
The SAFE Rated Search System
Follow the links below to some of the best places we've discovered on the Net. If you know of a great site that doesn't appear in our list, send us a message and tell us about it!
Links for Teachers Overview
General Resources
Educational Products and Services
Educational Software
Homeschooling Resources
Hotlists of Other Web Resources
Links to Lesson Plans
Search Engines and Indices
- Federal Resources for Educational Excellence — The FREE website organizes hundreds of federally supported education resources so that they can be searched easily. Categories include arts, educational technology, foreign languages, health and safety, language arts, mathematics, physical education, science, social studies, and vocational education.
- TeenLit.com — This is a site dedicated to promoting teen literacy and to helping teachers address the needs of adolescent writers. TeenLit provides a forum for teen writers to publish and discuss their writing and a place to review and discuss books they read.
- LD OnLine: Learning Disabilities Information and Resources — An interactive guide for parents, teachers, and children that includes general information, articles, first-person accounts, artwork, bulletin boards and online chats, links to other resources, and a newsletter.
- Thirteen Ed Online — Thirteen/WNET's practical service for K-12 educators is designed by teachers for teachers. The site is updated frequently and offers original Web-based lesson plans, in-depth Website reviews, software samples, and additional resources designed to foster an online education-based community.
- Basic Educational Materials, Publishers — "Materials Made For Teachers!" This company offers Basic Math Skills Workbooks in the areas of computational addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division skills, as well as Basic Language Arts Skills Workbooks in many areas of grammar and sentence writing skills. All skill workbooks are non-graded and can be used as review, remedial, and supplemental resources.
- Xpeditions @ nationalgeographic.com — This outstanding site, provided by the National Geographic Society, includes an atlas with nearly 1800 detailed maps you can print out; a forum for sharing ideas on geographic topics; a description of the 18 U.S. National Geography Standards, with classroom ideas and family activities for each one; and a virtual-reality Xpedition Hall that's open for exploring.
- BandAides and Blackboards — A web project designed to sensitize people to what it's like growing up with medical problems. The site includes many stories by children and teens who are dealing with chronic illnesses and other health problems. These young people describe the physical aspects of their medical conditions as well as the social rejection and teasing that they sometimes face.
- History Alive! Teachers' Curriculum Institute — An innovative, student-centered approach to history instruction designed to engage students with diverse learning styles. The site has information about curriculum materials for U.S. and world history, professional development seminars, sample activities, and more.
- Footbag Peace Initiative — An interesting site that describes how a dedicated group of athletes and educators is using the game of footbag (or "hacky sack") to promote personal health and cultural healing. Definitely worth checking out!
- OneWorld Classrooms — An educational, child-friendly, and child-safe site that consists of language arts and curriculum-based "learning adventures" focusing on different regions/cultures of the world, such as East Africa and the Amazon rain forest.
- Colonial Williamsburg's Resources for Teachers and Students — "The world's largest and oldest living history museum" tells "the story of our nation's struggle to achieve both freedom and equality." The site also has information about Colonial Williamsburg's Electronic Field Trips and some Classroom-Tested Lesson Plans.
- Scripts for Schools — Devoted to Readers Theater for students of all ages, this site provides both free scripts for scripts for purchase for use in the classroom. There are also links to related sites on the web.
- PedagoNet — A "learning material and resource center" that has a nice database of resources both offered to and requested by teachers.
- Douglass Archives of American Public Address — A large and well-organized archive of speeches from throughout American history. You can search by speaker, by title, by date, or by topic.
- Space Educators' Handbook Home Page — The content at this site is part of NASA's Multimedia Space Educator's Handbook. It includes materials for teaching space technology through science fiction (e.g., Star Trek), QuickTime space movies, space comics, and more.
- The School Page — Online help for teachers and administrators.
- New Zealand Education Web — An extensive collection of online educational resources, both within New Zealand and around the world. Take the time to explore different pages for interesting materials in different content areas and featuring significant cultural information. For example, the Te Kete Ipurangi The Online Learning Centre leads to links about nutrition, success for boys, technology, and more.
