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Network, 4
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CIESE Online Learning,
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MORE GREAT RESOURCES/LINKS FOR TEACHERS
Science & Math Games
— Fun-Based Learning offers several free science and math games that
teach chemistry concepts, graphing, and more. Free, or subscribe and
remove the Google ads.
Journey of
Democracy — Website commemorating the 400th anniversary of
the Jamestown landing offers K-12 educational resources and lesson
plans.
National Women's Hall of Fame
— American women who have made significant national or global
contributions in the fields of arts, athletics, business, education,
government, the humanities, philanthropy, and science.
The History Lab —
The History Lab offers teachers a template for creating primary
source based lessons and activities for students, with a focus on
inquiry learning. The completed labs are archived for use by anyone.
Registration is free.
600 Successful Lesson Plans — Created and contributed by
teachers who've used them successfully in their classrooms. Reviewed
at Education World, where you can find many other
Grades 6-8 site reviews!
Forensics in
the Classroom — If your students are interested in crime
scene investigation, check out this free offering from Court TV—
free curriculum units on forensic science for middle and high school
students.
Calendars Through the
Ages — How did various cultures develop their calendars?
Which calendars are still is use today? What is their astronomical
basis? How did the ancients decide on a "week" and "month" and how
did the names of the days develop? A great resource for teaching
about the ways we've chosen to structure time!
Project Constellation — This NASA website was created to
serve as a place the public can learn about Project Constellation,
which is the long-term project that will once again take humans back
to the moon for a variety of scientific endeavors. Check out the
Lunar Mission Animation!
The Cool Spot — The
Cool Spot, created by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism, is based on a curriculum for grades 6-8 developed by the
University of Michigan. Its goal is to give young teens a clear
picture of alcohol abuse among their peers.
See Education World review.
Resources for Writing — So much of today's push around
adolescent literacy involves reading. However, there are invaluable
resources on the writing end, too. Here's a collection of them.
Exploring the Environment
— Exploring the Environment includes twenty-five online
modules for grades 5-8 and 9-12 that cover such topics as coral
reefs, El Nino, climate change, volcanoes and much more.
Reach Every Child —
Horace Mann and teacher Alan Haskvitz developed this site of
educational resources for teachers and students. It includes lesson
plans to make reaching students and using technology easier.
Running English Pilot
Academy — This K-12 project, developed by a Canadian K-12
educator who is in training for space exploration, blends elements
of health, communication and science through activities that take
place in a natural outdoor setting. Can't be explained in a few
words, so check it out!
Best Foods, Worst Foods
— This site, developed by students, promotes healthy eating in an
entertaining fashion.
Solar Eclipse — On March 29, 2006, many of the Earth's
inhabitants will be able to see a total or partial eclipse of the
Sun. This story at Education World includes links to many resources
that can prepare students for this astronomical event.
Newton's Castle
— Students will learn about Earth's rotation, optical illusions,
logic puzzles, color, and more — and find thought-provoking
questions to foster further discussion.
Beyond the Fire
— Stories of 15 teenagers who came to the U.S. from war zones.
Includes talk section for teachers to discuss how they are using the
site in their own classrooms.
Algebra Solutions
— This A+ rated site is great for students wanting to brush up on
their algebra skills or get help with homework assignments, says
Education World.
Winter
Olympics — You'll find a nice set of resource links about
the 2006 Winter Olympics at the EduHound website, including lesson
plans and clip art for educators.
BBC Civilizations — At this interactive website, recommended
by a MS history teacher, students can visually see the development
of major civilizations and religions through time. "It uses web
technology to reveal the sweep of historical forces and the rise and
fall of great empires and ideas over 5000 years in a way that no
book could ever do."
New York Public Library Digital Gallery — This comprehensive
digital gallery provides a wealth of rich media for use in the
classroom. With the abundance of material in the databases, visitors
may find it a little overwhelming at first glance but there are user
friendly help pages available for searching, browsing, and user
guides. Read this Education World review and find a link to the
site.
Boston Tea
Party – On December 16, 1773, a small group of American
colonists (many of them dressed up as Mohawk Indians) sneaked onto
three ships in the Boston harbor, and dumped more than 300 cases of
English tea overboard as a protest against British taxation. The
British responded with several harsh measures that ended up uniting
the colonists in their quest for independence. Barbara J. Feldman,
editor of the Surfing the Net with Kids website, offers a
collection of resources about the famous event. To view some period
images, visit
this page at the Awesome Stories website: If you click on "tea,"
you'll see an actual bottle of the tea thrown into the harbor!
December Holiday Sites — Don't let the December holidays
disrupt the learning in your classroom, says Education World.
This collection of online resources will help incorporate them into
your real learning activities—and provide a little fun as well.
Includes resources for Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and Christmas.
Unraveling King Tut's Mysteries — National Geographic offers
a detailed online look at the new Tutankhamen American tour.
World History
Matters —This resource-rich site offers history teachers
guides to primary sources, multimedia case studies on how to analyze
documents, teaching sources and more.
Free Classics —At
the Classic Reader website, you'll find the complete texts of many
classic books and short stories. No longer under copyright, these
free materials can be downloaded and used as you like.
Eco-Classrooms
—The vision of Hands on the Land is to provide a national
network of field classrooms to enhance kindergarten through high
school student-learning. The site is designed primarily for teachers
and program providers (rated A+ by Education World.)
Insects on the Web! — Enjoy the enthralling gallery of
beetle photos on the Living
Jewels Web site and MicroAngela's eerie close-ups of common
insects taken with an electron microscope. This article recommends
other links to sites with insect-related information, puzzles and
downloadable masks.
Historic Maps in K-12
Classrooms — Historic Maps is a project of the Newberry
Library¹s Center for the History of Cartography. It features lesson
plans built around historically significant map documents that
support a variety of social studies, history and geography curricula
The site won
Education World's A+ designation.
Algebra Ideas
— A middle grades teacher writes: "This website will keep you and
your students busy for a lifetime. The questions are absolutely
engaging and ask you to think about things you didn't think you
could."
The Journey to Planet Earth Action Kit — Explores the issues
about the Earth's future environment raised in the recent PBS
series. You'll find hands-on activities for middle school students
in and out of the classroom.
Funny Poems
— April is National Poetry Month and expert websurfer Barbara
Feldman has pulled together links to selections of "funny poems" by
five poets. At the Kenn
Nesbitt site, you'll also find advice for kids on how to write
funny poetry.
