on ExhibitFiles at www.exhibitfiles.org.
The ISEN-ASTC-L email list is powered by LISTSERVR software from L-Soft. To learn more, visit
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To remove your e-mail address from the ISEN-ASTC-L list, send the
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