High School
Your Fantastic Elastic Brain, Stretch It, Shape It by Joann Deak
This innovative and timely picture book teaches children that they have the ability to stretch and grow their own brains.
Read MoreThe Lab Song (Bruno Mars Parody)
The Lab Song (Bruno Mars Parody) for all the Biology teachers out there.
Read MoreLab Rules Dua Lipa “New Rules” Parody
Lab Safety. Don’t be a Carol. Low cost science parody of Dua Lipa’s official music video New Rules!
Read MoreBinary #MicDropMath Patterns
The Binary #MicDropMath Patterns lesson can be used to help students recognize patterns, understand how to make multiple hypotheses in science and math, and understand the importance of basing claims on more data rather than less. It also serves as an introduction to the binary number system. The #STEMAZing Project has a series of lessons…
Read MoreBone by Bone: Comparing Animal Skeletons by Sara C. Levine
This entertaining picture book will keep readers guessing as they learn about how our skeletons are like–and unlike–those of other animals.
Read MoreWhat If You Had Animal Eyes? (What If You Had) by Sandra Markle
What if you woke up one morning and your eyes weren’t yours? What If You Had Animal Eyes? — the next imaginative book in the What If You Had series.
Read MoreIf You Were the Moon by Laura Purdie Salas
If you were the moon, what would you do? You’d spin like a twilight ballerina and play dodgeball with space rocks! And more.
Read MoreMae Jemison by Laurie Calkhoven
Blast off into space and get to know Mae Jemison—the first African-American woman to ever go to space—with this fascinating, nonfiction Level 3 Ready-to-Read, part of a new series of biographies about people “you should meet.”
Read MoreMaya Lin: Artist-Architect of Light and Lines by Jeanne Walker Harvey
As a child, Maya Lin loved to study the spaces around her. She explored the forest in her backyard, observing woodland creatures, and used her house as a model to build tiny towns out of paper and scraps.
Read MoreWendell the Narwhal by Emily Dove
Everyone in the ocean can make music, except for Wendell the narwhal. His big, pointy horn can’t go “pop pop pop” or “clappy clap clap” or even “whoosh”.
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