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BBC Schools - Bitesize revision on KS3.

A very good revision of every topic in the Key Stage 3 curriculum (11 - 14 years old pupils).

BBC Schools - Bitesize revision on GCSE.

A very good revision of every topic in the GCSE curriculum (14 - 16 years old pupils). Amongst other sections, the site also contains a great resource: the Core Science audio files and the Additional Science audio files for the GCSE topics.

Biology4Kids.

Quite good and easy to follow revisions on topics such as cell structure and function, microorganisms, or plants and animals structure and function.

Chem4Kids.

Quite good and easy to follow revisions on topics such as matter, Periodic Table, chemical elements, atoms, chemical reactions and biochemistry.

Geography4Kids.

Quite good and easy to follow revisions on topics such as Earth energy, Earth structure, Atmosphere, Hydrosphere, Biosphere, climates and biogeochemical cycles.

Cassiopeia Project.

Fantastic YouTube channel with very high-quality videos. Although some might be quite advanced for you, a fair amount of them should help your understanding of a number of essential topics on Biology, Astronomy, Physics and Chemistry.

ScienceHack.

A select collection of scientific videos organised by categories and verified in quality and accuracy by a scientist.

WEHI-TV.

An impressive collection of animations focused on Genetics and human infectious diseases.

How Stuff Works - Science Channel.

A great collection of articles explaining everything you've always wanted to know about Science and never dared to ask.

Science Clarified.

Wide, reliable and updated scientific encyclopedia, with special sections devoted to Technology, Chemistry, Geology and controversy in the History of Science.

Encyclopedia of Life.

Ambitious project to organize and make available virtually all information about the approximately 1.8 million known biological species.

Windows to the Universe.

A good collection of educational information, quite focused on Astronomy, but also covering other major scientific areas: Life, the Earth and Physics. With interesting animations.

Answers.com.

Quite possibly the best resource on the net when you need to find the meaning of a term or even knowing almost everything about it. It yields, in the same page, information collected from several sources, including a variety of dictionaries and the Wikipedia. You can also listen to the pronunciation of most words.

Wikipedia.

Not entirely flawless, but yet the most comprehensive and updated encyclopedia online.

Encyclopedia Smithsonian.

Amazing collection of educational resources on a wide range of knowledge topics.

Visual dictionary online.

A fantastic resource with definitions, images and pronunciation for almost everything in astronomy, the Earth, plants, animals, the human being, energy and more.

Merriam-Webster online dictionary.

The place to go when you simply need to know the meaning of a scientific term. Includes the etymology, the inflected forms and, best of all, you can listen to the pronunciation of them all.

Scientific dictionaries online.

A comprehensive list of scientific dictionaries online. Some are better than others.

Medical dictionary.

The medical argot unveiled. Helpful when studying the human body.

Online etymology dictionary.

Many scientific terms have old Latin or Greek roots. The Etymoloogy Dictionary explains many of them.

The 5 scientific experiments most likely to end the world.

If you are one of those who think that Science, in its insatiable curiosity and desire to put knowledge above all things, would never inadvertently set off a chain of events that lead to some sort of disaster that ended the world, then, here are five experiments that may prove you wrong.

9 of the oddest experiments ever.

Some of the most bizarre experiments ever conducted in the name of Science.

10 scientific frauds that rocked the world.

While most of them were considered significant breakthroughs in their time, they were just the result of the eagerness for personal recognition, or the will to mock a contender.

40 Years of the world's best microscope photography.

Stunning set of microscopic images that comprises the Nikon Small World prize winners of the past 40 years.

Small Worlds.

29 images selected from the 2010 Nikon International Small World Photomicrography Competition winners.

Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition 2011.

38 outstanding photos that let us see beyond the capabilities of our unaided eyes.

Peering into the micro world.

Electron microscope photo set of 32 microwonders.

The joys of microscope photography.

Amazing microscopic images from the Olympus BioScapes Digital Imaging Competition.

Fundamental scientific and technological English vocabulary.

Scientific language frequently makes use of a specific set of adjectives, nouns, verbs, adverbs, conjunctions and prepositions. Many of them are listed in this page.

Google Docs.

Create text documents, presentations and spreadsheets in a similar way to what you'd do with MS Office. Store them on-line, access them from any computer, share them with your friends to work collaboratively from different places and publish them for everyone to see. All for free: you only have to sign up for a Google/Gmail account. Learn more with the "Getting Started Guides" for spreadsheets, documents and presentations, or with the videos at Google Docs YouTube channel or at YouTube Google Docs Community.

SlideShare.

But if all you want to do is creating an online presentation, this is the place to go. You create your presentations with PowerPoint (not 2007 version, as of the moment of writing this), OpenOffice, or in pdf format, upload them to SlideShare and they'll be accessible to everyone with an internet connection. Once uploaded, you can do some basic editting and embed it in any of your blogs or web pages. To see how it works, watch a presentation on SlideShare or read the F.A.Q.

Mind42.

Great collaborative (or solo) online mindmapping tool where you can add links, attached documents, notes, icons and images to every node of your map. The maps can be published on-line for everyone to view, embedded into a webpage, and exported to pdf, jpeg, png and several mind map formats. Don't forget to use the keyboard shortcuts ("tab" and "shift+tab") to fast-create child and sibling nodes.

Spider Scribe.

Another mindmapping tool with lots of features, like the possiblility of adding documents, images, maps or calendar events to the nodes of your mind map. It also allows embedding the map into your website, exporting it to jpeg and png image formats, sharing it and collaborative working.

Bubbl.us.

Create colourful mind maps that you can share, email, print, save as an image or embed into your websites.

How to build a mind map in Microsoft Word.

When you need to create a mind map but don't have access to the Internet, you can still produce rich and colourful ones with MS Word. This great tutorial walks you through the steps to take.

ProProfs Flashcards.

Create flashcards for online study that you can download, print or embed into your webpages. You can also view thousands of flashcard sets created by others. Registration is free and recommended, although not strictly necessary.

Useful online calculators for almost every educational and life need.

This list guides you to online calculators that will help you calculate everything from algebra equations and mortgage interest to fuel costs and body fat.

Web 2.0 Calc.

One good and easy to use online calculator.

Online advanced scientific calculator.

Yet another one, with a friendly interface and a knack for fractions.

Print free graph paper.

Choose between a variety of graph types, paper sizes, units and grids to render a free graph paper ready for printing.

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