Gamma-ray bursts, flashing in the sky. Melting glaciers, offering clues to climate change. Lemurs of Madagascar, struggling to survive. Stem cells, ushering in new cures for human diseases.
Educators and students can explore these and many more developments in astrophysics, Earth science, biodiversity and human biology, and evolution, courtesy of New York City’s American Museum of Natural History (AMNH). The museum’s Science Bulletins, a free online program, takes viewers to where science is happening through high-definition videos and interactive media.
To make these electronic science news and information updates more widely available, AMNH created a website for them at www.amnh.org/sciencebulletins.
Science Bulletins are documentary-style feature stories, averaging approximately eight minutes, about scientists’ work in the field, along with regular research updates employing scientific visualizations and imagery. Bulletins come in four categories: Astro, Earth, Bio, and Human. These tools can help students “see science in action” and expose them to science careers, as well as make it easier for them to understand science concepts and data.
Excerpted from http://www.nsta.org/publications/news/story.aspx?id=55589