Lots of Book Reviews! –
Allreaders.com features detailed book reviews from all genres
as well as presenting featured authors, latest book reviews of your
favorite books, or you can enter a book review and get listed as a
scholar. You'll find lots of adolescent literature — and several
ways to search, including title, author, plot, genre, main
character, main adversary, setting, and style!
Alcatraz Island
— From the 1930s to 1960s, Alcatraz was the the nation's most
infamous maximum security prison, housing inmates such as Al Capone
& George "Machine Gun" Kelly. Before the prison was created, the
island was home to American Indians. Today, it is one of San
Francisco's most prominent tourist attractions. This National Park
Service site tells the story of the island and the prison. Sure to
engage middle schoolers!
Poetry Slam PowerPoint Style! — Students select poems,
create PowerPoint presentations that use graphics and text to
enhance those poems, and then display their presentations as they
read their poems aloud. Includes a lesson plan.
Underwater
Volcano — NeMO is a seafloor observatory at an active
underwater volcano. This multimedia site from NOAA allows students
to explore a seafloor observatory geographically or by topic. It
includes animations, fly-through movies and an
interactive
diving simulation!
Tuskegee
Airmen — A selection of resources about the first black
Americans to become military pilots who fought both fascism and
racism during World War II. (Surfing with Kids)
A Tapestry of Time
and Terrain – This A+ site from the United States Geological
Survey features a "digital tapestry" of the continental United
States, outlining the geologic story over the last 2.6 billion years
in a highly visual way. Puzzles, a movie—and a PDF download of the
beautiful map.
In Pursuit of
Tolerance – Edmund Burke, an eighteenth-century writer and
philosopher said "The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is
for good men to do nothing." If spreading tolerance and stopping
hatred is important to you, these sites gathered by Surfing the
Net with Kids offer both historical perspective and concrete
action items
Show Biz Science – Children's science writer Vicki Cobb
features fun science activities in her "Show-Biz Science" column at
Education World. Check out, for example, "I'm Dreaming of a
Bright Holiday" (properties of light); "Mayonnaise Have Seen the
Glory" (emulsions), "Show-Stopping Dropping" (gravity/physics) and
many more!
Textmapping –
Textmapping is a graphic organizer technique that can be used to
teach reading comprehension and writing skills, study skills, and
course content. This site is a free resource for teachers with LOTS
of lesson guides and free online training.
Access Excellence
– Access Excellence is a national educational program that provides
health, biology and life science teachers access to critical sources
of new scientific information. Among the many website resources: The
Mystery Spot – Interactive, online scientific mysteries developed by
Access Excellence for classroom use.
Dinosphere – "Now You're in THEIR World." A terrific website
of the Indianapolis Children's Museum, exploring that favorite topic
of many middle schoolers – dinosaurs. There's a special Webquest for
Gr. 6-8, "Who Should Own the Bones?", available in English and
Spanish.
For Cutting-Edge
Librarians – Whether you're a school or public librarian,
Jenny Levine should be on your list of Internet mavens. Her blog is
one of the best ways to keep up with the Web-driven information
revolution. Highly recommended by several MS media specialists.
Whiteboards – Students love working on their own
whiteboards; it's a great way of keeping an entire class actively
involved in a lesson. Education World offers five examples.
Ripley's Freaky Fridays – This Live Chat program at ePALS (every Friday from September 17 to
November 19) will feature items from Ripley's Believe It or Not!
There's a teacher's guide with discussion topics designed to engage
students.
The Lesson Plans Page
– This ad-supported website offers more than 2,500 free lesson plans
– plus links to many other education resources, including
fund-raising ideas,
inspiring
teacher stories, job-hunting tips and more.
Effective Classroom Management Techniques – Sage advice from
classroom management expert Fred Jones, including 12 teacher-tested
tips for behavior management. At Education World.
A Guide for New Teachers – Today's new teachers have many
more resources available to support them than teachers did 20 years
ago. For example, they can rely on the advice of Yvonne Bender,
author of the
New Teacher's Handbook. Read this interview with Bender at
Education World.
Teachable Moments
– TeachableMoment.org brings current topics in the news to
the classroom by providing K-12 educators with "timely teaching
ideas to encourage critical thinking on issues of the day."
Reducing Teacher Burnout – A teacher friend says of these
tips: "They're pretty general, but good advice nonetheless for our
new–and mature–teachers as we gear up and begin planning for next
school year."
eThemes
– Developed initially for Missouri educators, eThemes is an
extensive database of content-rich, age-appropriate website
resources organized around specific themes. All the sites and have
reviewed and approved as child-safe. Currently, there are more than
750 eThemes on topics ranging from Africa to Yellowstone National
Park.
ISS EarthKAM
– Earth Knowledge Acquired by Middle school Students is a NASA
education program that provides excellent activities and learning
guides for learning about Earth through digital pictures taken from
the International Space Station. "Incredibly interesting site," says
Education World.
Books for Middle Readers
– FlamingNet is a father-son website featuring recommended books for
students aged 8-16 and "their parents, grandparents, and teachers,
who are looking for books to recommend." It includes curent and
classic titles, all read by 13-year-old Seth Cassel and rated 0-10
(with some help from Amazon). There's a special section on the Civil
War.
Science
Snacks - These pages at the Exploratorium website are full
of Snacks — but they're not the kind you eat. They're the kind you
can learn from and have fun with. Exploratorium Science Snacks are
miniature versions of some of the most popular exhibits at San
Francisco's museum of
science, art and human perception.
TeenReads -
Teenreads.com gives teens a place to talk about their favorite books
and find the hippest new titles. It includes info and features about
their favorite authors, books, series and characters. Rated "A" by
Education World.
Very Cool Tools - Our correspondent writes: "During my
workshop today I learned of some amazing online tools for teachers.
The virtual manipulative site really fascinates me!"You'll find
links to all 25 tools at this archive page.
Before, During and After the Civil War - This selection of
images at the American Memory (Library of Congress) website presents
a chronological overview of the war as depicted in items from the
Civil War collections at the New York Historical Society. Be sure to
search for other Civil War materials at the site!
ESL Gold - This site is
truly a goldmine for ESL teachers and students, and others who work
with ESL learners. ESL Gold "strives to reduce your preparation time
by providing clear, easy-to-access handouts, lesson plans and
exercises that you can print out and take directly to class."
Study Guides and Strategies
- This commercial-free site offers a wide variety of information
about effective study -- and much more. Topics include: preparing to
learn; studying; classroom participation; learning with others;
project skills; reading skills; preparing for tests; taking tests;
writing basics; math and science, and "webtruth.".
