ConSource is a free online library of constitutional history. We digitize and cross-reference source documents written by individuals who drafted, ratified, and influenced the creation of the U.S. Constitution and its Amendments. We also run programs and host events that make use of constitutional sources.
Two missions: #1 Apprentice in Boston has to choose sides after the Boston Massacre. #2 Femaile slave has to decide if she wants to seek freedom and wonder what to do in various situations and who she can trust.
More than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
PrimaryAccess is a suite of free online tools that allows students and teachers to use primary source documents to complete meaningful and compelling learning activities with digital movies, storyboards, rebus stories and other online tools.
AwesomeStories is a gathering place of primary-source information. Its purpose - since the site was first launched in 1999 - is to help educators and individuals find original sources, located at national archives, libraries, universities, museums, historical societies and government-created web sites.
The Library of Congress. The Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural institution, and it serves as the research arm of Congress. It is also the largest library in the world, with more than 120 million items. The collections include books, sound recordings, motion pictures, photographs, maps, and manuscripts.
This The Best... list is focusing on two types of map-making sites on the web. One type allows you or your students to add personal, historical, and/or
Great ways to interact with real photos in Google Maps. NIce things to incorporate into service learning projects or standalone service learning. Exciting and fun stuff!!