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         Space Life Science Activities:     more books (23)
  1. Medical Operations and Life Sciences Activities on Space Station (NASA TM 58248) October 1982 by Philip; Mason, John Johnson, 1982
  2. Teachers and Students Investigating Plants in Space: A Teacher's Guide with Activities for Life Sciences (EG-1997-02-113-HQ) by NASA, 1997
  3. The Science Teacher's Activity-A-Day, Grades 5-10: Over 180 Reproducible Pages of Quick, Fun Projects that Illustrate Basic Concepts (JB-Ed: 5 Minute FUNdamentals) by Pam Walker, Elaine Wood, 2010-10-05
  4. Suited for spacewalking teacher's guide with activities for physical and life sciences (SuDoc NAS 1.19/4:101) by Gregory Vogt, 1994
  5. Suited for Spacewalking: Teacher's Guide with Activities for Physical and Life Science by Gregory L. Vogt, 1994
  6. Russian Spacesuits (Springer Praxis Books / Space Exploration) by Isaac Abramov, Ingemar Skoog, 2003-08-27
  7. Microgravity: A Teacher's Guide with Activities in Science, Mathematics, and Technology, Grades 5-12 by NASA, 1995
  8. Solar Activity and Earth's Climate (Springer Praxis Books / Environmental Sciences) by Rasmus E. Benestad, 2006-03-16
  9. Draw Science Fiction: Mutant Aliens, Far-Out Spaceships, and Other Outer Space Wonders (v. 2) by Theron Smith, 2000-08
  10. Planetary Volcanism: Study of Volcanic Activity in the Solar System (The Ellis Horwood library of space science and space technology) by Peter Cattermole, 1989-12-20
  11. Space exploration.: An article from: Arts & Activities by Henrietta O. Ladson, 2005-12-01
  12. The Science Detectives/Book and Video (Life in the Universe Series) by Seti Institute, 1996-06
  13. The Big Book of Mobiles: Space by Harris Nicholas, 1997-05

61. Education World® : Science Center : K-8 Curriculum : Space
A few more stimulating sites Amazing space, Plenty of webbased activities.Windows to the Universe, Earth and space info for all levels.
http://www.education-world.com/science/elem/space_k_8.shtml

Science Center
Elementary K-8
Earth Science

Habitats
... K-8 Curriculum Space S P A C E
THE MOON
Quick Links to Info and Images

Do you know: Where the Moon's glow comes from? How long a lunar month is? What the phases of the moon are? How the moon effects the ocean tides on Earth? Answer these questions and more with information from these links. CONSTELLATIONS Quick Links to Info and Images Take your students on a virtual visit to NASA to investigate what stars are made of. Plan stargazing trips using the monthly skycharts and map the mythology of the celestial heavens. OUR SOLAR SYSTEM Quick Links to Info and Images There is a great wealth of images of our solar system from NASA and other resources on the Internet. Students can use information from these sites to compare conditions on different planets and maybe even plan an interplanetary trip! Quite a vacation!

62. News Archive
did you know that you're a rapid space traveler too 18, 2002, Alien Fascination Isthere life on other planets can look at the risks and the science involved with
http://www.riverdeep.net/current/archive/space.jhtml

This Week's Current
The Classroom Flyer Life Science Biology ... Sports Space Sept. 9, 2002 Life on Mars, Life on Earth
Related Riverdeep activities: Our Solar System Xcursion August 1, 2002 Listen to the Stars
High in the Andes, plans are are on track for building the world's largest telescope. Related Riverdeep activities: Refraction and Lenses, Telescopes and Microscopes, Signals from Space May 13, 2002 Stargazing
This article is designed for teachers to use in the classroom. Nobody's got a better view of space than the Hubble Telescope. So what has this roving eye-in-the-sky seen lately? Related Riverdeep activities: Telescopes and Microscopes Apr. 29, 2002 Space Tourists
Private citizens Mark Shuttleworth and Dennis Tito paid for their own tickets to space. Is there a future in space travel for everyone? Related Riverdeep activities: Our Solar System Xcursion, Graphing Parabolas

