This resource is in development. = Resources for Grade School Students = = Resources for Middle School Students = = Resources for High School Students = [[Resource(1135)]], Mark Ratner, Northwestern University[[BR]] Dr. Mark Ratner talks about what the future holds for nano technology and where it is likely to head. Dr. Ratner relates nanotechnology to other sciences and the future role of modeling. = Resources for High School Students (Advanced Study) = = Resources for Teachers = [[Resource(4372)]], Carl Batt, Cornell University[[BR]] Dr. Carl Batt discusses the challenges of enhancing the public's understanding of nanotechnology and its ability to comprehend a scale of size over several orders of magnitude. Dr. Batt gives an overview of creating the traveling museum exhibit "[http://www.toosmalltosee.org/ Too Small to See]," which has successfully faced the challenges of bringing nanoscale phenomena to the human-scale. [[Resource(519)]][[BR]] A collection of presentations hosted by the [http://www.nclt.us National Center for Learning and Teaching in Nanoscale Science and Engineering] (NCLT) that focus on teaching NSE at the K-12 level. These presentations explore teaching methodologies and the fundamentals of NSE. [[Resource(6123)]][[BR]] The producers of "Dragonfly TV" introduce their new season about nanotechnology. In these series, real kids do real research and experiments find out more about nanotechnology. Teachers can learn more about "[http://www.pbs.org/parents/dragonflytv/index.html "Dragonfly TV"]" = Resources for Parents = [[Resource(1135)]] = Other Resources = [http://www.nanooze.org/ nanooze][[BR]] Created for kids, nanooze is a place to hear about the latest exciting stuff in science and technology. ''What kind of stuff?'' Discoveries about the world that is too small to see and making tiny things. You will find interesting articles about recent discoveries and what it might mean for the future. [http://pbskids.org/dragonflytv/ Dragonfly Tv][[BR]] An on going series on PBS.