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Jeffrey L. Jones, editor
jjones@fayette.k12.ky.us

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The
Partnership Help Desk
http://www.pfks.org/thehelpdesk/
The Partnership for
Kentucky Schools' newsletter, The Partnership
Help Desk, provides us all of our Internet resources this
month! The newsletter is laid out somewhat differently, delivering
its content by subject area. |
Submitted by Jeffrey
Jones
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Lesson
Plans from the IMSA 21st Century Information Literacy Portal
http://wizard.imsa.edu/teach/lessons
A project of the Illinois Mathematics and Science
Academy, this portal offers a wide range of classes and other
services...not for free, of course. But this collection of lesson
plans, grouped by elementary/middle/high, directly addresses the use
of information technology. Plans are in PDF format, are tied to ISTE
information technology standards, most are teacher-written, and
they're free. |
Submitted by..
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The
Art Exchange
http://www.ccproject.org/artexchange.html
Creative Classroom Projects, a part of the
nonprofit Creative Connections, hosts this international art
exchange. The Creative Connections Project is a sponsored project of
The New York Foundation for the Arts, a non-profit organization, and
some of their resources require the payment of a small registration
fee. However, there are sample
free teacher resources, and there are extensive student art
examples from several corners of the world. A great idea!
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Interactive
Mathematics
http://matti.usu.edu/nlvm/nav/vlibrary.html
From Utah State University, with funding from the
National Science Foundation, comes the National Library of
Virtual Manipulatives for Interactive Mathematics. Tied to the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics standards, and complete
with lesson plans and helps, the site's virtual manipulatives cover
a variety of subjects on all grade levels. These tools are low-tech
by web standards, requiring nothing more than Java in almost any
current browser. Great online tool! |
Body
and Mind
http://www.bam.gov/
Sponsored by the U.S. Government's Center for
Disease Control, BAM is a site full of activities for kids on the
subjects of mental and physical health, as well as illness and
nutrition. There's a section with some limited teacher
resources, with links to other education-related health sites. |
The
Literacy Center
http://www.literacycenter.net/
This free website service was originally funded by
a U.S. Department of Education Small Business Innovation grant. It
is dedicated to providing simple, free learning tools for young
learners (it's appropriate for K-2) with a focus on early ESL. All
games and activities are Flash driven. |
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The
U.S. EPA's Air Now
http://www.epa.gov/airnow/
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency provides
this visual database of U.S. air quality, including teacher
materials and instructional ideas (look for "Environmental
Education" in the "For Teachers" section). There's
even some online activities for elementary school kids. |
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Congress
for Kids
http://www.congressforkids.net/
This project from the Dirksen
Congressional Center in Illinois has information pages on the
history of the U.S. Constitution, the branches of federal
government, the electoral process... and all with regular formative
quizzes along the way to encourage learning. It looks like it's
aimed at middle to early high school. The content is high quality
and well laid out, but it's primarily text based, and I couldn't
find any teacher's resources. |
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MidLink
http://www.ncsu.edu/midlink/
North Carolina State University, with support from
SASInSchool, and the University of Central Florida, bring this
online literary magazine for students from 8-18. There are
instructions on how student writing can be submitted, an archive of
past editions, and a teacher resource section with lots of links to
sites in support of writing. |
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