63. News Archive
life science. Sept. Related Riverdeep activities An Overview of Photosynthesis,Why Are Leaves Green?, Photosynthesis and Plant Adaptations Xcursion. Sept.
http://www.riverdeep.net/current/archive/life_science.jhtml

This Week's Current
The Classroom Flyer Life Science Biology ... Sports Life Science Sept. 23, 2002 Fall Is in the Air
Fall is officially here. Why do leaves change colors? How do poets describe autumn's splendid changes? Related Riverdeep activities: An Overview of Photosynthesis, Why Are Leaves Green?, Photosynthesis and Plant Adaptations Xcursion Sept. 16, 2002 Genetics of Aging
What can the lowly housefly teach your students about the genetics of aging? Find out in this article for the classroom. Related Riverdeep activities: Genes and Dominance Sept. 9, 2002 Along the Food Chain
It's a bug-eat-bug world. Learn more about the fragile importance of food chains in this article for the classroom. Related Riverdeep activities: Exploring Food Chains and Food Webs Sept. 9, 2002 Life on Mars, Life on Earth
Related Riverdeep activities: Our Solar System Xcursion Sept. 2, 2002

64. Grade Six Science - Exploring Space
is the Ministry of State for science and Technology Another good research projectinvolves investigating life in a also examine the features of a space suit to
http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/docs/midlsci/gr6udmsc.html
Science 6
Exploring Space
Unit overview
The unit examines the impact of technology on the space program, in the past, and at present. Students also have an opportunity to speculate on the direction that space exploration could (or should) take in the future. Due to the nature of the material in this unit, fewer opportunities exist for hands-on activities. However, the unit provides many opportunities to develop Independent Learning, in conjunction with a Resource-Based Learning approach to researching and investigating space exploration. The optional unit, earth's climate , can also be integrated with this unit. Climatic patterns on earth can be studied by analyzing information which has been sent back to earth from weather satellites. These satellites provide us with information that would have been difficult, if not impossible, to obtain otherwise. Once consideration is given to climate, then the related life science units on Ecosystems and Plant and Animal Adaptations can be brought in as well. Science writing and reading activities, as discussed in this Guide, should be incorporated into each lesson. Writing science fiction stories based on science fact, reading articles from newspapers or magazines, and summarizing what they have read in the form of a chart are only two strategies through which students may refine their understanding of the concepts of science and develop their ability to communicate through the written word.

65. Math & Science
NASA Connect online exposure to exciting aeronautical, space and lifescience activities inside NASA and from sources around the world;
http://www2.ncsu.edu/ncsu/cep/ligon/sciencemath.htm
General Science Sites
Scientists Museums Biology ... Fee-Based Projects
Math General Top
Science General

66. Psychology, Science Search Results
principles related to the life, chemical, physical, meteorological, earth, and spacesciences highinterest, humorous science activities organized into
http://teachervision.com/tv/tvsearch/termname=Science|Psychology&type=Teacher Bo

67. NOVA | Teachers | Find By Subject | PBS
Web Site Overview. space Exploration. Online activities. Teachers Ideas. PreviousLife science, Mathematics, Paleontology, Physical science. by Title. by Subject
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/teachers/resources/subject_3.html
Find by Subject
To narrow your search click on the icons in the grid below. Science and Society Biography Ethics Media Literacy ... Technological Design To narrow your search click on the icons in the grid above. Previous: Life Science, Mathematics, Paleontology, Physical Science by Title by Subject: Anthropology, Archeology, Chemistry, Earth Science, Forensics, Health Science Life Science, Mathematics, Paleontology, Physical Science Science and Society, Social Studies, Space Science, Technological Design NOVA homepage ... Teachers Site Map Updated March 2003

