- If you have a thirst for scientific knowledge, there are many websites that can start to quench that thirst.
- American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
- ScienceStage.com.
- ScienceDaily.
- Science News.
- New York Times Science News.
- NOVA.
- HowStuffWorks.
How do I keep up with science news?
- Social media can be your friend.
- Subscribe to a popular science magazine.
- Get more out of your TV time.
- Don't expect scientific rigor from popular science.
- It's OK for things to be fun!
What is the best website to learn science?
- Teachers TryScience.
- HowStuffWorks.
- The Exploratorium.
- Science Toys.
- Bill Nye the Science Guy.
- Science News for Kids.
- BrainPOP.
- Beginner's Guide to Coding.
What are the best email newsletters?
- The Hustle. The Hustle is a daily newsletter that promises "business and tech in 5 minutes or less."
- NextDraft. NextDraft is a daily email written by a man named Dave Pell, which is a curation of the best web content of the day.
- REI.
- Austin Kleon.
- FandangoNOW.
- InVision.
- Community.is.
- Vox Sentences.
Which companies have the best newsletters?
- Litmus.
- The Washington Post.
- Lumi.
- Moz.
- Caterpillar.
- GetResponse.
- Goodreads.
- Brafton.
What are the best free newsletters?
- The Skimm. “theSkimm is the daily e-mail newsletter that gives you everything you need to start your day.
- Politico Playbook.
- The Daily Beast.
- ReadThisThing.
- The Daily Water Cooler.
- NY Times: What We're Reading.
- NextDraft.
- Muck Rack Daily.
What do the best newsletters contain?
- 3 key elements of all engaging newsletters.
- Choose your focus.
- Keep it simple, keep it catchy.
- Include third party content for more engaging newsletters.
- Include user-generated content.
- Connect to trending topics or events.
- Use social media as a teaser.
- Be consistent but provide something unique.