Engage your students with podcasts, educational activities, videos and a live webcast on Aug. 1, 2008.
Find information about Newton's Laws, aviation pioneers and the basics of aeronautics.
Find out when the space station will be flying over your city, or track where it is right now.
Challenge your students to see if they have the right stuff to plot a course for future space missions.
Mars is one of Earth's "next-door neighbors" in space. Find out more about the planet in this article.
Be a part of the lunar adventure and place your name in orbit around the moon for years to come. The deadline for submitting names is June 27, 2008.
Find out how NASA is participating in the 2008 FIRST Robotics competition.
Find educational resources, including standards-based lesson plans and a Web Quest, related to microbes.
Join in the celebration of IYA 2009! Visit this site to find NASA resources, events and opportunities.
Find out why astronauts exercise for hours each day in this diary entry from Expedition 16 Commander Peggy Whitson.
This contest is open to students in grades 5-12. Essay entries are due May 8, 2008.
Three-day events with special programs for schools and workshops for K-12 educators are planned at sites across the country.
Learn more about this day that celebrates "Space Weather Around the World."
Have you ever wondered how space travel impacts your daily life? Check out this interactive feature to see how the benefits of space exploration trace back to you.
This site applies distance-rate-time investigations and proportional reasoning skills to air-traffic control situations.
Find classroom activities, reading materials, educational tools and NASA images related to polar exploration.
Move your mouse over each flight day for details on the mission.
Get up-to-the-minute news about the space shuttle mission.
Learn more about the new rockets that will launch astronauts to the moon and Mars.
This project allows teams of students to image a site on Mars using a camera on board the Mars Odyssey spacecraft currently orbiting the Red Planet.