68. Welcome To NSSDC's General Public Page
space science Education/Outreach A collection of space science lessons,online activities and resources for teachers and students;
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nssdc/gen_public.html
Welcome to NSSDC's General Public Page! T HIS PAGE is intended to guide members of the general public to NASA/NSSDC data and services most likely to be of interest to the non-researcher/scientist segment of the internet community. Our Role T HE National Aeronautics Space Administration (NASA) carries out its functions through several offices. NASA's Office of Space Sciences sponsors the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC). NSSDC is primarily responsible for the archiving of space science data from past, present, and future NASA missions. We serve the science community and the general public in areas related to the space sciences (astrophysics and astronomy, solar physics, space plasma physics, lunar and planetary science). N SSDC is not intended as, nor is it, an encyclopedic source of information about NASA, its space activities, or space science in general. We provide data, and such information as we happen to have. There are many alternative sources of information about NASA, its activities, and space; several of these are identified below. Access to NSSDC's online WWW files, data, and information is free; nominal charges are made for dissemination of data on media, as, for instance, NSSDC's Planetary Images CD-ROM.
NSSDC Pages Most Frequently Visited by the Public
  • Photo Gallery

  • Popular and frequently requested pictures of planets, stars, and spacecraft

69. NASA Office Of External Relations: Human Space Flight And Research Division (Cod
also provides policy advice to the international life and microgravity science multilateralworking As international interest in space research grows and
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/codei/codeih.html
NASA Office of External Relations
Human Space Flight and Research Division (Code IH)
Role
The Human Space Flight and Research Division supports the international activities of two NASA Enterprises, 1) the Human Exploration and Development of Space Enterprise and 2) the Biological and Physical Research Enterprise . The Division provides dedicated international, interagency, and policy coordination support to the Administrator, the Associate Administrator for External Relations, the Office of Space Flight , the Office of Biological and Physical Research, the Chief Health and Medical Officer, and the Office of Safety and Mission Assurance . This support includes day-to-day international interaction at the Headquarters corporate level on matters related to the International Space Station , the Space Shuttle , Tracking and Communications, and Biological and Physical Research cooperative programs. In 1998, Congress passed the Commercial Space Act of 1998 "to encourage the development of a commercial space industry in the United States". The Act included specific provisions for the commercialization of the International Space Station as a high priority for economic development of low-Earth orbit. The Division works closely with its international partners to coordinate commercial activities through a multilateral consultative working group on commercialization. The Division also supports the coordination of commercialization efforts on the International Space Station through multilateral management boards. Additionally, as new issues related to international participation continue to arise, the Division will assist the Office of Biological and Physical Research in establishing the framework and agreements to best foster NASA's commercialization efforts.

70. Manufacturing, Life Science Experiments Begin New Year Aboard Space Station
Manufacturing, life science experiments begin new year Station expedition six scienceoperations status International space Station Expedition Six Commander
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-01/nsfc-mls011003.php
Public release date: 10-Jan-2003
Contact: Steve Roy
Steven.E.Roy@nasa.gov

NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center News Center
Manufacturing, life science experiments begin new year aboard Space Station
International Space Station nternational Space Station expedition six science operations status report for the week ending Jan. 10, 2003
International Space Station Expedition Six Commander Ken Bowersox exercises to collect data on changes in bone and muscle mass in microgravity as part of the FOOT/Ground Reaction Forces During Spaceflight (FOOT) experiment. Bowersox is wearing the Lower Extremity Monitoring Suit, a garment instrumented to measure stress on lower extremity bones and muscles during everyday activities. During this test on Dec. 24, 2002, Bowersox jogs on a treadmill in the Zvezda Service Module on the Space Station. (Credit: NASA/JSC)
IRemotely operated science combined with the human touch got the second Zeolite Crystal Growth (ZCG) experiment off to a good start during the past week. On Friday, January 3, Expedition Six Commander Ken Bowersox unloaded samples completed two days earlier from the zeolite experiment and reconfigured the furnace for another round of tests. After twirling each of the 19 new sample tubes to reduce the number of bubbles in them, he installed the samples in the ZCG furnace to begin a scheduled 15-day processing run.

