Science: Government of Canada– Not only does this government site round up a great collection of games and activities from various different departments and museums around the country, but, when you explore the Educational Resources section, they also offer the opportunity for kids to “Ask A Scientist” questions (or read answers to past questions), links to recommended other resources, lesson plans, and – my favourite – a collection of 6 Activity Books that you can download and print out that are full of experiments, lessons, activities and more.Ontario Science Centre STEM education toolkit – an outline intended for teachers in Ontario teaching Grades 6-8, but can be adapted for any grade level.They’ve even created a grade by grade list of games on the site that co-ordinate with various curriculum guidelines. If you visit Hiccup’s Science Workshop, you can watch videos and more. School of Dragons– Based on the hit movies, How to Train Your Dragon, the School of Dragon website offers a great list of hands-on experiments, plus great additional resources that help teach the scientific method through activities and worksheets. Plus, they host an annual Let’s Talk Science Challenge for kids in grades 6-8. They have activities to try at home, right from the main menu list, and they offer a free cross-Canada community outreach program where university students come and do science activities with local groups. There are different areas to branch out to, such as CurioCity – for teens and IdeaPark – for preschool and the early years. Let’s Talk Science – This terrific initiative helps kids to learn and love Science.Here are 10 free science websites full of resources, experiments, printables, activities, lesson plans, games and more to expand your children’s science learning experiences.
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