Create timelines, share them on the web.
Timetoast is a great way to share the past, or even the future...
Creating a timeline takes minutes, it's as simple as can be.
Easily draw on maps and then share them with friends, completely for Free! Simple enough to be used by children, but powerful enough to be used by GIS professionals - Scribble Maps is the easiest way to draw and share maps with friends.
Animaps extends the My Maps feature of Google Maps by letting you create maps with markers that move, images and text that pop up on cue, and lines and shapes that change over time.
When you send your Animap to friends it appears like a video - they can play, pause, slow and speed up the action!
The National Archives has
put together an amazing site where students can create digital
content with primary resources. Students can search photographs,
documents, and other records and collect them. Students can use
collected items to create their own digital poster or to make a movie.
Students can also create a Pathway Challenge. In a challenge,
students create a series of clues that show relationships between photographs, documents and other
records. Others can take part in these Pathways Challenges. There are also ready made challenges
that students can take part in, I just took the Lincoln challenge. Clues are given and students have to
find a record that matches the clue. This is a truly incredible way for students to interact with history.