Welcome
to the Sun Sentinel & Orlando Sentinel News in Education website. NIE provides newspapers, lessons, online activities and links for classrooms and homes. Just click on a picture or link, and you can download resources and activities at your fingertips.
Important Update: New eNewspaper Site
We've recently upgraded our eNewspaper websites, and the process for classroom access has changed.
Teachers and students will now log in using a custom access code on a dedicated page.
What you need to do:
Pre-registered administrators: An email with specific instructions and your new access code will be sent to you automatically from noreply@news-login.com. Please keep an eye out for it.
New registrations: You will receive your access email after you complete the application process.


Click here to download the PDF

Tap the wealth of information in your newspaper as a teaching tool:

Answer FIVE Geography questions each week based on major news events.
►Archive of Geography quizzes
Diversity, multiculturalism, worldwide events. You'll find plenty for classroom discussions in this listing of events.
Science Webcasts

Science Audio webcasts: An exclusive partnership with Pulse of the Planet, updated 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.

►Will oil freeway turn into toll road?
►Download the lesson
►Federal case brings verdict that Live Nation and Ticketmaster illegally overcharge concert fans

This week's word in the news: PETITIONER
DEFINITION:
A person who pleads with a governmental institution for a legal remedy or a redress of grievances, through the use of a petition.
FOUND IN THE NEWS:
While presenting the citizens’ petition for debate at the April 11 Spring Town Meeting, petitioners argued that ICE operations in Plymouth have “created fear” and “disrupted lives” among the immigrant community, leading to what they call a distrust of local police.
►The Boston Herald -- 04/20/2026