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DragonflyTV pioneered a "real kids, real science" approach to children's science television and led to the development of the SciGirls television series. [2] DragonflyTV and SciGirls were funded in part by the National Science Foundation to provide a national forum for children's scientific investigations.
For example, John le Carré's 2001 The Constant Gardener, and its film adaptation, tells the tale of the testing of anti-tuberculosis drugs on unwitting subjects in Africa. [20] In the 1915 novel Anne of the Island, the third in the Anne of Green Gables series, Ruby Gillis, one of Anne's childhood friends, dies of "the galloping consumption". [21]
On July 30, 2017, PBS Kids and WGBH announced that Ruff Ruffman along with his two assistants Blossom and Chet will be making a comeback in a new digital series called The Ruff Ruffman Show, where they answer questions from real kids, take on challenges and learns the value of perseverance—all while modeling science inquiry skills. The ...
Beyond Tomorrow (TV series) The Big Bang (TV series) Bill Nye Saves the World; Bill Nye the Science Guy; Boffins (TV series) Brain Games (2011 TV series) The Brain with David Eagleman; Brainiac: Science Abuse; Building Giants (TV series)
In September 2007, the first-ever Mystery Hunters DVD was released in Canada, a three-episode collection timed for Halloween called Mystery Hunters: Beastly Beings and Monstrous Mysteries, and in the Fall of 2008, a Mystery Hunters/Doubting Dave guide to paranormal tricks and hoaxes called Gotcha! 18 Amazing Ways to Freak Out Your Friends will ...
Eyewitness, like most other shows of its kind, is a documentary series. Each half-hour episode focuses on a single subject in the field of natural science, such as the Solar System or the various functions of the human body, similar in form to the book series on which it was based, with most being based, in part or in whole, off of existing book titles at the time, with few exceptions (though ...
A DVD of the series was released in July 2001 and includes a 50-minute feature on The Making of the Human Body - A final overview that reveals the techniques and developments that made the series possible. [9] The series was adapted into a film released for IMAX cinemas, with Robert Winston returning to narrate. The film won the Giant Screen ...
According to the rules of the International Academy, the category is for "a fictional production (comedy, drama, or sitcom) intended for a young audience". [2] If the program submitted is a standalone TV Movie, it must fit the minimum format length of a televised half-hour time slot (i.e. 20+ minutes of content).