DirectoryMix Web Resources » Article Details

PASCO and SMART Bring Classroom Management Support to Hands-On Science Learning - Read More

Date Added: July 01, 2008 05:40:03 AM
PASCO scientific and SMART Technologies announce an alliance designed to bring classroom management capabilities to hands-on science learning through an offering that combines PASCO's DataStudio® software and SMART's SynchronEyes classroom management software.

Category: Science and Technology » Biology


No comments are posted yet


 
Name:*
Email:*
Website:  (optional)
Comment:*
(html and bb codes are filtered and not allowed)

Do the math:*CAPTCHA - Do The Math
 

Related Articles

Sunday Focus | The next step in doping

Imagine the Olympics of the future, perhaps the New Delhi Games of 2040. Then, as now, some athletes will cheat to win gold medals. Picture discus throwers with custom-built arms. Or swimmers with modified legs. Or marathon runners with enriched blood. Or

Foundation Supports Technology Aimed at Destroying Cancer Cells

The technology, irreversible electroporation, which uses electric pulses to destroy cancer tissue, has been selected for an Early Career Translational Research Award in Biomedical Engineering in order to support commercial development.

Some educators concerned as online science test approaches

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - This spring, nearly 200,000 Minnesota students will take science tests online, and some school districts are already worried about problems.

Holt Products in Science, Language Arts and Social Studies Win Recognition as Finalists in Distinguished Achievement ...

Five curriculum products from Holt McDougal (www.holtmcdougal.com) were named as finalists in the 2008 Distinguished Achievement Awards (DAA) sponsored by the Association of Educational Publishers. The honored curriculum products and their categories incl

Protein Production Reduced To A Whisper By Gene Silencer And Quantum Dots

More than 15 years ago scientists discovered a way to stop a particular gene in its tracks. The Nobel Prize-winning finding holds tantalizing promise for medical science, but so far it has been difficult to apply the technique, known as RNA interference,