STEM educationFree STEM search engine is now mobile

Published 7 January 2013

Gooru — a free search engine for learning that brings together science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) educational materials on the Web — developed the Gooru Collections iPad app to bring thousands of assorted multimedia resources to teachers and students on the go

With the 16 December release of an iPad app, an educational search engine funded by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) has gone mobile

Gooru — a free search engine for learning that brings together science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) educational materials on the Web — developed the Gooru Collections iPad app to bring thousands of assorted multimedia resources to teachers and students on the go.

An ONR release reports that Gooru, launched with initial investment from ONR, provides a one-stop shop for fifth- to twelfth-graders and their teachers to discover and share high-quality videos, games, digital textbooks, quizzes, and other interactive products related to STEM and eventually other subjects.

ONR’s STEM efforts are looking for ways to inspire, engage and educate current and future STEM leaders,” said Cmdr. Joseph Cohn, ONR’s deputy director of research for STEM. “This technology promises to have a broad reach and would facilitate millions of students and teachers in developing a deeper understanding of a range of STEM disciplines.”

Last year, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced plans to strengthen the service’s future workforce by doubling the investment in STEM education over the next five years. The secretary shared this vision at a conference sponsored by ONR, which coordinates the Navy’s STEM efforts and offers a collaborative website at STEM2Stern.org.

ONR’s expertise in a variety of STEM initiatives has had a profound influence on Gooru’s development, said Dr. Prasad Ram, founder and CEO of Gooru.

“We view our partnership with ONR as going beyond a funding relationship, to leveraging all of ONR’s experience in the STEM space to help define, develop and continuously innovate on Gooru,” Ram said. “Continued funding from ONR has helped to get us to this point and will allow us to fulfill our mission to bring the highest quality STEM education to every American student.”

Gooru curates, auto-tags and contextualizes millions of STEM related web resources to get the most out of searches. It ranks and suggests items for students and teachers based on usage data, user input, search query logs and social signals.

“The Gooru platform has virtually eliminated many of the obstacles my teachers encounter that prevent significant technological integration to occur [in] today’s classroom,” said Gregory Green, principal of Clintondale High School in Clinton Township, Mich. “Through Gooru, my teachers can immediately have an extensive online digital resource bank without having to spend countless hours researching and organizing sharable classroom content.”

ONR is currently seeking proposals for developing other innovative solutions that will directly support the maintenance of a robust STEM workforce through education at the K-12, undergraduate and graduate levels.