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81. Internet Teaching And Learning Sites
on the internet; Maastricht PBLsite Problem-Based Learning; online University A virtual multi disciplinary teaching project for school students.
http://ultibase.rmit.edu.au/Resources/internet.htm
Internet Teaching and Learning Sites
Teaching and Learning Resources
Online Universities - Distance Education
Lists of links to online courses
Examples of virtual projects, modules, syllabi
This resource provides information on sites related to a range of university teaching and learning issues. All material is available on the World Wide Web.
Building a Web-based Education System
This site is designed to provide a collection of resources that help people make use of the Web in their teaching and learning.
Dalhousie University's Instructional Development and Technology Sites Worldwide
This site provides a list of links to university centres for academic development for Australia, Canada, USA, and others. It is not comprehensive, but it includes a wide range of links.

82. Reading Online - Reviews: Teaching With The Internet
A Review of Teaching with the internet Lessons from the Classroom At therequest of the students, Ms. Meyer creates an internet project in which her
http://www.readingonline.org/reviews/books/archive-lessons/
A Review of Teaching with the Internet: Lessons from the Classroom
Reviewed by Amelia E. El-Hindi
Teaching with the Internet: Lessons from the Classroom.
Donald J. Leu, Jr., and Deborah Diadiun Leu. 1997. Christopher-Gordon Publishers (480 Washington Street, Norwood, MA 02062, USA. 1-800-934-8322; fax 617-762-2110). ISBN 0-926842-59-5. Softcover. 226 pp. US$24.95.
Her words echoed in my mind when I read Teaching with the Internet: Lessons from the Classroom (1997) by Donald and Deborah Leu. The book is aptly named, for it describes actual teachers' use of the Internet and illustrates specific strategies that integrate this new technology with classroom instruction to enhance meaningful learning. The authors' premise that "Learning from one another is essential to success on the Internet" (p. 3) becomes clear through teacher anecdotes on use of the Internet to support all types of learning, from teaching inquiry skills through navigation strategies to fostering reading-writing connections with e-mail. Such technology provides a way for teachers to reach beyond their individual classrooms and link with educators everywhere. A reader hears from Angeles Maitland Heriot, a seventh-grade teacher from Buenos Aires who praises the ability of the Internet to allow children to discover firsthand the "geography, history, and culture of the world" (p. 170). Readers also hear from Terrie Gray, a junior high science teacher from California who discusses early Web experiences and invites us to visit a Web page created to teach research skills at

83. Reading Online - From The Editors: Teaching Students To Evaluate Internet Inform
internet safety and ethics for the classroom. Reading online. Washington,DC Pew internet American Life Project.
http://www.readingonline.org/editorial/december2001/
Teaching Students to Evaluate Internet Information Critically
Bridget Dalton

Dana L. Grisham

“I find the Internet most useful when I need help for school. In today’s world you can just go home and get into the Internet and type in your search term. The results are endless. There is so much information that you have to ignore a lot of it.”
15-year-old boy, "The Internet and Education"
[Creating Web pages] made me realize not everything on the net is valid...just thinking that even regular people like me can actually put something inside the net made me understand why everyone should be more careful in picking information...[there's] plenty of room to abuse the power of the Internet and as users we should be careful.
Preservice teacher, "To See One Another More Clearly"
When was the last time your students completed a research project that did not involve use of the Internet? For many students, the Internet is a far more familiar place than the library. They use it to e-mail, to chat online, to listen to music, to surf for entertainment, to post their own Web pages, and to find information they need for school projects. Many, teens in particular, rely heavily on the Internet to support their school work. In a recent survey of U.S. teens with Internet access, 94 percent reported using it for school research and 71 percent said it was a major source of information for their latest school project ( online document Finding and using information on the Internet is a relatively new literacy skill, one that requires students to know how to evaluate information "critically and competently” (

84. Resources: Professional Dev't And Teacher Support
The online internet Institute This site offers a national collaborative structure to Learning Networks A Field Guide to Teaching and Learning online
http://www.benton.org/publibrary/schools/resources6.html
Resources:
  • Overview
  • Statistics
  • Teaching process
  • Edu. Reform ...
  • Schools
    Learning Connection: Resources
    Professional development organizations and projects
    National Teacher Enhancement Network
    A project of Montana State University supported in part by the National Science Foundation, the network offers graduate-credit science and math telecomputing courses to middle and high school teachers nationwide. The Online Internet Institute
    This site offers a national collaborative structure to support local staff development efforts. OII came from the vision of two classroom teachers, Ferdi Serim and Bonnie Bracey, who recognized the need for professional development activities that would help other teachers become part of the Internet community. The OII Entry Points and CyberSeminar enable participants to develop skills in computer basics, connectivity, exploration and evaluation, navigation and research, communication, and curriculum development and presentation. The classroom educators and proponents of systemic reform who created the Online Internet Institute believe that computers and other educational technologies should be used to support, not replace, the teacher. Project MOST (Missouri Supporting Teachers)
    Project MOSTis a consortium of statewide education leaders planning a program of education reform and technological innovation. Their integrated teacher support system and network infrastructure is designed around the needs of teachers implementing math and science curriculum through problem-based learning and computational science techniques.
  • 85. Internet Resources For Learning And Teaching Anthropology
    A comprehensive list of chemistry teaching resources on the internet. online Anthropological Course Information at the University of Connecticut
    http://lrs.ed.uiuc.edu/students/xiaoyu/courses.html
    Curriculum Materials Online
    Course Information Available on the Web

    86. English Teaching Forum Online – Bureau Of Educational And Cultural Affairs
    You can also have students access the essay online at What was he trying toteach his students about writing with this internet project?
    http://exchanges.state.gov/forum/vols/vol42/no1/p52.htm
    Submissions Style Sheet Subscriptions Feedback Previous Issues
    Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
    OFFICE OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE PROGRAMS
    Home
    English Language Programs English Teaching Forum Volume 42 ... Issue 1
    An Integrated Skills Lesson Plan for "A Postcard from America" by Robert Olen Butler
    Carmel Underwood and Robert Underwood Read the essay
    Description:
    You can choose the parts of the lesson that you find most appropriate and useful for your class. Approximate times for each part of the lesson are included, but these times may vary, depending on the individual class or teaching situation.
    A. Introduce the Subject: Postcards
  • Show or pass around various postcards to your students. Ask questions such as the following: What are postcards? What are some common features (characteristics) of postcards? Who sends postcards? Why do people send postcards? Have you sent or received a postcard this year? If so, to or from whom?
  • B. Introduce the Lesson

    87. Guide To Philosophy On The Internet (Suber), Teaching/Learning
    Aesthetics Teaching Materials. From Aesthetics online. Bioethics Syllabi. International Society for Environmental Ethics Syllabus Project.
    http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/gpi/teaching.htm
    Guide to Philosophy on the Internet Peter Suber Philosophy Department Earlham College
    I stopped updating this guide in February 2003, after eight years online. I plan to leave it online for the foreseeable future and hope that enough links are still alive to make it useful. I know that the guide contains many dead links and omits many valuable new sites. For a comprehensive, well-organized, and up-to-date guide to philosophy on the internet, I can recommend Tom Stone's EpistemeLinks Home Guides Philosophers ... About I no longer link to individual syllabi, course home-pages, departmental curriculum pages, or lecture notes. There are now too many and I am not willing to track all those to come online in the future. I have removed the links of this kind that I already had.

    88. Fenichel's Teaching Tools: Online Resources For Educators
    online interactive learning center that makes homework and project assignments Teaching With the internet A comprehensive resource for educators
    http://www.fenichel.com/teacher.shtml
    Online Resources for Educators
    A.D.D. Children and Homework
    An excellent hand-out for parents, with tips on how to help organize home and homework for the child with attention deficits. (Erickson Learning Foundation)
    AllKindsOfMinds.com

    Pediatrician-turned-thinking specialist Dr. Mel Levine has become a guru to parents, teachers and learning specialists. His approach is to "de-mystify" how we are impacted by our strengths and weaknesses during the course of learning and performing in school. This rich and usable site offers general and specific strategies, including self-help techniques that children along with parents and teachers can employ to promote learning, focusing , and performing more efficiently.
    Adolescent Health and Mental Health

    An Internet guide to adolescent mental health issues, including self-esteem peer pressure
    ALFY.com

    Campaign For Our Children

    Serious information about teen pregnancy and sexual responsibility. Resources and information for parents and teachers. (CFOC)
    Children and Internet Use:

    Social, Psychological and Academic Consequences for Low-income Children

    89. Teaching Social Studies With The Internet
    Teaching Social Studies with the internet. Even more elaborate projects, suchas the fiveday world journey described above, can be published on the
    http://www.kidsource.com/education/teaching.ss.internet.html
    Teaching Social Studies with the Internet
    advertisement
    Credits
    Source
    ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education
    Contents
    Introduction
    Growth of Internet Use In Schools

    Using Primary Sources

    School or Class Portals
    ...
    Conclusion
    Forums
    Education and Kids
    Related Articles
    Parents Guide to the Internet
    The Internet and Kids - Websites
    KidSource Store
    The American Heritage Children's Dictionary Books to Build on: A Grade-By-Grade Resource Guide for Parents and Teachers (Core Knowledge Series) Advertisement
    Introduction
    Social studies educators are living and working in the middle of a revolution the emergence of the Internet as an integral part of education. This Digest summarizes ways that classroom teachers can combine the Internet with other instructional resources and methods. It is a basic guide for the novice and a checklist for the more experienced Internet user. The web sites and ERIC resources cited in this Digest and included in the references provide the "next steps" for exploration and implementation. Back to the Table of Contents
    Growth of Internet Use In Schools
    Back to the Table of Contents
    Using Primary Sources
    Teachers have long recognized the value of students reading accounts of historical events written in the words of those who were there. Excerpts from James Madison's journals kept during the Constitutional Convention is a typical example of the primary sources that teachers use to explain how the Constitution was developed and how it is interpreted today. But the Internet opens the way to an enormous range of resources. For instance, imagine reading Tacitus's eyewitness account of the burning of Rome, including the descriptions of "terrified, shrieking women" and "helpless old and young" fleeing the conflagration, or Corporal E. C. Nightingale's frightening memories from on the deck of the battleship Arizona in 1941. Both of these are available to teachers and students at [http://www.ibiscom.com], one of several commercial web sites that provide superb resources for teachers and students.

    90. Teaching Methods/Subject Area Resources Links
    The First Year of Teaching Middle School Education . Subject Area Web Resources Implementation of Global internet Project online Learning Activities
    http://www.mhhe.com/socscience/education/methods/resources.html
    Teaching Methods Web Resources Scientific Basis for the Art of Teaching The Role of Planning in Teaching Curriculum Theory Technology in Education ... Global Education
    Teaching Methods Resources
    Scientific Basis for the Art of Teaching Teaching in Historical Perspective
    The History of Education Site

    Blackwell History of Education Research Museum

    Cogito: The Cognitive Paradigm

    Center for Dewey Studies

    Effective Teaching
    Principles for Effective Teaching
    HVCC's Center for Effective Teaching Home Page

    NCREL: Pathways to School Improvement

    Education Hot Links

    Academic Learning Time Educational Psychology Interactive: Academic Learning Time A Systems Model of the Teaching/Learning Process Effective Teaching Class Notes Learning to Teach National Center for Research on Teacher Learning Overcoming the Education-Training Divide: The Case of Professional Development Troubleshooting Your Class Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators Constructivist Perspective The Institute for Constructivist Theories of Learning Constructivist Teaching and Learning Models WWW Constructivist Project Design Guide
    The Role of Planning in Teaching
    Instructional Objectives Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives Arts Education Evaluation Effective teaching strategies and the design of instruction Behavioral Objectives Writing Behavioral Objectives Individual Education Planning: Behavioral Objectives Bloom's Taxonomy Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Cognitive Domain Critical Thinking Selecting Curriculum Content Arts Education: A Curriculum Guide for Grade Eight Reading Curriculum Guide Contents A Curriculum Guide for the Elementary Level Instructional Design

    91. PRIMO Peer-Reviewed Instructional Materials Online
    PRIMO PeerReviewed Instructional Materials online. PRIMO, formerly known asthe internet Education Project (IEP), is a means to promote and share
    http://www.ala.org/ala/acrlbucket/is/iscommittees/webpages/emergingtech/primo/
    PRIMO: Peer-Reviewed Instructional Materials Online
    PRIMO, formerly known as the Internet Education Project (IEP), is a means to promote and share peer-reviewed instructional materials created by librarians to teach people about discovering, accessing and evaluating information in networked environments. The Committee hopes that publicizing selective, high quality resources will help librarians to respond to the educational challenges posed by still emerging digital technologies. PRIMO Database The database of instructional resources reviewed and selected by the Emerging Technologies in Instruction committee. Site of the Month : Monthly series of in-depth profiles of projects recently added into the PRIMO database. Site submissions for PRIMO are accepted continually, but are reviewed for possible inclusion twice per year. Read Selection Criteria Nominate a Site : Know of a great online instruction site? Use this form to suggest that we review it for PRIMO.

    92. ONLINE!
    Name of the editor of a scholarly project or database (if known) Preface.online! A Reference Guide to Using internet Sources.
    http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/online/cite5.html
    This chapter's guidelines for citing Internet sources are based on two sources: the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (2003) by Joseph Gibaldi. The MLA Handbook advises that you acknowledge sources "by keying brief parenthetical citations in your text to an alphabetical list of works that appears at the end of the paper" (142). Widely used by writers in literature, language studies, and other fields in the humanities, the MLA style of documentation allows writers to keep texts "as readable and as free of disruptions as possible" (143). The MLA Handbook provides information about the purposes of research; suggestions for choosing topics; recommendations for using libraries; guidance for composing outlines, drafts, notes, and bibliographies; and advice on spelling, punctuation, abbreviations, and other stylistic matters. It also presents a style for documenting sources and gives directions for citing print sources in the text and preparing a list of Works Cited. Thorough acquaintance with the MLA Handbook will, as its author promises, "help you become a writer whose work deserves serious consideration" (xv). This chapter follows the conventions of MLA citation style.

    93. Using The Internet In Economics Lessons
    Read about using a WebQuest as an internet teaching plan. A web projectused frequently to teach both economics and evaluation of economic information
    http://ecedweb.unomaha.edu/teachsug.htm
    Using the Internet to Teach Economics:
    An Idea Page
    Students at all levels get excited about using the web and can benefit from using the web for up-to-date information. Recommended grade levels are shown, but you should tailor the project to your students. At the end, we even have a couple of web projects for K-4 As students become more advanced at web use, they can begin to create their own pages. Any of the following ideas can be developed for advanced students by having them work in teams to create a Web Virtual Collection or Exhibition on the topic to share with others. Reminder: One of the most important things you can do for your students is help them learn to evaluate information! Have them ask: Who provided this information? What are his or her qualifications? Is this information consistent with what experts say? Does this information reflect a particular viewpoint? What are the other viewpoints? What can I learn from this web page? Here are some sources of information on this: Evaluating World Wide Web Information
    Evaluating information found on the Internet

    Criteria for evaluation of Internet Information Resources
    For these exercises, the search tools of the Web will be very useful. Any of the following projects can be enhanced by finding more supporting information. The students can do most of this! A web site that links all of the major search sites is found at

    94. TESL/TEFL/TESOL/ESL/EFL/ESOL Links - TESL : Internet : Teaching With The Web
    By Michael Ivy, The internet TESL Journal, May 1998. An online Culinary Exercise A World Wide William A Shakespeare Project By Iwona Filip, Teaching
    http://iteslj.org/links/TESL/Internet/Teaching_with_the_Web/
    TESL : Internet : Teaching with the Web
    This is a sub-page of
    The Internet TESL Journal's
    TESL/TEFL/TESOL/ESL/EFL/ESOL Links
    There are currently 12259 registered links.
    Main Page
    Links for Students Links for Teachers What's New
    iteslj.org / links
    Our Websites
    Activities for ESL Students

