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Move Over, James Bond. OSINT Is Here

Move Over, James Bond. OSINT Is Here

June 2022 / 3 minutes / Computer Programming Projects & Puzzles for Kids / Notebook / The Last Word(s) / Ethan Pate

Glitch Art of Corruption

Glitch Art of Corruption

February 2022 / 4 minutes / Computer Programming Projects & Puzzles for Kids / Programming / The Last Word(s) / Clarissa Littler

An Experiment in Distance Education

An Experiment in Distance Education

August 2020 / 3 minutes / Teaching STEM for Teachers & Parents / The Last Word(s) / Tim McGuigan

December 2019 Last Words

December 1, 2019 / 1 minute / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Open Source Common Core?

Open Source Common Core?

December 1, 2014 / 4 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Playgrounds for Programmers

Playgrounds for Programmers

November 1, 2014 / 3 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Are Video Games Bad for Kids?

Are Video Games Bad for Kids?

October 1, 2014 / 7 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

20 Things to Do with a Computer

20 Things to Do with a Computer

September 1, 2014 / 3 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

The Panopticon

The Panopticon

August 1, 2014 / 6 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Where to Begin to Teach Kids Programming and Computer Science?

Where to Begin to Teach Kids Programming and Computer Science?

June 1, 2014 / 7 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

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I sent two emails a week with links to STEM/STEAM articles, news, and resources for kids, parents, teachers, librarians. My goal was to help educate, inspire, and amuse.

30 STEM Links was the natural evolution of a kids STEM computing magazine that I published for 11 years in print and online. It was called beanz magazine. This website has both the 11 years of magazine content and the one year of email newsletter content.

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Copyright © 2013-2025 Owl Hill Media, LLC.

beanz Magazine Testimonials

"I love beanz because it's got a lot of coding stuff and I want to try coding as a career. Also, it's got Scratch tips the books won't teach you."

— Lillian in Virginia

"As a former teacher turned homeschooling parent, I LOVE (love, love!) when cross-curricular learning takes place. Each of the projects and ideas included in beanz require a child to employ cross-curricular skills. A child isn't simply coding or creating a Roblox account. Kids are using math, science, art, or critical thinking."

— A Parent