Experiments
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Society for Amateur Scientists
Reviewed May 14, 2002 by Sheldon Greaves, Ph.D., a reader from Coventry, Rhode Island, who is affiliated with the site. SAS is an organization for people who like to get involved in science. The goal of the organization and the website is to help ordinary people gain access to the brass-tacks tools and techniques used by working scientists. It also helps ordinary people get involved in real-life scientific research on a volunteer/amateur basis. They also publish a weekly electronic bulletin full of hints and tips for science enthusiasts. Most appropriate for high school aged kids.
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Sky Diary KIDSTORM
Reviewed April 19, 2001 by Chris, a reader from Florida’s Space Coast who is affiliated with the site. Sky Diary KIDSTORM provides information on individual pages devoted to tornadoes, lightning, hurricanes and storm chasing, addressing a lot of the common questions kids and adults have and explaining the science involved. There are also safety tips, photos, illustrations and links to other sites with valuable information. Plus, on the first page are links to: real-time severe-weather watches and warnings; satellite and radar images; and a storm word search.
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ScienceMaster - the science and technology network
Reviewed April 4, 2000 by Gene, a reader from San Jose, CA who is affiliated with the site. ScienceMaster.com is a science and education portal for students, parents and teachers. We provide resources, news and information, links, columns, learning galleries. Focus is K-12. Easy to use, easy to navigate, clear and concise information in all the major areas of science.
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Science experiments for data loggers and oscilloscopes
Reviewed April 12, 2000 by Alan Tong, a reader from Cambridge, England who is affiliated with the site. A library of science experiments for use with data loggers & oscilloscopes. Examples include measuring the speed of sound, pH of milk, electromagnetic induction & more.
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Science-Week
Reviewed July 29, 2000 by Brenda, a reader from Philadelphia, PA who is affiliated with the site. This a comprehensive science site for kids and teens covering many different categories of science with discussion boards, activities, experiments, and monitored chats which will act as a companion to the site. Topics include, Hurricane Watch, Astronomy Trivia, Getting Started with Astronomy, Eating Healthy, Name That Planet (a virtual game where youth can make their own planet) and more. -->
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Science Fair Central
Reviewed February 19, 2001 by Eric Ward, a reader from Knoxville, TN, USA who is affiliated with the site.DiscoverySchool.com’s popular Science Fair Central has added new content for this year’s science fairseason. The new project tip sheets have ideas for creating projects in biology, astronomy, chemistry, earth science and physical science.
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Science Year
Reviewed May 16, 2002 by David, a reader from London, England, who is affiliated with the site. Science Year is one of the most comprehensive learning resources for children, teachers, and parents.
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Science Fair Project Ideas
December 24, 2003: From Ken C., a reader from San Francisco, who is affiliated with the site. "This site has over 500 free science fair project ideas with full instructions and explanations. It also has a search tool that scans all ideas for keywords of interest and lists ideas that contain those keywords."
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Science Fair Project
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Science Hunt
"Science Hunt is produced by Hunt, the company that makes those cool stand-all-by-themselves project display boards. So in addition to sections on picking and planning a science project, it has a good chapter on how to display your finished work including design tips and lots of examples from other kids. You can even send in a photo of your own science project (using a Hunt display board) for posting on the site."
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