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Activate Learning Launches Virtual Investigations® Built for OpenSciEd Elementary

Business

Activate Learning Launches Virtual Investigations® Built for OpenSciEd Elementary
Business

Business

Activate Learning Launches Virtual Investigations® Built for OpenSciEd Elementary

2026-04-29 06:43 Last Updated At:07:01

ANAHEIM, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr 28, 2026--

Activate Learning, a leading provider of investigation-centered science education resources, announced the launch of new Virtual Investigations® built for the OpenSciEd K–5 curriculum, first unveiled at the 2026 NSTA National Conference on Science Education in Anaheim, California (April 15–18). The first set is now available on the Activate Learning Digital Platform, with additional Virtual Investigations® rolling out over the coming months. The new K–5 offerings expand upon Activate Learning’s acclaimed Virtual Investigations® built for OpenSciEd Middle School, extending the same commitment to curriculum fidelity into the elementary grades.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260428032368/en/

The Same Investigation — In a Digital Format

Unlike supplemental digital tools that approximate the spirit of a curriculum, Activate Learning's Virtual Investigations® are high-fidelity replications of the actual OpenSciEd K–5 activities — true to the curriculum's storylines, driving questions, and sense-making approach. These are not similar investigations. They are the same investigations, delivered digitally, ensuring every student gets the intended learning experience and eliminating variability in outcomes.

"Our Virtual Investigations® are built for OpenSciEd K–5 — not just inspired by it," said Joy Reynolds, Chief Academic Officer at Activate Learning. "Teachers and students get the exact investigation, delivered digitally, with the same rigor and coherence they expect from OpenSciEd. We're excited to release the first set now and look forward to expanding our library in the months ahead."

Built to Support Teachers — and Every Student

Activate Learning's Virtual Investigations® address the practical realities teachers face every day: time constraints, the need to review or revisit lessons, and keeping absent students from falling behind.

"Elementary educators wear many hats, and time is always in short supply," said David Robertshaw, Chief Product Officer at Activate Learning. "Our Virtual Investigations® give teachers a powerful tool when they need to revisit a lesson without repeating the full physical investigation, or when a student misses class and needs to complete the same activity at home. A student who was absent gets the same investigation their classmates experienced — so no one falls behind. These investigations don't replace the classroom; they make it more resilient."

Real Use Cases, Real Impact

Building on a Proven Foundation

The K–5 Virtual Investigations® build on Activate Learning's highly regarded Virtual Investigations® for OpenSciEd Middle School — part of the company's certified version of OpenSciEd 6–8, which has earned an "All-Green" rating from EdReports. Together, they create a coherent digital science experience from kindergarten through middle school.

Unveiled at NSTA Anaheim 2026

Activate Learning first unveiled the development of the new Virtual Investigations® for OpenSciEd K–5 at the 2026 NSTA National Conference on Science Education in Anaheim, California (April 15–18), where the company connected with science educators from across the country and shared curriculum insights, interactive digital product demos, and professional learning sessions spanning elementary through high school. The K–5 Virtual Investigations® were showcased alongside Activate Learning’s full suite of NGSS-aligned programs, including OpenSciEd K–12, EarthComm 4th Edition, Active Integrated Physics and Chemistry™ (Active IPC), IQWST®, Activate Learning Insight™, and the Activate Learning Digital Platform.

Available on the Activate Learning Digital Platform

The Virtual Investigations® are available exclusively through the Activate Learning Digital Platform, which supports student accessibility and inclusion with embedded translation for 140+ languages and text-to-speech with read-along highlighting — seamlessly supporting in-person, hybrid, and at-home learning.

The first set of Virtual Investigations® for OpenSciEd K–5 is available now. Schools and districts interested in learning more or scheduling a demo can visit https://activatelearning.com/elementary-curriculum/openscied-elementary/.

About Activate Learning

Activate Learning is dedicated to transforming science education through investigation-centered, research-driven curriculum and digital tools. As a certified OpenSciEd distributor and professional learning provider, Activate Learning offers educators the digital platform, print materials, science kits, and professional learning to support successful OpenSciEd implementation from elementary through high school. Learn more at www.activatelearning.com.

About OpenSciEd

OpenSciEd was launched in 2018 as a nonprofit to address the need for high-quality, open-source science instructional materials and curriculum-based professional learning aligned to the Next Generation Science Standards. The OpenSciEd Elementary materials are made possible by the generous support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Walton Family Foundation, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Learn more at www.openscied.org.

Activate Learning at the National Conference on Science Education Anaheim 2026.

Activate Learning at the National Conference on Science Education Anaheim 2026.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — San Francisco has settled a two-year legal fight with its neighbor across the bay that will allow the city of Oakland to include “San Francisco” in its airport’s name if it doesn’t highlight the two words in any way.

The settlement announced Tuesday allows Oakland’s airport to be called “Oakland San Francisco Bay Airport,” but it bars the city from spotlighting “San Francisco” or “San Francisco Bay” in fonts, highlights, different colors or any other way. It also requires Oakland to use the word “bay” right after “San Francisco” and bans it from using the word “International” in the airport’s name, even though it provides international flights.

The spat began in 2024 after Oakland, a diverse port city often seen as the underdog in the Bay Area compared to its richer neighbor to the west, changed its airport’s name to “San Francisco-Oakland Bay Airport,” prompting San Francisco officials to sue over what they said was a trademark violation.

The two airports are across from each other on the San Francisco Bay and about 30 miles (48.28 kilometers) driving distance.

Oakland officials said the name modification was necessary to help travelers unfamiliar with the region place the city in the Bay Area. They said visitors often fly into San Francisco’s airport even if their destination is closer to the Oakland airport. The airport’s three-letter code OAK did not change.

“We’re proud Oakland fought for, and preserved the right to retain our airport’s full name that puts Oakland first and recognizes OAK’s location on the San Francisco Bay,” Mary Richardson, attorney for the Port of Oakland, which manages the airport, said in a statement.

San Francisco argued having “San Francisco” in Oakland’s airport name would confuse travelers, especially those flying in from abroad and those unfamiliar with the Bay Area. But on Tuesday, San Francisco officials had a friendlier tone.

“We are grateful to have reached a resolution in this matter,” San Francisco International Airport Director Mike Nakornkhet said. “This agreement provides clarity for travelers to make informed decisions about travel through our respective airports.”

Neither side admitted liability, and there was no monetary settlement.

San Francisco International Airport, known as SFO, is owned by the city, though technically located south of it.

FILE - Vehicles wait outside the international terminal at San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco, July 11, 2017. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

FILE - Vehicles wait outside the international terminal at San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco, July 11, 2017. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

FILE - Travelers walk toward the entrance of Oakland's international airport Nov. 13, 2024, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez, File)

FILE - Travelers walk toward the entrance of Oakland's international airport Nov. 13, 2024, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez, File)

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