    Quizzes, Puzzzles, ...
    a4esl.org
    The Internet TESL Journal

    Monthly Online Journal iteslj.org Kelly Brothers' Website Interesting Things for ESL Students Quizzes, Puzzzles, ... www.manythings.org
    Activities for Using Junk Email in the ESL/EFL Classroom
    Suggested ways to use junk mail and some ready-to-use handouts for the classroom. By Michael Ivy, The Internet TESL Journal, May 1998
    An Online Culinary Exercise: A Worksheet
    An Exercise with Exchange 3, an ESL netzine
    An Overview of The Internet TESL Journal's Things for ESL Teachers and Activities for ESL Students (Charles Kelly)
    In addition to publishing articles, this online journal offers other things on its website.
    CNN Money - Best Places to Live
    Not designed for ESL, but good for a lesson on describing places.
    Critical Evaluation Surveys (Kathleen Schrock)
    Evaluation forms which you can use with your students to help them be able to critically evaluate a Web page for authenticity, applicability, authorship, bias, and usabilty.

    95. F500 Resources
    Teaching with the internet Issues. Article The internet as Curriculum by Jamie Examples of Just a Few internet projects (Good for the Unit 4 Project)
    http://www.indiana.edu/~f500/resources.html

    96. Project Syllabus: Master List Of Syllabi
    Social; Special Topics; Statistics; Teaching; Women; internet Courses internet Web Syllabus is posted online at instructor s site and available for
    http://www.lemoyne.edu/OTRP/projectsyllabus.html
    Master list date: 04-13-05; this page last updated 04-18-05) These syllabi have been reviewed by faculty volunteers serving on a Project Syllabus team. We make no claim that any of these syllabi are perfect; they are made available here as examples of syllabi that have been used. If you would like to submit your syllabi for review and possible inclusion, please send an electronic copy or URL to Jeanne Slattery at jslattery@clarion.edu or contact her for more information. Guidelines for Preparing Exemplary Syllabi Note: If you discover some type of formatting anomaly after downloading one of these syllabi, please be patient with us and, especially, their authors. The instructors who prepared these syllabi submitted to us electronic copies which displayed correctly on their own computers using their own word processing software. We have come to learn that what appears perfect on one computer may show some minor or moderate formatting anomalies on another computer. If such an anomaly appears to be particularly egregious or raises questions of interpretation of the author's pedagogical intent, please contact either Jeanne Slattery or webmaster John Williams ( john.williams@uni.edu

    97. Teaching With Technology - Educational Technology Resources - Academic Info
    Teaching with Technology Directory of online Resources The Pew internet American Life Project aims to be an authoritative source for timely
    http://www.academicinfo.net/edtech.html
    Academic Info
    Teaching with Technology - Directory of Online Resources

    Home
    Search Index Contact ... Education Technology Distance Learning Home Education Distance Learning Huge Savings on Scholarly and General Books at our Bookstore
    See also Internet Studies Action Research by Teachers for Teachers: ICT in the Classroom
    • Interpersonal Computing and Technology Journal (IPCT-J)
      "...is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal, published two/four times a year. The journal's focus is on computer-mediated communication, and the pedagogical issues surrounding the use of computers and technology in educational settings."
    Association of Learning Technology (U.K.)
    Sections include: Online Tutorials ; Lesson Plans ; Searchable Reference Desk ; Professional Resources ; Classroom Tools ; Technology The Campus Computing Project Canada's SchoolNet
    "Established in 1993, Canada's SchoolNet is designed to promote the effective use of information technology amongst Canadians by helping Canadian schools and public libraries connect to the Internet. Through its partnerships with provincial and territorial ministries of education, library authorities, education and library associations and the private sector, Industry Canada's SchoolNet has successfully made Canada the first nation in the world to connect its schools and libraries to the Information Highway." (British Columbia, Canada)

