Skip to content
30 STEM Links a Week
  • Menu  
    • Home
    • Email Newsletters
    • Extras
    • STEM Classifieds
    • Kids STEM Magazine
    • Search

:  Articles  Email Newsletters  Extras  STEM Classified Ads  Uncategorized

The Algorithm Beat

The Algorithm Beat

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

Users + Makers

Users + Makers

March 1, 2014 / 5 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

What is Design?

What is Design?

February 1, 2014 / 5 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Imposters and Kids Who Can’t Code

Imposters and Kids Who Can’t Code

December 1, 2013 / 7 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

How I Built This Magazine

How I Built This Magazine

November 1, 2013 / 9 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Open Source Security For Schools and Students

Open Source Security For Schools and Students

October 1, 2013 / 5 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Life Without Digits

Life Without Digits

September 1, 2013 / 5 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

Random Hacks of Kindness, Junior Edition

Random Hacks of Kindness, Junior Edition

August 1, 2013 / 5 minutes / The Last Word(s) / Tim Slavin

:  Articles  Email Newsletters  Extras  STEM Classified Ads  Uncategorized

Posts navigation

Newer posts

square logo

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.

About | Legal & Privacy | Technology Stack

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