The Smithsonian
Websites - The Smithsonian Institution is not a single
museum, but rather the world's largest collection of museums
(sixteen) and affiliate museums (129), housing 143 million objects
and hosting 45 million visitors a year. These Smithsonian sites are
a few of web wizard Barbara Feldman's favorites.
NASA Solar System Exploration
- NASA's main website for the unmanned exploration of the solar
system offers people-friendly information on the planets and bodies
in our solar system and the robotic missions sent out to explore
these worlds. It's big! Here's the
site map.
And kids will love
Drive a Mars
Rover, at the Planetary Society website.
The Middle School Hub -
Middle School Hub is an ad-free interactive learning center that
features educational games, puzzles, quizzes, and spelling
activities. It also includes subject guides for English language
arts, math, science, and social studies.
Student
Intervention Resources - These downloadable resources at the
Intervention Central support a problem-solving model in which
teachers work collegially with their peers to develop effective
teaching and behavior management strategies for struggling students.
Visible Earth - A
searchable NASA directory of images,visualizations, & animations of
Earth. Topics include soils, clouds, storms, hurricanes, droughts,
precipitation, vegetation, oceans, sea ice, human population, land
use, erosion, fires, rocks, minerals, regions, & countries.
Solve Medical Mysteries! -
This interactive online game at the Rice University website lets
students solve medical mysteries and learn how infectious diseases
are spread. Three "Missions" teach the fundamentals of microbiology,
infectious diseases, and epidemiology. They include virtual labs and
are aligned with National Science Education Content Standards.
Big Dig
Archaeology -From 1993-98 more than 4,400 bargeloads of dirt
were taken to Spectacle Island in Boston Harbor, where an old dump
made way for a new park. The Big Dig website is an overview of a
1992 archaeological dig (done before work began on the island) which
produced a wealth of information on Native American culture and
lifestyle.
Pursuing
Tolerance - Edmund Burke, an eighteenth-century writer and
philosopher said "The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is
for good men to do nothing." If spreading tolerance and stopping
hatred is important to you, these sites at Surfing the Web with Kids
offer both historical perspective and concrete action items.
A "Real" Webquest - This webquest for 5th grade world
history was recently praised by WQ guru Bernie Dodge during one of
his online training sessions. As Dodge says, a true Webquest
challenges students to develop and use higher order thinking skills.
Earth Observatory
- NASA's "home planet" website won the 2003 Webby Award for best
education website. Earth Observatory provides freely accessible new
satellite imagery and scientific information, focused on Earth's
climate and environmental change. All materials are available for
re-use, except where copyright is indicated.
TeenReads - Part of the
Book Report Network, Teenreads.com is described as "THE place online
for teens to talk about their fave books --- and find the hippest
new titles!" Visitors to the site will find book reviews and
highlights, newsletters, author spotlights, book club information,
reading guides for teens, and much more.
BioInteractive - Education World describes this site
developed by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute as "extraordinary"
and "highly interactive...for students and teachers of biology."
Read the EW review and find a link to the site.
The Laughing Classroom
- We rarely promote something you have to pay for in this space. But
so many teachers have told us how this book has enriched their
classrooms that we're making an exception. And the price is right!
Kids Hub - Kids Hub is an
online interactive learning center that features free spelling
activities, educational games, puzzles, and quizzes. See the middle
school directory for a long list of schools that have linked to this
activity-oriented website, developed by a pair of web designers who
specialize in education websites.
Teach Vietnam -
Echoes From The Wall offers a wealth of resources about the Vietnam
War experience. Lesson plans may be accessed through the Teachers'
Guide link on the Educators page. Sponsored by Vietnam Veterans
Memorial Fund.
Science
Hangman - Here's a fun site, developed by science educators,
where students can improve their science vocabulary and enjoy the
familiar Hangman word game. Select from many categories, including
6th/7th/8th grade science.
EvaluTech - The Southern Regional Education Board (SREB)
provides this searchable database that contains more than 7000
reviews of instructional materials, including computer software,
audio/visual materials, CD-ROM-based reference databases, websites,
and print materials.
SuperThinkers -This
Flash-driven website features a set of original games and
interactive mysteries designed to foster literacy and
problem-solving. Created by children's book author Peter H. Reynolds
and his creative team at Emmy Award-winning FableVision.
The Race for DNA - Science teachers will want to explore
this special collection at Oregon State University, documenting the
scientific (and very human) competition to be first to describe the
double helix structure of DNA. The collection draws on the papers
and work of Nobel laureate
Linus Pauling. There's rich material here for a collaborative
project among history and science teachers.
Teaching about War - Education World offers educators expert
tips on how to address the issues of war and terrorism with their
students. Included: Strategies for different age groups.
Discovery School -
Education World calls this site "enormously impressive" with lots of
valuable resources for teachers and students. And it's
well-organized, too!
Very Cool Tools - Our correspondent writes: "During my
workshop today I learned of some amazing online tools for teachers.
The virtual manipulative site really fascinates me!"You'll find
links to all 25 tools at this archive page.
Inventing -
"Everything that can be invented has been invented." proclaimed
Charles Duell, Director of the U.S. Patent Office, arguing in 1899
for the closure of his department. It seems he was wrong. The U.S.
Patent Office is still busy. And the Web is full of inventions,
inventors and advice on inventing. (Surfing the Net with Kids)
It's My Life -
This interactive health site, funded by the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, focuses on mental health and relationship issues that
children face in their everyday lives. Lots of color, cute graphics,
and easily read text make this site appealing. RealVideo plug-in is
needed to view the video clips. (Education World A+)
Vietnam Women's
Memorial Project - Nearly 10,000 women actually served
in-country during the Vietnam conflict. Articles describe the types
of jobs women performed during the war. Also includes first person
narratives from women veterans, information about the memorial, and
links to more information.
Japanese-American
Experience in WWII - "Life Interrupted: The Japanese
American Experience in WW II Arkansas" shares the history of two
Arkansas internment camps. "A beautiful interface (Flash) leads to a
variety of resources for teachers, students, and others with an
interest in History and/or Cultural Studies. Includes an interactive
timeline, photos, VR panoramas." (Blue Web'n review).
Project-Based Learning
Website - This free professional development module from The
George Lucas Educational Foundation can be used as a self-study
course or as a staff development presentation. The Web-based,
interactive modules answer the what, why, and how of project-based
learning and include video clips of real teachers, students, and
schools implementing project-based learning.
Fast Break!
- The NCAA offers a set of teacher-authored lesson plans (K-8)
in six core subjects, all tied to national standards, good behavior,
and college basketball! Participating classes can win prizes.
An American Fairy Tale
- This website, developed to accompany the Library of Congress
exhibition of Frank Baum and the Wizard of Oz, shares history, the
colorful illustrations and many artifacts. An integrated LA-history
lesson for sure!
Noodle Quest
– "Wow!," writes a teacher. "This amazing Web research tool
actually answers the inevitable first question: 'Where do I start?'
Just answer the seven multiple-choice questions starting with 'Are
you a kid, pretty new to the Internet, or an Internet wizard?" and
click 'Show Me a Research Strategy.' This is my pick of the day
because of the variety and quality of the research sites it
unearths."
ClassZone/Web
Research Guide – This tutorial helps teach
middle-school students to research, evaluate and cite websites.
Itbegins with a quiz to evaluate how much students know about the
Internet and offers five lessons. The first explores the advantages
of both the Web and traditional library research.
The Kids
Philosophy Slam – This annual program is designed to make
philosophy fun and accessible to all kids in grades K-12, as well as
to help promote critical thinking skills and encourage dialogue with
other students and adults. The Philosophy Slam asks kids to answer a
philosophical question. This year, it's "What is the Meaning of
Life?" Students can express themselves in words, artwork, poetry or
song. Each grade level has its own national winner,
Extreme Survival – This site at The Learning Channel can be
used as both a resource and a jumping off place for assignments. For
example, students can read survival stories from around the world
and then write and share their own story. We learned a lot taking
the survival quiz.
Congress for Kids -
Learning about government doesn't have to be boring. This site gives
students access to interactive, fun-filled experiences designed to
teach about the foundation of our federal government and how its
actions affect all of us.
The Exploratorium -
One of the first science museums to build a site on the Web, the
Exploratorium site offers more than 10,000 Web pages and hundreds of
sound and video files, exploring hundreds of different topics.
MythWeb -
Mythology is an easy sell for many students, but this site makes it
even more fun. Illustrated with cartoon characters, the site uses
graphics and colors to tell the tales of gods and heroes. There's a
section for teachers, too.
Websites Sorted by Dewey
Numbers - Created and maintained by a school librarian, the
Dewey Browse website offers a selection of student-friendly websites
in each of the Dewey Decimal System categories. It's not one-stop
shopping, but it's mighty handy! See, for example,
the 300s.
Global Museum –
Current science and social studies "stuff," with lots of articles
and great teasers to entice kids. Sign up for the weekly newsletter
and browse!
Literary Elements – Several of our middle grades
language arts friends recommend this page at the University of South
Florida website. It's a skinny on literary elements of fiction,
covering character, plot, setting, theme, style, point of view and
tone. Very handy!
ThinkQuest
2002 – ThinkQuest Internet Challenge is an opportunity for
young webmasters (from grades three through twelve) to show off
their skills by developing an educational Web site. Find out more
and peruse a list of this year's
national winners.
(At "Surfing the Net with Kids")
Flying Turtle Exploring
– Here's a smart, fun site where students (and teachers) can explore
energy and other basic science principles. Creator David Watson
likes to demonstrate how the same fundamental principles control
nature, living organisms, and human technology. "The articles are
carefully researched, accurate, easy to understand, and according to
my e-mail responses, funny," he writes. We had a great time
exploring Flying Turtle Exploring!
Fire Wars –
With wildfires raging in Colorado (June 2002), this resource page at
the NOVA website is especially timely. It's a companion to the May
NOVA special "Fire Wars" about the impact of wildfires on humans and
nature. A teacher's guide accompanies the site, offering ideas for
discussion and activities that can be used alone or with the
television program.
Medicine and Madison
Avenue -- This advertising archive helps illustrate the
variety and evolution of marketing images from the 1910s through the
1950s. The collection represents a wide range of products such as
cough and cold remedies, laxatives and indigestion aids, and
vitamins and tonics, among others. Useful in media literacy and U.S.
History classes.
Silk Road Seattle
- This education project follows the "Silk Road" theme to explore
cultural interaction across Eurasia from the beginning of the Common
Era (A. D.) to the Sixteenth Century. Suitable for middle and high
school students. And see this
related news story about Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road project.
++Edison School - This website developed by the Smithsonian
Institution examines several inventions of American genius Thomas
Edison, including the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, & electric
light bulb. Students can learn about his life and create their own
light bulb.
Also visit the American Memory site "Thank You, Mr. Edison:
Electricity, Innovation, & Social Change," which includes four
student lessons and teacher materials.
Civil War
Resources - More than 600,000 Americans gave their lives for
their country in the Civil War (1861-1865); more than any other war
in our history. Although the North prevailed over the South, the
grief and bitterness caused by the violence healed very slowly.
Learn more at these sites selected for "Surfing the Net with Kids."
You'll find an excerpt from "Africans in America," some primary
source material about camp life at Gettysburg, and more.
Raptors in the City
- Raptors in the City introduces students to a recent phenomenon --
peregrine falcons who are homesteading in urban landscapes. The
program is rich in educational content, based on national science
and technology standards. It has the special goal of reaching
low-income urban kids, a group that has been historically
underconnected with technology. Students can follow the birth cycle
of the falcons, via webcams, and much more!
Media
Literacy Clearinghouse
- If you're looking for information, articles, and lesson plans
designed to help teachers integrate media literacy into classroom
instruction, the Media Literacy Clearinghouse is the place to go.
Teachers will find a rich resource for helping their students
understand the role and impact of media in our lives. (Education
World review)
+Math Problem of the Week
- Students (and teachers) can try to solve the "Middle School
Problem of the Week" at the Math Forum website. Students can submit
their answers at this page, where teachers will find a link to an
archive of
previous problems and solutions. Also, there's always a link to
"last week's solution."
Riverdeep -- This
outstanding education resource site, based in Canada, offers both
free and subscription-based material for students and teachers in
many subject areas. Science teachers, for example, will see the
potential in
this teacher background article about cow burping and the ozone
layer! For starters, examine an issue of Riverdeep's
Currents
magazine.
Geography4Kids
-- This interactive site (Grs. 3-8) explores the basics of physical
geography (not maps and gross domestic products). "Physical
geography is all about the Earth and the things that happen on
Earth. Humans are only one part of the overall equation." The site
includes an easy search, many activities and downloads, and
cross-interaction with two companion sites:
Chem4Kids and
Biology4Kids.
So
You Have to Do a Research Project? -- This site offers tips
and strategies for starting, developing, and completing research
projects for grades 3-8. The site encourages students to follow the
links provided to complete six major steps (define the problem,
decide the source of information, locate sources, take notes,
organize, and evaluate) for developing a research project. Included
is a printable KWHL (what you already Know, What you need to know,
How you will find out, and what you Learned) chart for organizing
thoughts. A chart will help decide which information tools to use.