    98. Yenza!
    Using the internet for research and teaching in the Humanities and Social Sciences In selecting outside resources, the project team has looked for
    http://www.nrf.ac.za/yenza/
    Using the Internet for research and teaching in the Humanities and Social Sciences About Yenza! "Yenza" - which means "do it" in isiXhosa and isiZulu - is a guide to using the Internet for research and teaching in the Social Sciences and Humanities. The project's understanding of "using the Internet for research" includes using Internet tools for finding information, for conducting research, as well as for disseminating research-related information. The Yenza! site was developed by the South African National Research Foundation in partnership with the Infolit Project of the Adamastor Trust . Materials on the site comprise a mixture of annotated links to resources in South Africa and elsewhere, and materials developed specifically for Yenza! In selecting outside resources, the project team has looked for materials which are highly rated by subject experts. These resources are intended as an introduction to what the Internet offers researchers and teachers, not as a comprehensive catalogue. The information on this site should help both the novice researcher and the more experienced researcher to find and develop online resources. The site can be used independently by researchers, although it was primarily developed to complement face-to-face workshops. Yenza! for trainers

    99. Mathematics Archives - K12 Internet Sites
    K12 Teaching Materials. The following are internet sites which contain significant Ask Dr. Math is an internet project based at Swarthmore College and
    http://archives.math.utk.edu/k12.html
    K-12 Teaching Materials The following are Internet sites which contain significant collections of materials which can be used in the teaching of mathematics at the K-12 level. We have organized these materials into the following categories: Lesson Plans
    Columbia Education Center Mathematics Lesson Plans
    Explorer
    The Explorer is part of the Unified Network Informatics Technology for Education (UNITE) efforts at the University of Kansas. The Explorer is part of a research and development effort to establish an on time and user friendly means of delivering a full range of information resources to educators and students. This site includes information on software, lab materials, lesson plans, video tapes, etc. for the teaching of mathematics at the k-12 grade levels.
    ExploreMath.com Lesson Plans for the Graphing Calculator
    Lesson Plans using Geometer's Sketchpad
    Math Activities for K-12 Teachers
    In December, 1997, NASA Dryden Flight Research Center funded Dan Biezad, Professor of Aerospace Engineering, and Robin Ward, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, both of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, to develop materials for K-12 teachers based on aeronautical themes and NASA projects. One major goal of this project was to make the learning of mathematics more engaging and realistic for students, by using real-world applications.

    100. Teaching Migration In A Transatlantic Classroom: A Curriculum-Based Internet Pro
    Check the internet for project announcements (for suggestions, This onlineresource for teaching, learning, research, and collaboration allows teachers
    http://www.oah.org/pubs/magazine/migrations/otto.html
    Teaching Migration in a Transatlantic Classroom: A Curriculum-Based Internet Project
    Kerstin Otto
    Reprinted from the OAH Magazine of History
    14 (Fall 1999)
    . ISSN 0882-228X
    "My father grew up in a village in Taiwan....When he was 14 years old he left his home and went to Taipei, looking for a job....In 1979, my father came to Germany because he wanted to visit one of his cousins, but he liked it here and stayed. He worked as a cook in a Chinese Restaurant and his plan for the future was to be the owner of a Chinese Restaurant. Two years after his arrival in Germany we followed. At that time I was only five years old and I could only speak Chinese....
    "Now we were all in Germany, my father worked as a cook, my mother stayed at home and took care of us and we went to school. But we only had visums (sic) for a few months, so we moved from state to state and tried to get a visum there. We moved for about five times until my father got an unlimited visum so that we were allowed to stay in Germany. Eleven years ago we moved to Hamburg and my father opened his own Chinese Restaurant.
    "I didn't change my nationality, that means I'm still Taiwanese, but today my whole family has got an unlimited visum, so that we can stay here. I like it here in Hamburg but I think I will go back to Taiwan after I finished an apprenticeship."

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