Integrating the Internet
into the Classroom
Facilitator: Michael
Krauss, AES,
Lewis
& Clark College
Resources for Younger
Learners
I. How do young children
learn? Is there a role for computers? Should very young children be
exposed to the Internet?
- See Early
Connections, developed by the
Northwest Regional Educational Technology Consortium.
II. What should teachers,
parents and students know in order to stay safe on the
Internet?
- See SafeKids,
a commercial website dedicated to the issue of child safety on the
Internet.
III. Teachers should
know not to just "send kids out on the Internet to do research!" What
are some directories and that contain appropriate Web sites for
younger learners? Also are there some individual Web sites that are
especially designed with kids in mind?
*
Here is the most
comprehensive collection of resources for teachers of young learners
put together by IATEFL. There are
some out of date links, but you can Google the titles of the
resources and usually find the working URL.
- ALA
Great Web Sites for Kids - The
sites on this page are selected by librarians in areas of interest
to kids. Rated by Pre-K, Elementary, Middle School, and
Parents/Teachers/Caregivers.
- Ask
Jeeves for Kids - Young people can
ask this search tool questions in "natural language," such as
"Where are the Andes Mountains?" The design discourages
"wandering" on the Web and produces only kid-friendly results. I
still recommend that teachers find the sites *for* kids,
especially in elementary school.
- Awesome
Library - Safely search the Web or
the Awesome Library site for homework or entertainment. This site
is available in Spanish or English.
- Education
Place (Houghten Mifflin) - This is
a math test prep site for elementary kids. Students can take
online math quizzes. (Recommended by an elementary school teacher
during a workshop).
- Eduhound's
Directories for Kids - Fifteen or
so excellent directories for kids. Some of these also appear on
this page as individual listings. Eduhound
itself has a wealth of resources both for K-12 learners. Eduhound
is also available in
Spanish (all Web resources are in
Spanish). And also sites of special
interest to Spanish speakers, but in
English.
- EnchantedLearning.com
- (Terrific for young kids!) Has great resources for young kids
such as a hyperlinked
picture dictionary and online
"Zoom
School." Kids surf only within the
umbrella site.
- Funbrain
- Variety of educational games at several levels. Includes math,
geometry, art, language arts, and more. (Recommended by an
elementary school teacher during a workshop).
- *
Gamequarium.com
- A comprehensive, fun, free site that includes not only learning
games, but tutorials, online tools, printables and more. A
directory designed for the Internet-connected teacher and
learner.
- Giggle
Poetry - Students can read funny
poems written by others, learn to write poems themselves, and
enter poetry to be included on the site. (Recommended by an
elementary school teacher during a workshop).
- Great
Sites for Using the SMART Board (K-3)
These resources are particularly relevant for use in the
one-computer classroom with K-3 kids. A 2007 Blue Web'n
selection.
- *
Kathy
Schrock's Guide for Educators (Kid Stuff
Category) - This section of
Schrock's excellent directory includes some of the individual
sites listed here plus many more that are intended for
elementary/middle school kids (A great place to start for content
for primary/middle schoolers).
- KidsClick!
- Librarians have developed this
searchable directory divided into 15 categories. