The public is invited to celebrate the world’s favorite mathematical holiday at its birthplace ...
The Exploratorium invites guests (21+) to step into an interactive playground of music, movement, and mind-bending discovery at the Phenomenal Ba ...
Make a saturated salt solution by adding salt to water and stirring until it doesn't dissolve anymore. Add a splash of vinegar to this solution. Cut your matboard into four 1/2-inch squares, each ...
John Edmark is an artist and designer whose explorations range from organically inspired cellular and kinetic works to products for storage, kitchen, and creative play. Edmark has taught in the design ...
For nearly two decades, Laura Zander has helped shape the Exploratorium as one of the world’s most innovative museums, advancing its role in informal learning, public engagement, and scientific ...
Join us for Storytime Science—a storybook read aloud followed by a simple related science activity geared toward very young children. This month, Exploratorium staffer and children's literature ...
Bring a drawing to life in just two pages! Animated videos are usually created by showing thousands of images very rapidly — which means they take a LONG time to make. But you can make a scene or ...
You don’t have to be a climate scientist to teach climate change, and you don’t have to be an experienced storyteller to infuse climate content with stories. Explore these educator resources for using ...
-Sportscaster Joe Garagiola describing the first documented appearance of a "stadium wave" at the Oakland Alameda Coliseum on October 15, 1981. Consider the stadium wave: a spontaneous group behavior ...
Sunday (Daytime Members/Donors Only 10:00 am to Noon): 12:00 pm—5:00 pm ...
Can you smell time? Your dog can. On a very basic level, so can you: When you crack the lid on that old quart of milk, tentatively sniff and—peeyouu!—promptly dump that foul stuff down the sink, you ...
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