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Library of Congress Home - 4 views

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    government library, primary sources
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    Jaymes Talkington January 23, 2010 http://www.loc.gov/index.html Content This site is full of collections of books, newspapers, videos, and other documents on thousands of historical events and people that are kept in the Library of Congress. There are resources for kids, librarians, publishers, researchers, teachers, and visitors. All of the informational documents found on the site come with citations, and since the information is in the Library of Congress it is most likely creditable. There is also a link that allows you to ask some of the librarians specific question. Design The front page of the web site is pretty easy to use considering there are many specific areas to click on depending what your use of the site will be. Everything is clearly identified on the front page. It didn't take unusually long to load either, and all the other links I tried came up pretty fast as well. The "search" bar at the top of the front page makes it easy to find exactly what you are looking for. It may take some time to download copies of texts, but the videos don't take long at all. There is no advertising on any of the videos I observed so it gets right to the chosen subject. Overview This site's purpose is to make the Library of Congress's information available to anyone without leaving their home. Their audience can include kids, librarians, publishers, researchers, teachers, and visitors. The resources on this site include digital copies of books and journals, and also educational videos. Overall the cite seems like an accurate and easily accessible source of historical information.
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    This webstie allows students to research primary sources.
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Scribus - 1 views

    • craig shepherd
       
      This is a great program to do basic page layout. It is a lot cheaper than InDesign or PageMaker and for most educational purposes will work fine. I wish that I had a copy of this program when I took high school journalism because we could have trained students better how to create effective and creative page layouts to prepare them to be editors.
  • open-source program
  • Scribus supports professional publishing features, such as CMYK color, separations, ICC color management and versatile PDF creation.
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    Open Source Desktop Publishing much like PageMaker or InDesign
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The History Cooperative - 0 views

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    A site similar to Jstor.org but much more organized with a larger\ncollection of material. The site also includes sites like Jstor to help \nkeep the collections quite large.
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