K-12 Educators
NASA’s Science Mission Directorate (SMD) has an essential role in NASA’s education mission “to inspire the next generation of explorers.” The discoveries and new knowledge from our missions and research programs consistently engage people’s imaginations, inform teachers, and excite students about science and exploration. Here you will find information that will allow you to:
- Become part of SMD’s E/PO community or partner with a community member
- Participate in an SMD E/PO opportunity
- Find funding opportunities to propose an E/PO project to SMD
- Find classroom resources and programs for K-12 educators
NASA Wavelength is an intuitive and searchable database of SMD educational products and activities. Find resources for your classroom!
You can search for all education resources created by all areas of NASA.
Visit NASA Nationwide to find speakers for your classroom and to learn about events that may be ongoing in your community through the network of NASA volunteers.
If you are K-12 educator who is doing – or interested in – education and public outreach, and would like to be part of SMD’s E/PO Community, please contact the SMD E/PO Forum that most closely aligns with your interests; contacts are listed at the top of the PEOPLE tab.
The Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Queens College have partnered to provide teachers with a FREE 3 day STEM training on November 14th, 15th and 16th that will provide teachers and schools with GLOBE certification. If you are the first teacher from your school to be certified in GLOBE you will receive a bundle of science instruments and equipment worth $600.00, courtesy Con Edison.
Day one will be held at the offices of NASA-Goddard…
Download AttachmentsNASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum have partnered to provide educators a Free STEM workshop that will train educators to implement the BEST (Beginning Engineering, Science and Technology) curriculum into their classrooms and educational programs. Participants will receive a Free BEST lab materials kit and training from Intrepid’s STEM education programs. BEST meets many of the standards associated with the Common Core Standards, Next…
Calling all educators! Are you looking for ideas to create new and exciting programs for your audiences? Celestial events (eclipses, meteor showers, etc.) are seen frequently from Earth while, in this age of planetary exploration, NASA spacecraft are often reaching important mission milestones. Use these celestial events and NASA mission milestones as unique opportunities to engage your audiences in solar system science and exploration! The Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, TX…
Magnitude 6 at peak brightness
Magnitude 6 at peak brightness
Magnitude 6 at peak brightness.
Magnitude 5 at peak brightness
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
This will be a spectacular event with all states in the U.S. experiencing at least a partial eclipse. The path of totality crosses a number of large cities (including Salem OR, Casper WY, Kansas City MO, St Louis MO, Nashville, TN, Columbia SC, and Charleston SC), several national parks (Craters of the Moon, Grand Teton, Great Smokey Mountains, Conagree), and numerous state parks.
Maps from http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov
This eclipse will be observed in Hawaii and Alaska on the afternoon of March 8. Western Alaska and the main Hawaiian islands will experience a partial solar eclipse. The path of totality will pass through the region of the Northwest Hawaiian Islands between the Pearl and Hermes Atoll and Lisianski Island.
Map from eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov
For the general public, teachers and students.
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/LEplot/LEplot2001/LE2015Apr04T.pdf
Like the Oct 8 2014 eclipse, all of the contiguous U.S. will experience the partial phases before totality. The east coast will witness the Moon setting during totality. Observers further west will see all of totality and, progressing westward the partial phases following totality. Totality for this eclipse will be of very short duration, less than five minutes.
For the general public, teachers and students. Visble in Norway.
For the general public, teachers and students. Visble in the southern tip of Africa.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers, and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.
For general public, teachers and students.
For the general public, teachers and students.