Space
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Project Sky Lab
Reviewed March 25, 2000 by Alexander, a reader from USA who is affiliated with the site. Project Sky Lab makes learning fun and meaningful for all students. The program uses rockets to teach subject like English, math and science. This site is great for all ages and has many nice photos of students and rockets.
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Pemberton High School Amateur Rocketry Society
Reviewed July 5, 2000 by Vince Quaresima, K2NE, a teacher from Browns Mills, NJ who is affiliated with the site. This site is the home of the Pemberton Amateur Rocketry Society at Pemberton Township High School in New Jersey. Visit the site and see how rocketry can be used as a motivating educational resource in high school Physics and Physical Science!
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Orrery: The Solar System in Action
Reviewed July 2, 2001 by Andrew Harmsworth, a teacher from Cambridge, England who is affiliated with the site. Orrery is a concise tour of the Solar System - and beyond! Learn about everything from the Sun to Saturn; or the Moon and Mars. The site was created by a Physics teacher in Cambridge, England, and it contains a wide range of educational resources.
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NOVA: Mars Dead or Alive
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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National Geographic - Virtual Solar System Tour
Reviewed May 2, 2002 by Daniel, a reader from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, who is not affiliated with the site. This site takes you on an awesome 3D or 2D tour of the solar system, giving tons of info and facts. It is one of my favorites!
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National Museum of Natural History: A Blast from the Past
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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Nasa: Sun-Earth Day2004 Venus Transit
"Whether you are a student, educator, or amateur astronomer, Nasa has a Venus Transit website just for you. Enter through the student gateway, choose your grade, and you’ll be rewarded with concentration games, crossword puzzles, word searches, vocabulary lists, and feature articles on the history, science, and art of Venus’ transit. To hear the John Phillips Sousa "Venus Transit March," composed in 1883, follow the Music link from any of the Background Reading sections for grades seven through twelve."
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NASA’s Origin Program
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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NASA’s Observatorium
A Surfnetkids Honorable Mention site.
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NASA KIDS
Reviewed November 18, 1999by Judy Vukasin,a reader fromMONTANAwho is not affiliated with the site.We ran across this site while searching out the Leonids meteorshower. It presents information on 2 levels: K-8th, 9th-Adult. It is veryeye-appealing...fun for kids of all ages. There are really cool (whileeducational) interactive squares included in some articles. We also likedthe graphics and the "Buzzwords", (vocabulary).
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