71. FY 2001 NASA Budget Request: Space Science; Life & Microgravity S&A
at Mars that could enhance the science return and 129.3 Health Research 8.7 11.3Space Products Development The Office of life and Microgravity sciences and
http://www.aip.org/enews/fyi/2000/fyi00.019.htm
AIP HOME PAGE Online Journal Publishing Service AIP Journals Magazines, Books, Proceedings, and PACS® Publishing Services Science Policy History Center Working at AIP Site Index
FYI
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Science Policy News
Number 19: February 15, 2000
"For the first time in seven years, the NASA budget [request] is going up - $435 million in 2001." NASA Administrator Dan Goldin The total FY 2001 budget request for NASA is $14,035.3 million, an increase of $434.5 million, or 3.2 percent, over FY 2000 funding. Within this request, Space Science would see an increase of 9.4 percent, and Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications would grow by 10.1 percent. Earth Science would undergo a major restructuring of its budget and see its funding drop by 2.6 percent. Within the Human Space Flight account, Space Station funding would be cut by 9.0 percent. Below are highlights of the budget requests for the Space Science and the Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications accounts. A subsequent FYI will cover the request for Earth Science, and Human Space Flight. SPACE SCIENCE REQUEST: $2,398.8 million; up 9.4 %

72. Thursday's Classroom -- Lesson Plans And Educational Activities From NASA
movies, but they are part of real life in space In this activity students write ascience fiction story based on a 24hour day on the International space Station
http://www.thursdaysclassroom.com/index_04jan01.html
Science@NASA presents
Thursday's Classroom
www.ThursdaysClassroom.com
: The aim of Thursday's Classroom is to provide a lasting connection between NASA's latest research and the classroom environment. We would appreciate your feedback about how we might make this a more useful resource. We also hope you'll become a regular weekly customer by subscribing to our Express News email service! If you're looking for an old episode or a schedule of upcoming lessons, please visit our archive Dr. Tony Phillips , Production Editor
Thursday, January 25, 2001
Far-Out Chores on the International Space Station
Content and design by Bishop Web Works.
Four Facts
about Real Life in Space
Astronauts on the International Space Station dispose of their trash with the aid of a space-age garbage truck. A Russian rocket, The Progress , retrieves the garbage and incinerates it in Earth's atmosphere! more
Cooking in space is pretty easy astronauts make their favorite meals by adding water to packets of freeze-dried food. more
Orange juice or whole milk cannot be dehydrated. Rehydrated orange juice crystals form orange "rocks"! To get the necessary vitamins and minerals, astronauts drink Tang and nonfat dry milk.

73. Louisville Science Center
Our New Home in space Star Station One's newest science demonstration, Our NewHome in space , focuses on how the human body reacts to life in a micro
http://www.louisvillescience.org/happening.php3?page=daily.ext

74. CSMEE Space Education Companion Page 2
from the Clementine Deep space Program science Experiment. Analysis Center at NASAGoddard space Flight Center information about the origins and lifecycles of
http://www.ericse.org/space/space2.html
Objects in the Night Sky
Solar System Astronomy Skywatching
Solar System
A multimedia tour of the Sun, planets, moons, comets, and asteroids. The latest scientific information and the history of space exploration, rocketry, early astronauts, space missions, and spacecraft are presented through photographs, facts, documents, graphics, and videos. English, Spanish, and Portuguese versions are available. See also: Views of the Solar System
An Overview of the Solar System
Covers the basics to the "big questions" using diagrams, pictures, text, and links to other websites.
Walk the Solar System
Directions from the Exploratorium for making and using a scale model of the solar system.
Solar System Live
An interactive simulation of the solar system that allows you to set the time and date, viewpoint, orbital elements to track, and several other variables.
Planets
The Nine Planets
An overview of the history, mythology, and scientific knowledge of each of the planets and moons in our solar system. Individual webpages offer text, images, sounds, movies, and references to related information.
Welcome to the Planets
From the California Institute of Technology, a selection of the best images from NASA's planetary exploration program. Images of several spacecraft are also provided.

