Current Science
Win a Free Classroom Subscriptionto Current Science!
Teachers! Please help us meet yourclassroom needs. Take a fewminutes to answer thequestions on our end-of-yearsurvey and return it to us.We will enter your name ina random drawing and fivewinners will each receive afree clasroom subscriptionto the 2008-2009 Current Science.You can access the surveyby clicking here. (See complete contest rules here.)
AND THE WINNERS ARE . . . Congratulations to the winnersof Current Science's MysteryPhoto Contest. They are (fromleft to right) Eric Dunn, DeannaFrederick, Maria Schueller, andBriana Weyker, students inMaureen Mersberger's seventh-grade science class at CedarGrove-Belgium Middle Schoolin Cedar Grove, Wisconsin.
Most of the Mystery Photos featured inCurrent Science are taken by studentphotographers. For each photo publishedin the magazine, the photographer receives$50 plus a T-shirt with the photo printed on the front. The photographer or classroomwith the most photos published in a schoolyear wins the Mystery Photo Contest. Pleasee-mail your photos to
mysteryphotos@weeklyreader.com
Or send them via regular mail to:
Mystery Photo EditorCurrent ScienceWeekly Reader Publishing1 Reader's Digest RoadPleasantville, NY10570-7000
UPDATEIn its January 18, 2008 issue, Current Science reported on an upcoming flight of the NASA spacecraft Cassini. The craft was scheduled tofly through one of the plumes of ice and waterthat rises from Saturn's moon Encedaldus todetermine the plume's exact contents. That fly-throughhas now happened and the findings are describedin this New York Times article.
NOW PLAYING!Check out four animated short subjects, each one made exclusively for Current Science .
"Twisted."Discover what atmospheric conditionsgive rise to nature's most violent storms.
"Under the Hood."Learn how the internal combustion engine convertsgasoline into go power.
"Gene Tracing."Delve into the world of DNA and learnhow to tell a gene from a genome and a chromosome from a base pair.
"Turbo Charged." Find out how almost all of the electricity we use--all of it except solar-generated electricity--is produced.
Hands On Science.Current Science is proud to welcome Robert Krampf as a regular contributor. Rob is a roving science educator from Florida who has taken his amazing science show around the world, dazzling audiences in appearences on CNN, CBS This Morning, The Discovery Channel, and Late Night with David Letterman, among other places.Look to the Currrent Science Teacher's Guide for hands-on experiments prepared by Rob that you can use to demonstrate concepts described in the magazine.
Department of Corrections. In the Teacher's Guide to theNovember 30 issue, the answers tothe 10-point and the 20-pointquestions in The Solar Systemcolumn of the Sci-Triv Gamewere inadvertently reversed. The10-point image is, of course, Jupiter, and the 20-point image isMars. Our apologies go out to allJovian and Martian readers of Current Science, and our thanks to Doyllie Heathand students at Pinkston Middle School in Mountain View, Arkansas,for alerting us to the mistake.
Math Counts! You can't solve a problem if you don't know how to solve a problem. Celebrate the 25th Anniversary of MATHCOUNTS, a national math enrichment, coaching, and competition program that promotes middle school mathematics achievement in every U.S. state and territory. Click here to learn more about the MATHCOUNTS program and how your students can compete against the greatest mathletes in the country. While you're there, try the Problem of the Week.
Internet Links: Find links to related sites on the Internet and news and information relating to stories that appear in the magazine's printed edition for the classroom.