What Kids Can Do --
This recently established national organization has a great website
and a great purpose: to document "the value of young people working
with teachers and other adults on projects that combine powerful
learning with public purpose for an audience of educators and policy
makers, journalists, community members, and students." Look what
these kids can do!
Marco Polo! -- The
MarcoPolo program provides no-cost, standards-based Internet content
for the K-12 teacher and classroom, developed by the nation's
content experts. Online resources include panel-reviewed links to
top sites in many disciplines, professionally developed lesson
plans, classroom activities, materials to help with daily classroom
planning, and powerful search engines.
Read how technology coach and MiddleWeb diarist Marsha Ratzel
uses this site.
Sports Media -- This
content-heavy site provides a wealth of information for P.E.
teachers and students, including lesson plans, tips, drills,
activities and other teaching aids for the physical education
teacher.
Story Arts Online --
Designed to help educators improve their storytelling skills. Users
can explore ways to practice storytelling, such as retelling
folktales and collecting family stories. Teachers will find lesson
plans, activities, and articles with fresh ideas for using
storytelling to teach language arts to students. A+ from Education
World.
Froguts.com -- Yuck. A site
only a science teacher could love! Froguts is a free virtual online
frog dissection that uses photos of frogs recycled from schools (Gr.
6-12). Interactive site uses Flash technology. Visitors need Flash
Player 5.0, which is available at the site. A+ from Education World.
Underground Railroad
-- Good resources supported by the National Underground Railroad
Freedom Center. Clickable map shows locations of railroad stops. A
People section that contains stories of the work of people involved
in the abolitionist movement.
Money Central
Station -- The Bureau of Engraving and Printing presents
Money Central Station to teach kids ages 5-13 about money and
counterfeiting.
Inventing Modern
America -- Celebrates the best of American ingenuity and
inventiveness by exploring the life and work of five of modern
innovators. Choose one of the inventors' qualities - courage,
insight, know-how, vision, and perseverance - to find out more.
English
Idioms
-- Birds of a feather flock together, and every middle grades
language arts teacher who's tried to explain English idioms will
want to flock to this website. GoEnglish.com has hundreds of idiom
definitions, a free weekly newsletter, and an index of past daily
entries
Hammurabi's Code -- Includes text of the historic code,
background, teacher's page, and an activity that lets students
"solve" some problems faced by the Priest King.
Lord of the
Rings -- A collection of links related to the epic fantasy
series
Liberian
Folk Tales -- The stories used in this lesson were collected
by the author while serving as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Liberia,
West Africa, in a town surrounded by the rainforest, or "the bush."
The tales are "kid - tested" with students of all ages. Good
introduction to the wealth of African culture and history.
World Capital and
Geography Quizzes -- This comprehensive teacher-created site
includes 1200 interactive geography quizzes, some with maps.
Philosophy Slam
-- The Kids Philosophy Slam is a contest designed to make philosophy
accessible and fun for kids of all ages and abilities and promote
philosophical dialog between kids and adults. This year's topic: "Is
the Nature of Humankind Good or Evil?" Cash prizes and a chance to
be named the nation's "most philosophical school." Deadline is
January 21.
Immigration Stories -- A complete, ready-to-use resource
from Scholastic for grades 4-8. Includes an interactive tour of
Ellis Island, and stories about young immigrants past and present.
North American
Slave Narratives -- When completed, this site will include
all the narratives of fugitive and former slaves published in
broadsides, pamphlets, or book form in English up to 1920 and many
of the biographies of fugitive and former slaves published in
English before 1920. (U. of North Carolina)
Climate Change
-- These student/teacher resources have been developed by the
Institute for Global Environmental Strategies. Among those focused
on the middle grades: Global Balance, El Niño, Water, and What Could
a Hurricane Do to My Home?
Young
Internet Entrepreneurs -- In 1996, company executive Tom
Williams was seventeen. Designer Benjamin Carson was thirteen. Web
master Monika Bough was twelve. Blue Web'n Reviews suggests that
teachers wow their middle grades students with these tales of the
"young, smart, and online." (PBS)
Teaching Students to Cite Sources -- "Noodlebibs is an
excellent resource which teaches how to properly cite information,"
writes MiddleWeb diarist and technology integration coach Marsha
Ratzel. "I have used it with my students to great success." Another
middle grades teacher recommends
KidsConnect
(sponsored by ALA) as a good resource to help students evaluate the
quality of information they find on the Web.
Post Your Student/Parent
Notes on the Web -- This free service at the Learning
Network comes highly recommended by yet another MiddleWeb diarist,
Joanne Payling. "I LOVE it," she says. "Very easy to start and
update and easy for students and parents to access."
Greenhouse Gases -- Exercises, links and information on
the issues of greenhouse gases and climate change, designed for
middle and high school students by Brown University.
Poetry Express --
Blue Web'n Reviews says the Poetry Express feature 15 Poems You Can
Write Now is "a great resource for teachers looking for poetry
activities. Most of the activities have good examples for students,
while leaving room for creativity."
Founding Fathers
-- The Claremont Institute has developed a website based on a PBS
documentary about George Washington. It's interactive and emphasizes
character and principle. Includes lesson plans. The Institute also
invites you to visit its
collection of writings on the founding of America and a
step-by-step guide to the political principles of constitutional
government.
" History Firsthand" -- Designed to help K-6 students
understand primary sources. Students learn how archival collections
are organized, how to interpret artifacts and documents, how to use
primary sources to tell a story, and how to do online research. At
the Library of Congress.
Human Genome Project Education Resources -- Offers
curriculum modules, a newsletter, a molecular genetics primer,
teaching aids, and other learning resources related to genetics.
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The Civil War
Years -- This Historical New York Times Project is
divided into Overview (by year), Topics (Battles, Military,
Politics, Relations Among the States, and Social Issues), and
Articles of Note. Each section contains selected articles drawn
from the pages of the New York Times.
Children's Historical
Literature -- At this Website, the CHILDE project
presents well over 1,000 images from children's books from six
collections in England, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Germany.
Most of the books were published before 1890. Search for images
by author, title, illustrator, or free text.
Find out about nature in your
own backyard! -- The ENature website was mentioned in a
recent
diary entry by Marsha Ratzel. Have students go to the
homepage and enter an email address and their zip code. Presto!
Page after page of descriptions about the critters who live in
your neighborhood.
