Welcome to our searchable database of education resources created by NOAA and our partners. If you have issues or feedback, please let us know by filling out our feedback form offsite link or sending us an email at education@noaa.gov.
- Climate (268)
- Freshwater (170)
- Marine life
(495)
- (-) Aquatic food webs (63)
- Adaptations (12)
- Coral reef ecosystems (87)
- Ecosystems (118)
- Conservation (9)
- Endangered species (20)
- Entanglement (17)
- Fish (101)
- Fisheries and seafood (116)
- Invasive marine species (9)
- Invertebrates (91)
- Life in an estuary (36)
- Marine mammals (138)
- Plankton (15)
- Salmon (23)
- Sea turtles (68)
- Seabirds (30)
- Seaweed, algae, and aquatic plants (23)
- Sharks, rays, and skates (38)
- NOAA careers (32)
- Ocean and coasts
(674)
- Earth processes (15)
- Harmful algal blooms (19)
- Maritime archaeology and history (34)
- Ocean acidification (67)
- Ocean chemistry (15)
- Ocean currents (96)
- Ocean exploration (84)
- Ocean floor features (90)
- Ocean pollution and marine debris (174)
- Ocean sounds (16)
- Oil spills (59)
- Rip currents (22)
- Sea level rise (41)
- Tides (62)
- Tsunamis (62)
- Technology and engineering (296)
- Weather and atmosphere (368)
- ESS2: Earth’s Systems (7)
- ESS3: Earth and Human Activity (8)
- ETS1: Engineering Design (5)
- LS1: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes (3)
- LS2: Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics (16)
- LS4: Biological Evolution: Unity and Diversity (6)
- PS1: Matter and Its Interactions (5)
- PS3: Energy (2)
- PS4: Waves and Their Applications in Technologies for Information Transfer (1)
- At Home with Galveston Bay (1)
- B-WET grantee (1)
- Deep Ocean Education Project Website (1)
- Deep-sea dialogues (3)
- ELP grantee (1)
- Estuary Education website (1)
- Microworlds (1)
- National marine sanctuaries coloring pages and puzzles (1)
- National Marine Sanctuaries Webinar Series: Archived webinars (4)
- NOAA Enrichment in Marine Sciences and Oceanography (NEMO) curriculum (1)
- NOAA Live! 4 Kids (1)
- NOAA Marine Debris Program (2)
- Ocean Exploration educational materials (2)
- Ocean facts (1)
- Ocean Today (13)
- Sanctuaries 360 virtual dives (2)
- Sanctuaries media gallery (1)
- Sea-Earth-Atmosphere (SEA) resources (1)
- Signals of Spring ACES (Animals in Curriculum-based Ecosystem Studies) (1)
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
NGSS DCI
Special categories
Three themed modules — Ocean Food Webs, Observations and Models, and Predators and Prey — contain 21 interactive investigations. These educational modules help high school students learn how scientist use models, or data rich representations of systems, to better understand and predict changes in environmental processes in the ocean, the weather, and climate. In these investigations, students use scientific data and models — the same ones NOAA scientists use — to explore human-caused changes in ocean ecosystems and the impacts these changes have on the animals in those ecosystems. The modules also include resources for educators, including student worksheets, NGSS alignment, and presentation graphics.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
NGSS DCI
This guide includes eight elementary-level lessons, inspired by topics from the IMAX film Ocean Odyssey. Watching the film is not required for these lessons, but may enhance students’ learning experience of the topics presented in the activities. Educators can view a special extended preview offsite link of the film. Understanding the ocean and its ecosystems is essential to comprehending and protecting this planet. We must all be stewards for a cleaner, healthier, and more sustainable ocean. The activities in this guide will help lead you and your students to learn more about our ocean planet, its myriad of wonders beneath the waves, and work to maintain healthy ecosystems that are resilient in the face of change.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
NGSS DCI
Special categories
Collection name
The Deep Ocean Education Project is a collaboration among NOAA Ocean Exploration, Ocean Exploration Trust, and Schmidt Ocean Institute featuring high-quality ocean exploration and science education materials from the three organizations. The Deep Ocean Education Project website – launched in 2021 – is built around themes that are easily searchable, address key ocean-related phenomena, and encourage and support three-dimensional approaches to teaching and learning for K-12 education. The objective is to provide a one-stop resource hub for public, educators, and students looking for deep-sea educational materials. The website also includes information on how to connect with research vessels, including a list of upcoming events and opportunities, and live feeds of expeditions.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Special categories
Collection name
Watch. Explore. Discover. View the beauty and mystery of the ocean realm captured on video around the globe. Videos are organized into collections to help educators.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
This resource collection from NOAA Education dives into what food webs are. Food webs describe who eats whom in an ecological community. Made of interconnected food chains, food webs help us understand how changes to ecosystems — say, removing a top predator or adding nutrients — affect many different species, both directly and indirectly.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Learn how overfishing impacts corals and what you can do to protect these important ecosystems.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Students across the nation in all 50 states looked up at their class projector screen this year and witnessed what some describe as “alien-like life decked out in discoware grooving across the dance floor!” They observed shimmery symmetrical diatoms, clear-bodied oozing shapes that morph before your very eyes, and a larval sea star that looks nothing like a star.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Explore this collections of lessons, activities, videos, coloring pages, and field guides from the North Carolina National Estuarine Research Reserve on life in that estuary.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Special categories
Collection name
This webinar series was developed by NOAA's Regional Collaboration Network and Woods Hole Sea Grant at WHOI in response to the COVID school closures. With over 100 webinars featuring different NOAA experts/topics and a moderated question and answers session throughout so that students could get a peek at what our NOAA scientists do in all the various NOAA offices. They range in geography, content, and NOAA line office focus but are all designed to engage the students, answer their questions, and give them a glimpse of possible career options. Captions are available in English and Spanish. Many have ASL interpretation.
Audience
Subject
Resource type
Topic
Kelp forests are an important ecosystem that support a variety of species and grow predominantly along the Eastern Pacific Coast, from Alaska and Canada to the waters of Baja, California. Kelp forests can be found in four of our national marine sanctuaries along the West Coast of the United States. This collection has compiled wide-ranging resources from lesson plans, webinars, web stories, virtual reality videos, and more. You are invited to learn more about the importance of Kelp Forest Ecosystems, NOAA’s efforts to manage and conserve them, the species that call these forests home, and the threats kelp face.