75. ESA Portal - Life In Space - ESA Reschedules European Participation In Soyuz Fli
space programme and research performed in space to a the Ministry of Education, Cultureand science will focus out an extensive programme of life and physical
http://www.esa.int/export/esaCP/SEMBII2A6BD_Life_0.html
ESA Life in Space Expanding Frontiers Improving Daily Life ... Benefits for Europe 11-Apr-2003 14:52:42 UT Services Subscribe Contact Us Search All ESA Home Advanced Search
The agreement is a sign of close cooperation between ISS partners

ESA reschedules European participation in Soyuz flights in a spirit of solidarity with International Space Station partners
28 February 2003
ESA PR 13-2003. The European Space Agency (ESA) has agreed to six-month postponements of the Soyuz flights by two members of its astronaut corps planned for April and October 2003.
The agreement is based on an understanding between ESA, the Russian Space Agency (Rosaviakosmos) and NASA, in close cooperation with the Spanish and Dutch authorities concerned. The purpose of the agreement is to allow the April Soyuz flight to be used for an International Space Station crew rotation. "The agreement was made in the interest of a smooth continuation of Space Station operation and utilisation," said Mr Jörg Feustel-Büechl, ESA Director of Human Spaceflight, "it should be seen as a sign of the close cooperation and solidarity among the International Space Station partners"
Pedro Duque’s mission is now planned for October

It was initially planned to exchange the present crew on board the ISS in March with a new crew arriving on the Space Shuttle Discovery. In April a new Soyuz spacecraft was scheduled to fly to the ISS carrying ESA astronaut Pedro Duque for an 8-day stay on the ISS, a mission supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology.

76. ESA Portal - Life In Space - ESA Reschedules European Participation In Soyuz Fli
for October, when he will carry out a range of life and physical science experimentson with the aim of bringing the European human space programme and
http://www.esa.int/export/esaCP/SEMIKI2A6BD_Life_0.html
ESA Life in Space Expanding Frontiers Improving Daily Life ... Benefits for Europe 11-Apr-2003 14:52:49 UT Services Subscribe Contact Us Search All ESA Home Advanced Search
ESA reschedules European participation in Soyuz flights in a spirit of solidarity with International Space Station partners
28 February 2003
The European Space Agency (ESA) has agreed to six-month postponements of the Soyuz flights by two members of its astronaut corps planned for April and October 2003. The agreement is based on an understanding between ESA, the Russian Space Agency (Rosaviakosmos) and NASA, in close cooperation with the Spanish and Dutch authorities concerned. The purpose of the agreement is to allow the April Soyuz flight to be used for an International Space Station crew rotation.
“The agreement was made in the interest of a smooth continuation of Space Station operation and utilisation,” said Mr Jörg Feustel-Büechl, ESA Director of Human Spaceflight, “it should be seen as a sign of the close cooperation and solidarity among the International Space Station partners”. It was initially planned to exchange the present crew on board the ISS in March with a new crew arriving on the Space Shuttle Discovery. In April a new Soyuz spacecraft was scheduled to fly to the ISS carrying ESA astronaut Pedro Duque for an 8-day stay on the ISS, a mission supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology.

77. Frank Potter's Science Gems - Life Science I
Find via Natural science life science - Ecosystems (general, food States - NorthernPrairie science Center Each Gasior @ NASA/Goddard space Flight Center
http://www.sciencegems.com/life.html
Frank Potter's Science Gems - Life Science I
FYI: Check back weekly, for we will continue to add new resources to the more than 12000 WWW resources that we have located so far.
Latest update: Sunday, September 1, 2002.
http://www.sciencegems.com
SUBCATEGORIES SOME POPULAR SITES Life Science - Part I
  • Cells: Energetics to Heredity
  • Molecular Genetics
  • Evolution
  • Ecology ...
    Life Science - Part II
  • Biology of Viruses...
  • Biology of Plants
  • Biology of Animals
  • Human Biology + Martindale's Health Guide
  • BioMOO - Virtual School of Biology!
  • 78. NASA Space Life Sciences Data Archive/Overview/NASA-Mir Program/STS-84
    conducted repairs to parts of the space station Some science hardware and researchsamples were lost the schedule and performance of life sciences investigations
    http://lsda.jsc.nasa.gov/sts84/sts84.stm
    STS-84/NASA 5 The STS-84 mission was the sixth docking mission between the U.S. Space Shuttle and Russia's Mir Space Station. The Space Shuttle Atlantis launched on May 15,1997, with 7 crewmembers on board. Astronaut Michael Foale replaced Jerry Linenger as the fifth U.S. long-duration astronaut on the Mir. Linenger took Foale's place on the Shuttle for the return trip to Earth. The exchange of these crewmembers on Mir ushered in the NASA 5 mission, and marked the end of a successful NASA 4 mission. During the 5 days of joint U.S.-Russian operations, astronauts and cosmonauts transferred the science samples and data collected by the Mir 22/Mir 23/NASA 4 crew from the Mir to the Shuttle, where they were returned to Earth to be analyzed by researchers. Crewmembers also transferred 7,314 pounds of water and logistics to and from the Mir, including the hardware and supplies in support of the health and well-being of the Mir 23/Mir 24/NASA 5 crew and the science investigations on the station. On June 25, 1997, during a docking maneuver, the unmanned Progress resupply ship collided with the Mir complex, damaging the Mir module called Spektr. Spektr experienced a depressurization and was sealed off from the rest of the Mir station by the crew. Following this unfortunate incident, onboard activities focused on preserving as much science as possible. The Mir crew conducted repairs to parts of the space station. Some science hardware and research samples were lost, because they were inside the now inaccessible Spektr module. Partial loss of station electrical power also impacted the schedule and performance of life sciences investigations during the mission.