Sharks
-- Roughly fifty of the approximately 350 species of sharks are
considered dangerous for human swimmers. Annual worldwide shark
attacks continue to average about 100 per year. Whether sharks
scare you or fascinate you, you can learn more at these five
sites. (Surfing the 'Net)
Teach With Movies
-- At times, movies are appropriate teaching tools. This site
gives you some discussion questions (and perhaps essay topics)
for more than 200 movies. Search by keyword or browse
alphabetically, by culture, or for character development issues.
Descriptions include benefits, possible problems or issues
raised by the movie, and background. Check out the list of
Movies Not Recommended as Teaching Tools. (Internet Scout)
Area and Perimeter -- Narinder Jeet Makkar, who
teaches at Salwan Public School in New Delhi, India, submitted
this lesson at Education World. It's designed to help students
discover the formulas for computing area and perimeter of
squares and rectangles.
Study
Skills -- Achieving success in school isn't always easy,
but it is attainable if you put your mind to it. Step one is
improving your study skills. Here's how to start. (Surfing the
'Net)
Poynter Institute's High School Journalism Guide --
If you're teaching journalism in middle school or helping with a
student newspaper or newsletter, this guide may be helpful.
Although aimed at high school students, it will be a happy find
for middle grades teachers who need to learn something about
journalism themselves! Students can also learn more about news
design at Poynter's Color Project page.
Figure This! --
Interesting math challenges for schools and for families of
middle school students. Three to four math challenges using real
world examples are posted here each month. Hints, solutions, and
related problems.
Save One Starfish -- Save One Starfish was written by
three school nurses and addresses the issues of diagnosing and
medicating children with ADHD. Focus on grades 3-8.++Help
with research papers -- The staff of the Internet Public
Library created this Web resource to help students research and
write papers. Follow step-by-step instructions for tracking down
the information needed online and in the library, then get help
assembling research into an A+ paper. "A must for middle and
high school students," says one review.
++Historical Treasure Chests -- Combine a lesson on
primary and secondary history resources with some U.S. and
personal history. The inital activity identifies some primary
and secondary sources, with students looking for similarities
and differences. Activity Two lets students work in teams to
discover information contained within primary source documents.
The extension activity allows students to investigate their
family's primary source materials and display them online.
Macintosh:
Bibliographer -- This program is great for students or
anyone else who needs to create bibliographies in the widely
used Modern Language Association (MLA) format. Type information
about your sources, and the program will automatically format
them properly.
The White
House -- In these resources from Surfing the Net with
Kids, we learn that Franklin D. Roosevelt called the White House
a "house owned by all the American people." Its first
cornerstone was laid on October 13, 1792. John Adams moved in
eight years later, even though it wasn't quite finished. The
phrase "White House" is frequently used to refer to the
President who lives and works there, and not the building
itself.
Africa Online --
The companion Web site to AFRICA, an eight-part production of
Thirteen/WNET New York and National Geographic.
++Stonehenge: Solving Ancient Mysteries -- In this
lesson, students become detectives as they investigate a mystery
at Stonehenge, featured on the Thirteen/WNET New York
program, SECRETS
OF THE DEAD: MURDER AT STONEHENGE. Students learn about
archeologists and anthropologists and the tools and methods they
use to gather and interpret scientific evidence. They also
research current archaeological excavations and contact the
scientists working at these digs.
Online
Encyclopedias -- Barbara Feldman, author of the weekly
column "Surfing the Net with Kids," writes: "Although the
Internet could be viewed as one giant encyclopedia, there is one
very important difference: the bulk of the Internet is written
by sources with dubious credentials. When you need background
information for a school paper or a research project, you not
only need it quickly, you need to trust your sources. Here are
my recommendations for trustworthy (and free) online
encyclopedias."
Fear of Physics
--As the creators of this website say "We created this site to
be a friendly, non-technical place for you to come and 'play'
with the laws of physics for a while." Middle school and high
school students can try the different simulations, including
Sound, Collisions, Making your Jump Shot, and Zero G. (Blue
Web'n review)
BBC Online Kids
Health -- Information on the health of the body and the
mind in terms kids will understand.
Eighth Grade Sci-ber Text -- Created as a
collaborative effort by teachers in Utah. Includes activities,
lab experiments, and movies that correspond to the eighth-grade
science curriculum. Teachers can easily adapt the activities for
other grade levels.
++The
Odyssey -- One of our MiddleWeb diarists tells us that
this is "a fantastic resource" to use with students."They have a
whole teacher section with units that explore different
essential questions like, 'How have past advances in technology
influenced communications?' and 'How can young people create
change in their communities?'" All questions are organized under
particular themes that explore the questions within specific
environments like Peru, Guatemala, Iran, Mexico, and many other
countries.
++Survey parents and kids on-line! -- One of our
favorite teacher/web authors, Brenda Dyck, recounts her
adventures in on-line surveying, using Zoomerang and similar
products. She calls her activity "Whassup?" Students share
reactions to lessons and classroom practices as well as their
feelings about school and themselves. Parents offer input from
their perspectives too.
The "Moon Conspiracy" -- Some middle grades teachers are
using the controversy over whether astronauts really landed on
the Moon as a way to challenge students to question issues
critically. Here's a website recommended by a teacher as a
"teacher resource" only.
Ontario Science
Centre Online -- The Home Lab will give you ideas for
science experiments for your classroom. And ways to examine some
of the great science questions of our day (found in Our Brains),
such as Is Pluto Really a Planet ? and What Can the Ramones
Teach Us about Science?
Geography
World -- This teacher-produced website offers links to
"everything on the web a geography teacher should need."
It's a Pond's Life -- Students in Austin created this
site for the International Science Day competition. Students
discover how science works in a pond ecosystem and how acquiring
water monitoring skills can benefit their community. Also see
Bridging the Watershed, a site with performance-based curriculum
activities for studying the watershed.
Mrs. Carroll's
Music Room -- Great music information for students and
teachers, including "Music Teacher Resources" link to a broad
variety of lessons, activities and ideas.
Periodic
Table ADventure --This site was created to "introduce
and explore basic chemistry concepts and to practice these
concepts using engaging web-based research and activities."
Free math ideas
online -- Publisher Macmillan/McGraw Hill offers free
math lessons through an online service for teachers of
pre-kindergarten through sixth grades. The free math lessons are
sent each month via e-mail.
++Explore Math
-- Explore Math features interactive multimedia activities that
cover topics from beginning algebra to pre-calculus, with a
special section for grades 6-8. Education World says "Math
teachers can use this excellent supplement with their students,
or students can explore it on their own."
Children
in Urban America -- Shows how children experienced city
life during the last century and a half. The site features
hundreds of documents and images about children in Milwaukee
County, Wisconsin, drawn from newspapers, government, & other
official records, oral histories & memoirs, & other sources.
