Advantages of the eEdition!
Your students live in a digital world. The e-Edition is an excellent interactive tool that helps you and your students meet technology and core curriculum learning objectives.
To register your class, click on the "Order" tab above and enter the information requested. At the time of the order you will create a user name and password to share with your class to access the e-Edition.
Kathryn Cates
501-378-3413
kcates@digital.wehco.com
Answer FIVE Geography questions each week based on major news events.
This Week's lesson:
UN adopts Ghana's slavery resolution
Social media giants lose two lawsuits blaming them for serious risks to young users
Visiting social media can be a daily compulsion that may feel addictive, in a sense. Now California jurors say that two tech giants, Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram) and Google (YouTube's parent), must pay $6 million total to compensate a ...

NASA's Night Sky Network
A monthly column on the latest space discoveries and technologies for elementary students (Updated Monthly)
Rare moment sperm whales help newborn to swim
Scientists have captured one of the most detailed observations of a sperm whale birth ever recorded in the wild. Two matrilines — independent, female-led groups — of sperm whales appeared to cooperate to assist in the calf’s birth. The group worked t...
Tap the wealth of information in your newspaper as a teaching tool:
⇒ Elementary (K-4)Science Audio webcasts: An exclusive partnership with Pulse of the Planet, updated daily with two-minute sound portraits of Planet Earth. Tracking the rhythms of nature, culture and science worldwide, blending interviews with extraordinary natural sounds.
How well do you keep up with the world around you? Take this week’s quiz to test your knowledge of recent national and world events.
Diversity, multiculturalism, worldwide events. You'll find plenty for classroom discussions in this listing of events.
This week's word in the news: RESPIRATORY
DEFINITION:
FOUND IN THE NEWS:
They weren’t warned to wear respiratory and other personal protection because the burning composite materials from the F-35 stealth fighter were releasing potentially harmful airborne particles and fibers, according to the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque.
The Albuquerque Journal -- 03/30/2026
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