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Amanda Asbell

A GeekyMomma's Blog: 10 Online Educational Sites for Kids - 3 views

  • literacy site for grades K-8
  • The Stacks is a Scholastic website for children who enjoy reading. Site visitors can create a profile, get book recommendations, write and read book reviews, and chat about books on a secure message board.
  • Children who can't make it to the National Zoo can still see many of the zoo's different residents through animal web cams.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • The site provides games, activities, fun facts, and an astronomy dictionary
  • improve their math skills and have fun at the same time
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    Guest post from Karen Schwietzer about the top 10 educational sites for kids.
Melissa Smith

10 Educational iPad Apps For A Well-Rounded Elementary Curriculum - 0 views

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    Not only are the apps explained, but blog post tells subject and price. 
Gail Braddock

http://www.ftc.gov/os/1999/10/64fr59888.pdf - 0 views

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    I'm a little confused about why separate permissions are necessary. Google Apps for Education is a service contracted by the school and those terms of service are different from the ones that govern regular Gmail accounts. The school is in full control of all student information and acting as the parent's agent, as in: "...the Rule does not preclude schools from acting as intermediaries between operators and parents in the notice and consent process, or from serving as the parent's agent in the process."  59909 in 64 Fed. Reg. 59888, et seq., available
Melissa Smith

10 Free Mobile Apps to Create Awesome Drawings and Doodles - 0 views

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    Apps for iOS and Androids - some collaborative
Gail Braddock

John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum - 0 views

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    In a move that will make primary-source documents more accessible for students, Caroline Kennedy unveiled the nation's first online presidential archive on Jan. 13, a $10 million project to digitize the most important papers, photographs, and recordings of President John F. Kennedy's days in office. Users can browse through the drafts of Kennedy's "Ask not what your country can do for you" speech and see how he tinkered with the words of that most famous line from his inauguration. Or, they can listen to his personal phone calls and read his letters. Archivists digitized more than 200,000 pages, 1,200 recordings, and 300 museum artifacts, as well as reels of film and hundreds of photographs. Library Director Tom Putnam said they started with all of Kennedy's Oval Office files-everything that went across his desk-along with his personal papers, official White House photos, audio of all his public remarks, video of his famous speeches, and home movies. Private partners-including AT&T, EMC Corp., Raytheon Co., and Iron Mountain Corp.-contributed $6.5 million in equipment and technical services to digitize thousands of records. The library will continue digitizing about 100,000 pages a year, along with thousands of photos and recordings. At that rate, it would still take more than 100 years to digitize all records from the Kennedy administration
Gail Braddock

YouTube - AT&T Don't Text While Driving Documentary - 0 views

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    Last over 10 minutes. Totally worth it! Should be mandatory for Driver's Ed!
Gail Braddock

https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=77e662bfbc&view=att&th=13221b28437118d5&attid=0.1... - 0 views

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    Zoom into Microscopic Worlds With the Java applet Secret Worlds: The Universe Within, your students can view the Milky Way at 10 million light-years from Earth. Then they can move through space toward Earth in successive orders of magnitude until they reach a tall oak tree just outside the buildings of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, Florida. After that, they can begin to move from the actual size of a leaf into a microscopic world that reveals leaf cell walls, the cell nucleus, chromatin, DNA and, finally, into the subatomic universe of electrons and protons.
Gail Braddock

VideoANT: October 2009 Archives - 0 views

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    Get software at http://ant.umn.edu/. No download. This is the video help!
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