| Dragonfly TV |
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“Dragonfly TV” is an award-winning multimedia science education program combining television, community outreach, the Web, and fun. Produced by Twin Cities public TV station KTCA, the creator of the long-running family science series Newton's Apple, “DragonflyTV” engages tens of millions of children, parents and teachers in hands-on science activities. “DragonflyTV” is designed to appeal to children from diverse ethnic, socioeconomic, and educational backgrounds. By modeling and celebrating children's science capabilities, “DragonflyTV” shows that if kids can dream it, they can do it. The “DragonflyTV” television program is broadcast nationwide on PBS stations, and presents real-life science investigations in a style of television that captures the attention of today's MTV and video game generation. Against a pop music soundtrack, children tell about their investigations, communicating the infectious excitement that comes with making their own discoveries. A new season is airing in 2008. “DragonflyTV” extends beyond the television screen, offering a variety of standards-based learning tools. A rich, interactive Web site, a biannual children's science magazine, educators' guides, Fun Kits, and other outreach materials are available to schools, homes, community organizations, or any place kids gather to explore, create, and discover. DragonflyTV’s “Find a Science Center” feature includes listings for over 1,000 science museums, hands-on science centers, natural history museums, zoos, arboretums, aquariums, and children’s museums across the United States. “DragonflyTV” also directs SciGirls, a program that offers fun science experiences for girls across the country. SciGirls get together in camps, clubs, and science centers to watch DragonflyTV videos that showcase girls and women doing science. Then SciGirls take the wheel, doing their own investigations that relate to the science seen in the videos. The SciGirls program is still young and small-scale, so programs only exist in a handful of places across the United States. Other groups host great science programs for girls - Girls Scouts, Girls Inc., YWCA, Sally Ride Science and your local science museum are all good places to try. Some schools also have after-school science clubs for girls. Here is a list of SciGirls programs and the organizations that run them: SciGirls programs:New England and East Coast
The Southwest
Midwest
The South
The Mid-Atlantic
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