- From Now On — "The Educational Technology Journal"
- Harnessing the Power of the Web for Classroom Use: A Tutorial — Part of The Global SchoolNet: engaging students and teachers around the world in learning exchanges.
- Newton's Apple — "Public TV's family science show." Get a preview of this season's upcoming shows, download teacher's guides and order other support materials, and send in science questions via e-mail that might be answered in next season's shows.
- AskERIC — The Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) is a federally funded national information system that provides a variety of services and products on a broad range of education-related issues. The site has several search engines to help you find the information you're looking for.
- Science Learning Network — An online community of educators, students, schools, science museums, and other institutions demonstrating a new model for inquiry science education. Member museums include the Exploratorium in San Francisco, the Miami Museum of Science, the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia, the Museum of Science in Boston, the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, and the Science Museum of Minnesota.
- The GLOBE Program — Students conduct an array of measurements and observations at their schools and share their data via the Internet with other students and scientists around the world to detail an environmental picture of the globe.
- Carol Hurst's Children's Literature — This site offers "a collection of reviews of great books for kids, ideas of ways to use them in the classroom, and collections of books and activities about particular subjects, curriculum areas, themes, and professional topics."
- Teachnet.Com: Teacher's Edition Online — This newsletter has loads of ideas for activities, management strategies, and more.
- EdWeb — This site has interesting and well-written web pages about Internet technology and its affect on education. Specific topics include the Information Highway Debate, and WWWEDU: The Web and Education List.
- WWW Virtual Library — This site lets you conduct far-reaching searches of the Web, with information conveniently arranged by subject.
- Internet Public Library — This library has, among other things, Subject Collections that allow you to search the Web by subject and a Ready Reference section with hotlinks to Internet search engines such as Factbites, Lycos, and Yahoo!.
[Return to Links for Teachers Overview]
- Hands-On Astrophysics — Describes a flexible set of hands-on educational materials, activities, and investigations, based on an electronic database of variable star measurements. These materials, which are available for purchase, allow students to "experience the excitement of doing real science with real data."
- Taking the Bully by the Horns — A book and web page dedicated to helping children and young teens deal with bullies and self-esteem issues.
- Landfall Productions — Distributor of an award-winning documentary film (video) on eight public school teachers who use Waldorf education methods in their public school classrooms.
- passports — A company that provides educational travel tours for high school and college students, their teachers and professors, and adults. Travel trips are scheduled year-round to Europe, Scandinavia, Africa, the Caribbean, Asia, and Australia.
- The Hampstead Players — This children's theatrical touring company visits schools around the country, bringing a taste of Shakespeare and other drama to kids in grades K through 8.
- Bilingual Books for Kids — This site offers a large array of books with text in both English and Spanish, and allows you to order the books via mail, fax, or e-mail.
- Silly Billy's World — At this site, you can read online stories about Silly Billy or order books and videotapes. The page also provides information about author Bill Dallas Lewis's visits to elementary schools, during which he gives a multimedia demonstration of how he creates the illustrations for his books.
- Educational Software — Small Planet's list of sites that offer educational software, either for free or for purchase.
[Return to Links for Teachers Overview]
- Baggetta_Ware English Language Arts Software — This site offers educational software that you can try for free before purchasing. Titles include the Interactive Raven (Edgar Allan Poe), and the Interactive Canterbury Tales (Prologue) (DOS).
- Owl & Mouse Educational Software — educational software and maps. Includes a downloadable activity in which kids print, color, cut out, and assemble a barn, silo, farmhouse, and chicken coop to make a model farm.
- SuperKids Educational Software Review — Provides substantial reviews (by parents, teachers, and kids) of children's educational software. A very helpful site if you're thinking about investing in some software for your classroom.
- Hungry Frog — A small California publisher that offers software titles in math, chemistry, and modern and classical language vocabulary.
