GPB’s education outreach specialists provide free on-site virtual reality demonstration lessons with students and professional development sessions to teachers across the state of Georgia.
Across the country — and even around the world — teachers are using Mystery Skype educational game to improve students' comprehension of geography, a subject students in this country struggle with.
Today, our students face a daunting media landscape that never seems to turn off and is hyper-driven by getting their attention. Here's how you can help them navigate it.
PBS Digital Studios Announces the Launch of IT’S LIT and READ AWAKENING as Part of the Multi-Platform Summer Reading Initiative THE GREAT AMERICAN READ; Expands Virtual Reality Slate with New Oculus App, ROLLER COASTER VR
Have a favorite show on PBS? Of course you do. PBS' programming covers the broadest variety of content from science to drama, history to athletics, early childhood to advanced research. But an often overlooked resource is their platform offering more than
Digital Learning Day was started as a way to actively spread innovative practices and ensure that all youth have access to high-quality digital learning opportunities no matter where they live.
New ‘How Nature Inspires 3M Science’ virtual field trip takes students on a journey to explore how 3M scientists are using nature to improve and invent new technologies.
Showcasing GPB’s original content, PBS LearningMedia and Discovery Education, GPB Education’s free digital resource trainings provide teachers with exciting new tools.
Dunwoody Elementary School is a DOE Georgia STEM Certified School. The Science Lab uses STEM challenges and experiments, documented in each student’s journal, to enrich the science and math curriculum.
Differentiation is often a word that is drilled into our brains early on in our teaching careers. For myself, I have heard that magic word since I took my first education class in college.
"I actually think that Carmen Sandiego is probably the most important video game ever made," says Gabe Zichermann, "principally because it was the first and last time that parents, teachers, and kids, all agreed that a video game was awesome." Zichermann,
Tritt Elementary School's STEM journey began six years ago. We use the word journey to describe the changes we’ve seen over the past six years because STEM education is a process which takes time to develop.
Regardless of geographic home base, time constraints, or budget, every teacher and student has the imagination to explore an unknown place in space or time.