teacher-librarians Bookmarks
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This medieval webquest contains a lot of links to good information, as well as a section on planning a unit on the Middle Ages.
more from www.ndaviess.k12.in.us
Free clipart and animations from "Harry the Cat" and Dorrett Goodwin.
more from www.harrythecat.com
This is quite a good page from Oakton Library about evaluating websites. The table has 2 sections - questions to ask at each step, and "how to interpret the basics."
Accuracy, authority, objectivity, currency, coverage.
more from www.oakton.edu
This page has a lot of good links to medieval webquests and links to Middle Ages information. Mostly suitable for Yrs 4-7.
more from www.yesnet.yk.ca
This is one of the pages from a webquest on the Middle Ages, specifically designed to help students gain more from reading the book "The Door in the Wall". It contains lots of links to
more from coe.west.asu.edu
This site offers an extensive database of all things castle related including a directory of castles from around the world, a photo gallery with thousands of castle photos, castle greeting cards, a castle forum where you can meet other castle enthusiasts, a castle glossary and more! If you enjoy castles then this is the place to be.
more from www.castlesontheweb.com
If you have any photos of the displays which you have created in your library, please share them here, and hopefully pick up a few ideas from other people.
more from www.flickr.com
This is a photostream of favourite library displays and layouts from Fran Hughes, Education Officer: Library & Information Services, Catholic Education Services
Cairns Diocese
more from www.flickr.com
The Whuffie Factor
is a breakthrough book, providing the
strategic map and specific tactics for success in the lucrative, but strange and
elusive world of online communities. As Tara Hunt has found, online success
comes from building a community and being part of it – not by pushing a product
or service. If you want to learn the secret sauce behind Facebook, Twitter, or
YouTube, you have to use them until you love them.
more from www.horsepigcow.com
This seems to be a site similar to Google Docs where you can find and share professional documents.
more from www.docstoc.com
The Web 1.0 concept was simple: web pages linking to web pages. Then came Web 2.0 - a powerful movement from web pages to web applications. Web 2.0 applications have evolved into often slick viewports into proprietary or personal collections of information. This means they still primarily house data in silos inaccessible to and disconnected from the larger world, and most importantly, from each other.
But as we approach 2009, the clear outlines of the new web are forming. Some call this next generation the Semantic Web, but we think that term is confining, and so, instead, we refer to it as simply Web 3.0.
The new web is moving beyond connecting pages to interconnecting data objects, concepts, and things. Ultimately Web 3.0 is really about creating technology that more accurately mirrors how we see and think about the world around us.
more from www.web3event.com
This is a widgetyou can add to your blog or webpage. It features a different author each month, and you can scroll through a list of quotes from different authors through history.
more from www.widgetbox.com
This blog entry looks at different products on the market to give an overview of a webpage without having to actually visit the site.
more from www.readwriteweb.com
This site gives lots of links under the following headings:
Plagiarism and the internet
Plagiarism in schools
General resources on plagiarism
Helping students avoid plagiarism
Papermills and plagiarism detection
Teaching about plagiarism
more from eduscapes.com
This is a useful PPT presentation for giving students a brief overview of the issues involved with plagiarism.
more from www.google.com
This is one component of the webpage Thinkering Space the focuses on library observations that will inform design criteria for Thinkering Space
more from www.id.iit.edu