    79. NASA Science Sets Its Sights On Human Mars Mission
    NASA remains committed to the pursuit of science in space, knowing that achievablein the history of humankind a glimpse of what our life what nature
    http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/nasa_science_030205.html
    SEARCH: Spacewatch: Backyard Astronomy
    advertisement
    NASA Science Sets its Sights on Human Mars Mission
    By Robert Roy Britt

    Senior Science Writer
    posted: 02:45 pm ET
    05 February 2003
    NASA's 2004 budget request, released Monday and overshadowed by the Columbia disaster, represents strong support for space science. It also shows hints of an elevated commitment to Mars both as a science target and a place NASA wants to eventually send humans. For the moment, space science has taken a backseat to the shuttle investigation, within NASA and among scientists, politicians and the public. Researchers acknowledge and appreciate that it could take many months for experiments aboard shuttles to get back on track. More Stories
    NASA Requests Money for Shuttle Upgrades, New Mars Mission, Nuclear Propulsion

    SPACE.com's Complete Coverage of the Hubble Space Telescope

    Special Report: Odyssey Mission to Mars
    Lives Lost, Lives Saved: The Benefits of Shuttle Science ... Complete Coverage of the Columbia Disaster Investigation But the vast bulk of space science research will proceed pretty much as usual. The shuttle program combined with the International Space Station accounts for only a portion of the overall pure science activities conducted by NASA, a program that includes the Hubble Space Telescope, as well as the Mars Odyssey and Galileo missions. These ongoing endeavors won't be affected, says Louis Friedman, executive director of the Planetary Society, in a telephone interview Wednesday with

    80. SETI Institute - Life In The Universe Guides
    now under development teach standard science concepts in of questions about the natureof life, its possible chemical settings provided by space, planets, and
    http://www.seti-inst.edu/publications/curriculum/litu/overview.html
    Books Bibliography Scientific Papers Curriculum ... Newsletters Printer Friendly Version
    Overview
    The "Life in the Universe" project is creating supplementary science curricula for elementary and middle school students. The intent of the project is to take advantage of the intense interest that young students have in the existence of extraterrestrial life to motivate their studies of science and other subjects. The curriculum activities are drawn from the experience of SETI scientists, whose research requires considerations of astronomy, life sciences, earth sciences, chemistry, physics, mathematics, engineering, and many other disciplines. The lessons, activities, and experiments now under development teach standard science concepts in the context of questions about the nature of life, its possible presence elsewhere in the universe, and the physical/chemical settings provided by space, planets, and stars, and within which other life might be sought. The science activities are designed by teachers and tested in their classrooms. They are "hands-on" in approach and philosophy, and encourage students to express their learning in alternative ways. The activities also encourage questioning, and provide many opportunities to reinforce critical thinking skills. Initial classroom trials demonstrate a high degree of student and teacher acceptance, and confirm the appeal of these activities to students of diverse backgrounds.

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