A recent post was entitled '100 Ways Google Can Make You a Better Educator', which is full of great ideas using a wide variety of Google products including Google Earth for class exercises and experiments from setting up a science project to doing a scavenger hunt.
The related links below show a variety of ways to use Google Earth in the classroom.
Google Earth can be viewed on any browser. Opening Google on any browser will give you the same result.
google earth 3d is called google earth 5.0
There are many google and user-provided layers that give insight into the planet and its ecosystems. Also, there is good collection of geological data (e.g. climate change, earthquakes, etc.) available via the "Earth Knowledge Portal" that uses Google Earth as a web browser Plug-in. See related links for some examples.
I thought Forks didn't exist!
Finding the acceleration due to gravity by running an experiment with a simple pendulum will give you a figure that can be used to determine the mass of the earth
google earth
Google reported in 2011 that there were over a billion downloads of Google Earth. That includes downloads of the Google Earth desktop client, mobile apps and the Google Earth plug-in.
A Google Earth plug-in is a plug that automatically brings you to Google Earth.Answer#2Actually, the Google Earth plugin is an embedded version of Google Earth that runs within the web browser.
One uses Google Earth to get directions as Google Earth provides geographical information about places on the Earth. Google Earth was released twelve years ago in 2001.
Our classroom is working on a experiment
Yes. There Is A UFO On Google Earth.
well that's what google is for...:)