- Lawrence Goetz's Home Page — Offers children's shareware programs for MS Windows.
- Totware — Freeware and shareware for kids.
[Return to Links for Teachers Overview]
- At Home Publications — A source of inexpensive curriculum guides suitable for home schools and co-ops, home day care, and small private schools. Publications include Early Education at Home (ages 3-5) and Art Adventures at Home (grades K-5).
- Homeschool Software — Part of the website for Hungry Frog, a small software publisher in California that offers titles in math, chemistry, and modern and classical language vocabulary.
- About.com: Homeschooling — Includes articles about homeschooling issues, a discount book store with recommended titles, and links to online resources.
- Homeschooling Information and Resources Pages — This site is provided by Home Education Magazine.
- Homeschoolers Trading Zone — A forum for buying and selling homeschool books and curriculum.
- Homeschooling Today — A journal focused on homeschooling from the Christian perspective.
[Return to Links for Teachers Overview]
- Lakeview Educator Page — A high school principal in Campbell, Ohio, created this page, which contain links to many psychology, sociology, U.S. history, and world history sites on the Net.
- Surfing the Net with Kids — Each week, Barbara Feldman scours the net looking for the best sites on a particular topic, such as Leonardo da Vinci, stock market simulations, the Berlin Wall, ghost stories, venomous snakes, riddles, ballet — just about anything you can imagine. This website is an archive of her well-researched reviews of the sites. You can also sign up to receive the free e-mail edition of her newspaper column.
- The Awesome Library — An extensive directory of K-12 education resources, organized into sections for teachers, kids, teens, parents, librarians, and community. The site includes a search engine to facilitate location of resources.
- Cornell University Center for Advanced Computing: Gateways — This site has links to many educational resources, organized into Math and Science, Arts and Social Sciences, and Educators' gateways.
- Cool School Sites — Links to resources that integrate the Internet and classroom learning experiences, as well as lots of other useful links.
- Lesson Plans and Teaching Strategies — Extensive list of links to social studies, geography, and history lesson plans.
[Return to Links for Teachers Overview]
- Educational Resources and Lesson Plans — "This web page consists of thousands of links to lesson plans and other resources of potential use to education students, teachers, and homeschoolers. It also includes lesson plans and resources unique to this site."
- Adventures and Websites from Educational Web Adventures — Online activities in the categories of Art and Art History, Science and Nature, and Social Studies.
- Monarch Watch — An excellent science site that provides detailed information about monarch butterflies (including their biology and migration patterns), curricular materials, and student projects.
- History Alive! Teachers' Curriculum Institute — An innovative, student-centered approach to history instruction designed to engage students with diverse learning styles. The site has information about curriculum materials for U.S. and world history, professional development seminars, sample activities, and more.
- Busy Teacher's Cafe — A great site with many links to lesson plans and other teaching resources online.
- TEAMS Distance Learning for K-12 Educators — A well-organized and nicely designed site with links to loads of resources for teachers, including lesson plans by content area.
- Emerging Technologies — Many links to lessons and resources organized by curriculum area for teachers, students, and parents.
- Kinder Art — This site has free online art lessons for children and offers reasonably priced art instruction packages for children, teens, and adults.
- Lesson Plans and Resources for Social Studies Teachers — An extensive database of lesson plans and links to educational Websites.
- AskERIC
- Acorn Naturalists — Lesson plans encompassing topics for the trail and classroom are available to buy from Acorn Naturalists.
- Hands-On Science — A teacher's guide to student-built experiments from the Exploratorium, a San Francisco museum devoted to hands-on science.
- The Incredible Art Department — An interesting site that includes detailed lesson plans for all ages, inspirational stories about artists, examples of student art, and links to related pages on the Net.
- Annenberg Media Learner — Resources for teachers across the curriculum. Vast amounts of content and a helpful teaching practices library. Many programs are available to view online for no charge. See also A Biography of America.
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