This site is a great tool for anybody looking for activities to help teach particular topics. It's divided up by grade, then by subject. I find this particularly useful for those who are extremely interactive.
This is a great website, with lots and lots of links to fantastic educational websites all around the world wide web. You click on a topic, and it provides a list of websites that have information about that topic.
I came across this website for high school students (or beyond). This website is very interesting if a student is interested in visiting foreign countries. There are many choices for volunteer work.
This website lists some great Smart board apps for use in the classroom. I especially like the science apps, where there are hands-on simulations for students to manipulate.
This website is great! It has lots of teacher development workshops, conferences, courses that you can take for free or take for a fee for CEU's.
My favorite thing about this website though is the resources it has available for the teacher, for every grade for just about every subject.
This is the official website of NSTA (New Hampshire Science Teachers Organization). The site highlights science news and lists professional development opportunities.
Providing educators and students access to the highest quality practices and resources in reading and language arts instruction.
This website has great lesson plans for teaching reading and writing for grades K-12 and strategy guides for teachers.
These are a ton of one page activities from Bill Nye the Science Guy's website that really provide accurate visuals as a foundation for elementary school students. I actually remember doing a few in my second grade class.
This website has a small but interesting list of ways to begin questions, categorized by which level of Bloom's taxonomy you are looking to work in. This link takes you immediately to the question starters, but the entire website is worth perusing if you have a moment.