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LiveMocha - 0 views

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    LiveMocha is a powerful online language learning community that allows you to interact with native speakers of many languages. It also provides a selection of free and paid language lessons.
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DoInk - 0 views

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    DoInk allows you to easily create vector-based Flash-style animations.
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Discovery Streaming - 0 views

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    This is a great website for all types of thematic units. There are full-length movies, movie clips, images, and lessons. This is a subscription service.
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Blabberize - 0 views

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    This is a great site for students to upload a picture of either themselves or a figure in history and record a voice over. Great for a biography or autobiography assignment.
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    Blabberize allows you to quickly create an animated character that speaks in your voice.
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The Civil War Home Page - 0 views

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    Great resource for students and teachers who are researching the Civil War. Information on battles, slavery, and soldiers. There are also links to official records which are interesting for the students to see.
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Civil War.com - 0 views

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    Great website for Civil War Units. There are maps, battle statistics, weapons, people, and slavery. Easy for students to use. Well-maintained and accurate.
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Penzu notetaking site - 0 views

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    Great website for students and teachers to take notes on projects and daily work. Prevents misplacing the notes and difficulty in reading them because of messy handwriting.
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Yahoo Kids - 0 views

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    Kid friendly search engine. There are fun things on the website for the kids to visit as well. These include music, games, movies, sports, and ecards. Easy for students to use.
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Document View - ProQuest - 0 views

  • he ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) staff reach out to members and non-members by providing support during actual or potential challenges to books, Internet resources, magazines, and other library materials. Being a member of a state library association can reduce the feeling of isolation and provide networking opportunities for personal exploration of dilemmas relating to selection and access to resources in a library media program.
    • anonymous
       
      Being a member of the Idaho Library Association does help!
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Nettrekker search engine - 0 views

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    A great searching tool for educators.  Educational websites are already prescreened and available for your age group.
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    This is a search engine that is a subscription service. It is monitored and updated by educators. Great resource for research projects.
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Censorship in the classroom: Understanding controversial issues - 0 views

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    "Censorship in the classroom: Understanding controversial issues\n\nhttp://www.readwritethink.org/lessons/lesson_view.asp?id=203\n\nA lesson plan for grades 9-12 English Language Arts and Information Skills\nLearn more\n\n * Learn more about banned books, biases, censorship, language arts, media, persuasive writing, propaganda, reading, stereotypes, and writing.\n\nHelp\n\nPlease read our disclaimer for lesson plans.\nLegal\n\nPrint\n\n * Print\n\nShare\n\n * Email\n * Delicious Delicious\n * Digg Digg\n * Facebook Facebook\n * StumbleUpon StumbleUpon\n\nIt is important for young people to understand their individual rights and what they, as citizens, can do to protect these rights. In addition, young people need to understand the way in which bias and stereotyping are used by the media to influence popular opinion. In this ReadWriteThink lesson, students examine propaganda and media bias and explore a variety of banned and challenged books, researching the reasons these books have been censored. Following this research, students choose a side of the censorship issue and support their position through the development of an advertising campaign.\nNorth Carolina Curriculum Alignment\nEnglish Language Arts (2004)\nGrade 9\n\n * Goal 3: The learner will examine argumentation and develop informed opinions.\n o Objective 3.01: Study argument by:\n + examining relevant reasons and evidence.\n + noting the progression of ideas that substantiate the proposal.\n + analyzing style, tone, and use of language for a particular effect.\n + identifying and analyzing personal, social, historical, or cultural influences contexts, or biases.\n + identifying and analyzing rhetorical strategies that support proposals.\n\nGrade 10\n\n * Goal 3: The learner will defend argumentative positions on literary or nonliterary issues.\n o Objective 3.01: Examine controversial is
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Document View - ProQuest - 0 views

  • The number of incidents in which individuals or groups attempt to remove a resource from libraries or classrooms varies.* Between 2001 and 2008, there were 3,736 challenges reported to the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom.* ALA estimates this is only 20-25% of actual challenges since many are unreported.
    • anonymous
       
      Rarely are these reported! I'd like to find an easy way for school librarians and teachers to report challenges!
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Ask Kids Search Engine - 0 views

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    This is a search engine for kids that makes researching much easier. In addition to finding answers for questions, the students can play games, find images, and learn facts about movies.

ALA | - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 13 Oct 10 - No Cached
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ALA | Banned and/or Challenged Books from the Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novel... - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 13 Oct 10 - Cached
  • Banned and/or Challenged Books from the Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century
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Intellectual Freedom Committee | Idaho Library Association - 0 views

  • e, support, and referral.
  • Deborah Babbitt, Chair
    • anonymous
       
      Who should I contact about a school library challenge?
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