Haven't signed into your Scholastic account before?
Teachers, not yet a subscriber?
Subscribers receive access to the website and print magazine.
You are being redirecting to Scholastic's authentication page...
Announcements & Tutorials
How Students and Families Can Log In
1 min.
Setting Up Student View
Sharing Articles with Your Students
2 min.
Interactive Activities
4 min.
Sharing Videos with Students
Using Junior Scholastic with Educational Apps
5 min.
Join Our Facebook Group!
Exploring the Archives
Powerful Differentiation Tools
3 min.
World and U.S. Almanac & Atlas
Subscriber Only Resources
Access this article and hundreds more like it with a subscription to Junior Scholastic magazine.
Tech companies use design tricks and traps to keep you scrolling, but you can take back control.
Protests by Black teens and kids in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963 helped end legal segregation nationwide.
The capital of Indonesia is sinking, but officials have a plan to save it: by building a new capital.
Accessing healthy, affordable food is a struggle for millions of Americans.
A political cartoonist comments on Earth Day, litter, and the impact of pollution on the environment.
Consider the pros and cons of young people competing in organized sports, then decide if they’re too intense.
A young artist creates sculptures of endangered species to call attention to the problem of plastic trash.
The pandemic has contributed to a jump in the number of immigrants taking the oath to become U.S. citizens.
Scientists studying sewers under the Colosseum learn what snacks were popular with showgoers in ancient Rome.
A British fisherman reeled in a goldfish thought to be one of the largest of its kind.