Follow three
families in The Frontier House -- Students can go to
"The Frontier House" site for weekly updates on the lives of
three families as they experience life as it was on the American
Frontier in the 1880s. Also, look for biweekly essays on the
history of the American Frontier. The results of this adventure
will be broadcast on PBS in 2002.
Back-to-School Ideas for Principals -- Once again
Education World comes through with a collection of 20 articles
for principals that can help get the new year off to a good
start.
Integrating
Technology and Instruction -- A list of useful resources
developed by the George Lucas Educational Foundation.
Ancestors in the Americas -- This companion website
for the PBS series explores the history and stories of Asian
Americans. A timeline shows events that shaped Asian American
history, and a resource section allows further exploration of
the Asian American experience. The site includes guides with
discussion questions for teachers and an online discussion.
++Outta
Ray's Head - Language Arts-- This great site, full of
lesson plans, ideas, and other resources contributed by
teachers, has a new web address. The lessons focus on
literature, writing, poetry, and library activities, in middle
and high school. Contribute something of your own!
The Lost Museum
-- Explores P.T. Barnum's American Museum, which epitomized
popular entertainment and education in the U.S. for nearly a
quarter of a century. The museum was destroyed in 1865 in one of
the most spectacular fires in New York City's history.
Scholastic News Zone -- Presents current events in a fun
and appealing way for students in grades three through eight.
Colorful, and engaging.
++Web for Teachers --
This page at the University of Kansas "4Teachers" website helps
teachers integrate technology into instruction. It features
various tools for teachers: one for creating quizzes that
students can take online, another for organizing and annotating
web sites, a third for developing rubrics, and more.
United States Scavenger Hunts -- Here's another good
article from Education World, challenging students to sharpen
their Internet searching skills as they learn about the history
and landscape of the United States.
++"Let the
Walls Come Down" -- This project, led by middle grades
teacher Brenda Dyck, will provide online experiences for
students to move beyond bare information to real revelation as
they tour the Berlin Wall, the Western Wall in Jerusalem, the
VietnamVeteran's Memorial and the Great Wall of China. Students
will write a short report about the visible and invisible "
Walls" in our world.
The Secret's in the Little Things -- These "simple
tips for successful teachers" include ideas for getting to know
your students, communicating with parents, getting your day of
to a good start, and much more! (Education World feature)
To Clone or Not to Clone -- A model lesson plan
suitable for eighth grade.
Online Harry Potter Games -- Need we say more? A
collection from Surfing the Net with Kids.
Learning Websites for Middle School Students -- A
variety of useful webpages covering many subjects, developed by
a middle school computer teacher.
Teaching with Biographies -- Students may initially
view them as dull, but biographies can be the stuff of great
classroom activities, says this curriculum article in Education
World. Includes a list of "10 Ways to Teach Biography."
++Asleep on the Job -- Her yearly Grade-Six Sleepover
prompts teacher Brenda Dyck to consider how incorporating fun
and humor into teaching may help create memorable learning
experiences. Article at the Education World website.
Lewis and Clark Expedition Bicentennial -- A
selection of resources compiled by ASCD for teachers and
students who can use the expedition to study history, math,
geography, science, and more.
EarthTrends: The
Environmental Information Portal -- The World Resources
Institute put together this database of datatables, country
profiles, maps and other features. Use the pull-down menus under
each topic, such as Coastal and Marine Ecosystems, or Climate
and Weather, to find links to information.
++Electronic Postcards from Around the World -- This
project lets you exchange postcards with classrooms in other
communities. Registration begins now, with the exchange
beginning in September, 2001 until May 2002. Find more
information at the site, including how to protect student
privacy.
Dictionary of Difficult Words -- Help increase your
students' vocabularies and supplement elementary level
dictionaries found in some classrooms.
++Connecting the Continent -- What does it take to
connect a continent for communication? In these days of
satellite transmissions, it does not seem like such a huge task.
Go back in time, and across the continent of Australia, to 1870
to connect the continent together with an overland telegraph
line. This website traces the route, the stories, and the
settlements that grew along its path. Students can participate
in a webquest, observe Virtual Reality (VR) images of the
countryside, and hear audio clips of assorted residents. (Blue
Web'n review)
How
Volcanoes Work -- Just the thing for those perennial
volcano projects! San Diego State University and NASA provide
comprehensive information on volcanic eruptions with
illustrative diagrams and photos.
Cell Biology
-- Cells are the Lego's of all living things, says Barbara
Feldman, host of Surfing the Net with Kids. She's collected a
group of websites that can help introduce students to the
mysteries of cell biology.
Who
Dunnit? -- This site challenges students (Grs. 6-8) to
solve a crime by learning how forensic scientists analyze
evidence. Cute, colorful graphics and Alfred Hitchcock music set
the scene for this detective mystery. (Education World review)
Teaching With the Newspaper -- Education World offers
10 "terrific classroom activities that use the newspaper to
teach all sorts of valuable skills -- including reading and
writing for meaning, map reading, media literacy, sequencing,
word meaning, and math."
Help with Algebra
-- This free service allows you to select, edit, or enter a
problem and automatically receive a printable step-by-step
solution.
An Animated History of Books -- The BBC offers high
or low tech versions of the history of books and writing from
cave paintings to the future of electronic media.
Cloudman's Gallery of
Clouds -- If it's clouds you're interested in, this is
the place!
Presidential
Profiles -- "Mr. President" profiles U.S. leaders at the
Smithsonian Center for Education and Museum Studies website.
The Gilder Lehrman Institute
of American History -- The Institute, which hosts summer
workshops for teachers, has made a remarkable array of
instructional materials available online, including a U.S.
history textbook and over 400 annotated documents, supplemented
by primary sources on slavery, Mexican American and Native
American history, and U.S. political, social, and legal history,
and more.
2001: Destination
Space -- This website compares the science and
technology found in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey (released in
1968) to real science and technology of today. See and hear
interviews with six visionaries. Learning resources include
activities on space and planning for the future. (Blue Web'n
review)
Youthealth.com -- Child Health Monitor presents health
information in easy to digest nuggets for children and young
teens.
Cool Math Sites -- Need some ideas on integrating
math and technology? Here's a hotlist of math websites, with
categories for Algebra, Geometry, and Math Resources.
++Teacher-made middle grades lesson plans -- Visit
this collection at Education World, which pays a $50 honorarium
for each lesson it publishes on the web.
Digital
Photography -- Surfing the Net with Kids offers this
collection of websites for kids (and teachers!) who want to
learn more about taking digital photographs and posting them on
the Web.
