The NERACOOS ocean and weather climate display delivers information about the average weather and ocean conditions between 2001 and 2012. The display also includes information about recent and past years' ocean and weather conditions so that you can compare them to the average conditions from the past decade.
This site provides materials and information on the 30 different organizations under the University of Hawaii School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) faculty. Several of these links provide information and educational services to scientists and educators outside of SOEST including science information, maps, labs and speakers bureau.
This site shares different University of Hawaii School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) public resources including information about SOEST open house, speakers bureau, science expeditions, public lectures and seminar series through i tunes, and live time data.
The University of Hawaii Department of Geology and Geophysics offers Ask An Earth Scientist site where students or the public can search previous asked questions by subject headings or submit their own questions.
Science Island - The offical blog of Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology at Coconut Island showcases weekly educational articles, updates on the community education program, and calendar events.
University of Hawaii's Sea Grant Hanauma Bay Education Program offers a variety of resources on their website including a pdf fish identification card, natural history of hanauma bay guide, lecture and event calendar, publications, and ongoing research at the bay.
This site showcases all sanactuaries within the NOAA system but focuses on Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument also known as the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. This Encyclopedia offers a glossary of species found in this Monument including a variety of invertebrates, plants, reptiles, birds, fish and mammals.This Encyclopedia is meant to provide natural history information, video clips, still images, and additional resources to find more information about the marine life found within the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.
Humbpack whale-based games for elementary and middle school students including a section for teachers with classroom programs, students at sea programs, ocean-oriented field trips, publications, and education offerings.
The NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office helps a range of students—from elementary school through high school—build buoys to introduce them to concepts behind observational platforms and to help connect them with their local ecosystem—and to help track measurements in that ecosystem.
NOAA’s Chesapeake Exploration is a new and innovative collection of online activities for middle and high school students that bring the science of the Chesapeake Bay to life. Chesapeake Exploration gives teachers and their students unprecedented access to lessons designed around real-time observational data from CBIBS.
This web page from the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History's Ocean Portal contains a wealth of information for educators - including lesson plans, materials, and resources - on the Gulf oil spill.