Ask a Librarian — We’re Open for (Online) Business!
Posted by: Neely Tucker
The Library's Ask a Librarian online service is open, even if the Library itself is closed during the coronavirus pandemic.
Posted in: Education
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Posted by: Neely Tucker
The Library's Ask a Librarian online service is open, even if the Library itself is closed during the coronavirus pandemic.
Posted in: Education
Posted by: Neely Tucker
Parents, here are some great ideas from the Library’s Center for Learning, Literacy and Engagement staff for activities with the kids while they're at home.
Posted in: Education
Posted by: Neely Tucker
The Library of Congress houses a multitude of papers, blueprints, recordings, drawings, images and artifacts that document the dazzling era of American invention, from the 1850s to the 1910s.
Posted in: Education, Manuscripts, Science, Technology
Posted by: Neely Tucker
The Library's "The Exquisite Corpse" project, a tag-team YA story told by a number of children's authors and illustrators, turns 10 this year.
Posted in: Education, National Library Service (NLS)
Posted by: Wendi Maloney
Kellie Taylor is the Library’s first-ever Albert Einstein Distinguished Educator. The fellowship program appoints accomplished K–12 teachers of science, technology, engineering and mathematics — the STEM fields — to collaborate with federal agencies and congressional offices in advancing STEM education across the country. Taylor has a doctorate in educational technology from Boise State University. She …
Posted in: Education, My Job, Researcher Stories, Science, Technology
Posted by: Neely Tucker
The Library is part of LibGuides, the international research aide.
Posted in: Education, Technology
Posted by: Neely Tucker
Four great children's books, free, for Children's Book Week.
Posted by: Wendi Maloney
Carolyn Bennett, a music at Wheeler Middle/High School in North Stonington, Connecticut, is a teacher-in-residence a the Library’s Learning and Innovation Office this year.
Posted in: Education, Music, Researcher Stories
Posted by: Wendi Maloney
This is a guest post by Amanda Reichenbach about a new American Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB) collection covering education reporting on public television. The AAPB is a collaboration between the Library of Congress and the Boston public broadcaster WGBH. Reichenbach worked on the release while interning last summer at the Library’s John W. Kluge …
Posted in: Audiovisual, Education, Exhibitions, New Online, Video