Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ 2011Reference
Cynthia Stogdill

Online Resources - Topic Index - 0 views

  •  
    This resource provides information and primary information on early Nebraska history as well as information on other American history subject areas.  It offers a portal, visual resources and lesson plans compiled on various subject areas. 
Lorie Adams

IRIS - Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology - 0 views

  •  
    This site is good for researching seismic activity and earth quake. Students can monitor seismic activite daily.
Lacey Matthews

W - 0 views

shared by Lacey Matthews on 08 Oct 11 - Cached
  •  
    I know it may seems like a wild card, but believe Wikipedia has a place in the education world. I think it is a great jumping off point for finding topics and small snip bits of information. Would I tell my students to completely rely on what Wikipedia says? No, but its a good starting place.
Willa Grange

EuroDocs: Online Sources for European History - 0 views

  •  
    This excellent site links the searcher to primary documents, images, etc. from libraries, archives, schools, and governments all over Europe, but everything is in English, usually with the native language included. The toolbox on the left helps, particularly special pages. This site is probably best used for researching cultures, history, and geography.
Willa Grange

Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free Books, Movies, Music, and movies - 0 views

  •  
    Not only does this site have primary sources in text, audio, video, and images, but also, silent movies, archived web pages, historical software, and animation/cartoons. Grades 1-12 could easily find interesting primary sources for their projects. Students will enjoy an occasional old cartoon, like Why We Have Elections, that teaches about the election process, and can be taught about primary sources, too.
Teresa Bell

Shakespeare's Globe: Globe Education - Recommended Online Resources / Shakespeare's Globe - 0 views

  •  
    Excellent starting point for Shakespeare research. This site also provides links to sites with images of rare books, manuscripts, photographs and music.
Susan Harder

Career P.R.E.P. - 0 views

  •  
    "OPS A+ Career PREP in conjunction with Nebraska Career Connections offers students valuable on-line education & career planning resources. Log on to complete your student e-portfolio."
  •  
    This site offers links to a number of different vocational assessments (some free and others not free) as well as a more specific understanding of how career clusters are devided and what falls into which category.
Susan Harder

Overview of BLS Wage Data by Area and Occupation - 0 views

  •  
    This Bureau of Labor Statistics page provides information on different occupations based on national numbers, regional, state, and a number of different metropolitan areas. There are also a number of links to other related sites that can be accessed regarding employment trends.
  •  
    This site provides statistical data that can be used in preparing research papers as well as for students looking at careers based on geographic location as a source for determining their career future.
Susan Harder

OSHA Directorate of Training and Education - 0 views

  •  
    This page is a resource for those who want to know more about safety in the workplace. This OSHA page is specifically about training, educational resources, and training materials administered through OSHA.
  •  
    I want students to know more about future careers than just how much they will get paid. I want them to understand the rules that govern their employers and career fields. So, this site would help them understand one of the groups who (on a federal level) impacts the viability of their business to remain open as a safe worksite.
Susan Harder

Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2010-11 Edition - 0 views

  •  
    Describes the education and training needed for hundreds of different jobs. Tells how much expected earnings for careers are, explains what workers in these jobs can expect to do on the job and what sort of working conditions under which they will work.
  •  
    Being able to access the online version of this handbook would be invaluable for school libraries as it would save money and space in the library. Additionally, as this is updated annually, the online version would provide much more up to date information.
Susan Harder

EducationQuest - 0 views

  •  
    EducationQuest is an excellent resource for Nebraska students transitioning from high school to college. It can help those looking at community colleges as well as universities seek sources for school funding.
  •  
    I would use this with students who are looking at careers which require more than a high school education, to help them find ways to pay their way towards their chosen career.
Sydney Omo

WritingFix: 6 Traits and Primary Writers...our print guide and webpage - 0 views

  •  
    This site provides many writing lesson plans.  It also gives many computer interactive prompts, and gives children the chance to share their writing online.
Kelly Eby

US History, American History - 0 views

  •  
    shmoop claims to "speak student."  I think this is a great site for kids who are trying to understand their topic of choice.  There are some primary source links embedded within the text of each subject.  The high interest topics of study makes this site usable for students doing research.
Kelly Eby

Primary and Secondary Sources - eThemes - 0 views

  •  
    The links from this site are fantastic! There were some broken links from the library of congress that I think would be very good if they were fixed. State standards are listed at the bottom, but they did not include Nebraska. Lesson plans, examples and activities help teach the topic of primary sources well.
Deb Kendall

History in the Raw - 0 views

    • Deb Kendall
       
      Justification for using primary source documents with students. It can be used with historical fiction as well as general research in other subjects.
  • Primary sources fascinate students because they are real and they are personal; history is humanized through them. Using original sources, students touch the lives of the people about whom history is written. They participate in human emotions and in the values and attitudes of the past. By reading a series of public opinion surveys from World War II, for example, students confront the language of the person interviewed and his or her fears about shortages, as well as the interviewer's reactions recorded after the interview. These human expressions provide history with color and excitement and link students directly to its cast of characters. Interpreting historical sources helps students to analyze and evaluate contemporary sources--newspaper reports, television and radio programs, and advertising. By using primary sources, students learn to recognize how a point of view and a bias affect evidence, what contradictions and other limitations exist within a given source, and to what extent sources are reliable. Essential among these skills is the ability to understand and make appropriate use of many sources of information. Development of these skills is important not only to historical research but also to a citizenship where people are able to evaluate the information needed to maintain a free society.
  •  
    Many times primary source documents are overlooked as a tool for students to connect to history. Our textbooks rarely go in depth on any topic thereby leaving out the sense of humanity. Primary sources motivate students to engage in historical inquiry as they analyze and evaluate contemporary sources. I would like to see more primary source documents used in literacy classes to support historical fiction.
McKenzie White

America's First Freestanding Holocaust Memorial Center - The Harry and Wanda Zekelman I... - 0 views

    • McKenzie White
       
      Curriculum connections for educators
Sydney Omo

National Archives Experience - 0 views

  •  
    This is an interactive site that makes it easy to look up certain events, or people, in history and immediately find other related sources.
Susan Harder

Occupational Outlook Quarterly - 0 views

  •  
    "OOQ provides practical information on jobs and careers. Articles are written in straightforward, non-technical language and cover a wide variety of career and work-related topics such as unusual occupations, tips for jobseekers, salary trends, and results of new studies from the Bureau of Labor Statistics." Articles as far back as 1999 are available online for students and school counselors to access and assist students in career planning
  •  
    I was specifically interested in the timely articles on things like finding careers in the gaming industry. Many students think that there are unending careers in the field of video game development and in fact there are some excellent careers in the field, but often students have unrealistic ideas of the prospects. This site allows them to search back as early as 1999 articles so they can get an idea of what trends may associated with these careers.
Lorie Adams

EIA Energy Kids - Energy Kids: Energy Information Administration - 0 views

  •  
    Student friendly wed site that explores energy basic, energy resources, using and saving energy and history of energy. The teacher's resource has activities that use this web site.
Sydney Omo

Students for the Environment | US EPA - 0 views

  •  
    This site includes numerous science lesson plans, homework resources, and interactive games to assist students and teachers.
« First ‹ Previous 141 - 160 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page