++Bridging the Watershed -- Students learn which plants,
macroinvertebrates, and fish are signs of a healthy watershed.
Teachers can use student service project ideas in their
communities, or extend the lesson by investigating and comparing
local watershed areas.
++Paul Revere Virtual Museum -- Developed for
California's SCORE project, the museum offers five Paul Revere
exhibit halls, exploring the poem by Longfellow, The Real Story,
Colonial Boston, Ride with Paul Revere across the Charles River,
and Music of the Revolutionary War. Activities and resources are
covered in each hall. (Blue Web'n review)
++ScienceMaster
-- A wealth of information for science teachers, students, or
hobbyists. The site devotes an entire section to each of the
five areas of science: Earth, Space, Life, Physical, and
Technology.
++Learning from the fossil record -- Forget Jurassic
Park and all its countless blockbuster sequels: at this site,
you'll get the real scoop on what fossils can teach us about
where we've come fromand where we might be going. You'll find
information about paleontology, classroom activities, and
articles about valuable but underused paleontological resources.
(Gr. 7-12, ENC Digital Dozen)
Teaching Through Invention -- Invite your students to
invent a better mousetrap -- or a better mouse! These lessons
focus on inventors and inventions, challenging your students to
see the world in a whole new way. (Education World curriculum
feature.)
++Chemistry experiments you can do at home -- ENC's
Digital Dozen reports that this site is suitable for grades
6-12. "Never mind all those commercials you see on television
that warn: Do not try this at home! At this web site, you'll
find a bunch of experiments expressly made for students to do at
home-with adult supervision, of course. Topics include gases,
reactions with oxygen, and solutions, as well as quantitative
tests for substances."
Eyewitness to history
-- The theme at "Eyewitness" is "history through the eyes of
those who lived it. These days, that means audio and news clips.
In older times, it meant reading excerpts from diaries and other
personal accounts. Suitable for middle schoolers on up.
++The
Megapenny Project --Designed to help people visualize
huge numbers by using a small, commonplace objectthe U.S.
pennyto visually represent an answer to the question: "What
would a billion (or a trillion) pennies look like?" (Gr. 5-9,
ENC Digital Dozen)
Find
Those Grants! -- K-12 Funding opportunities with links
to grantseeking for teachers, learning technology, and more.
Toshiba
America Foundation Grants -- Grants for programs and
activities that improve the classroom teaching of science,
mathematics, and technology for middle and high school students.
The Small Grants Program awards grants of up to $5,000 monthly
throughout the year.
++Only have one computer in your classroom? -- Check
out this "Hotlist on the One-Computer Classroom." Blue Web'n
says it's "a great resource to kick off a staff development
period, with small groups exploring each site to come up with
creative ideas for using computers in education. Very
practical."
Civics Online --
This resource for K-12 teachers and students contains a
collection of primary sources related to U.S. government and
democracy.
The
Everglades Ecosystem-- Learn about the habitats, animals
& endangered species of the Everglades, as well as threats to
what remains of this "river of grass" -- population growth,
water quality, loss of species, introduction of non-native
species, & more.
Everyday Life in the Civil War -- "So You Want to Learn
About the Civil War?" helps students understand daily life for
soldiers at Petersburg (VA), the supply center to the
Confederate capital and site of the longest siege in American
warfare.
++NCTM's
Illuminations -- The newly revised National Council of
Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) math principles and standards
site includes Web-based multimedia activities, video vignettes
of teaching and learning, lesson plans, and a rich network of
links. (ASCD's Web Wonders)
++Virtual
Manipulatives -- "Hands on" gets virtual at this site,
which collects uniquely interactive, Web-based manipulatives or
concept tutorials aimed at K-8 math learners. With the aid of
JAVA applets, students can visualize such concepts as the
Pythagorean Theorem, tessellation, base 10, or comparing
fractions. Award from the National Science Foundation. (ASCD's
Web Wonders)
++Born in
Slavery -- Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers'
Project (1936-1938) records the remembrances of African
Americans living in the 1930s who had been born into slavery.
Youthealth -- A fun multimedia experience for young
people that promotes good health practices.
Dolphins
-- Five websites where students can learn more about the popular
sea mammal.
Teen
Pregnancy -- Released by the National Campaign to
Prevent Teen Pregnancy, this new report reviews some 250 studies
on teen pregnancy programs. The review finds that long-term
programs have made a genuine difference in teen pregnancy,
abortion, and birth rates, the last of which is now at its
lowest level recorded.
Geography Research Pathfinder -- A middle grades
librarian created this page "to guide students who are
researching other countries and cultures for geography classes."
Your Sky
-- Help your students build a sky map. This program lets you
choose a nearby city, or enter your latitude and longitude, to
find out what is in the sky presently. Using fairly easy-to-use
controls, you can then manipulate the data to find a star map
for the next night, or the next week. (Blue Web'n)
Women and
Geometry -- "An Archive of American Patchwork Quilt
Designs," these photographs and illustrations bring quilts to
life and serve as a great resource to use when teaching about
color and pattern.
Science Playwiths -- This teacher-created site offers
simple everyday science experiments for grades K-6, some more
challenging activities for older students. Some great ideas!
PBS
Pioneer Living Series -- Promotes integration and
inclusiveness and is produced by new Americans and targeted to
immigrants, multicultural audiences and their educators and
employers. The series is suitable for grade levels: 7-12. The
series features over 100 guests from over 40 countries.
Description of all 18 episodes at this page.
Geography
-- A collection of useful links from "Surfin' the Net with
Kids."
Articles
about teaching adolescent literature -- The ALAN Review
offers thought-provoking perspectives for middle grades
literature teachers. Many articles from this NCTE journal are
on-line. Explore the tables of contents and find essays like
"Ethical Dilemmas in Teaching Problem Novels."
Using
picture books with young adolescents -- A collection of
resources for teachers.
Out of the
ordinary teen booklists -- Reading Rants, a site
developed by a middle school librarian, answers the question for
young teens, "Is there life after Judy Bloom and Gary Paulsen?"
Many topics, good reviews, and frank discussion. Example: The
Bare Bones List -- Honest Fiction about Weight and Eating
Disorders.
How much was that money worth? -- This hotlist helps
answer the question: "How much would a specified amount of money
at a certain period of time be worth today?"
Encyclopedia Smithsonian -- From Accessibility to
Zoology, find out all about collections and other information
from the Smithsonian Museums in Washington D.C. Under Traveling
Exhibitions, there are lessons and activities for students,
including "The Good, the Bad, and the Cuddly: Attitudes Toward
Animals." (Blue Web'n review) |
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