1. Bring millions of Smithsonian resources to your students.

Teachers can help students engage in deep examination of an image by using image annotation. Describe details and highlight notable information from your lesson.

Minimize resource information to just what your students need to know by adding an item to your collection, selecting the information panel, and clicking the description to edit to your liking.

The Hotspot Tool allows you to pinpoint areas on an image or document and provide further information.

2. Digital resources from across Smithsonian in a variety of media formats.

There are now over 2 million digitized resources with new ones being added constantly, including 3D scans which are available for download. Read more about Smithsonian digitalization efforts.

No one is limited to only Smithsonian resources. You can also add resources from your own website, a YouTube video, or any document into your collection for student review.

Check out this 3D replica of Abraham Lincoln.

3. Bring collections to where your students are.

Likewise, instructors can find items from the Smithsonian collection and embed them where learners already like to connect, be that a class website, Google Classroom, Moodle, or other tools.

Embed codes are easily found in the options of the Share button.

This is a collection about the Apollo 11 crew: