The discoveries made at City of Hope have changed the lives of millions of patients around the world.
Founded in 1913, City of Hope is one of only 45 comprehensive
While weighing ideas for a major Santa Monica-Malibu schools fundraiser, officials glanced about 12 miles down the coast and saw something worth emulating.
The Manhattan Beach Education Foundation holds an
As the STEM coordinator at Will Rogers Learning Community, Laura Simon wanted iPads to help students develop their coding skills as they learn to program robots.
She announced a request
If your kid is going to be spending their spring break playing Minecraft they may as well be gaining something more out of it than expanding their imaginary world.
Enter
Why open an umbrella with your hands when you can create a series of 20-plus chain reactions using science and technology skills to accomplish the same goal?
That's
Last weekend, nearly three million boxes of Girl Scout Cookies arrived in Greater Los Angeles to be sold by roughly 40,000 scouts. Of those 40,000 girls, over 300
As several Santa Monica students have learned, getting to space isn't an easy endeavor.
About six months ago, the SpaceX rocket carrying their science experiment to the International
Members of the local Board of Education and other school officials have plenty of ideas for how to prepare students for life after graduation. What they need to figure out
The best shooters in basketball are sometimes said to be “lighting it up,” and the phrase was taken quite literally this week at Will Rogers Learning Community.
Using little more
What do contact lenses, spam and sheep's blood have in common?
They're central ingredients in three separate science experiments that Lincoln Middle School students have designed
Lisa Randall is a theoretical physics professor at Harvard, her work is often cited in the science community and her name was once included on Time magazine's list
In recent years, state budget changes led the Santa Monica-Malibu school district to cut back on professional development.
But it appears that’s going to change.
The local Board of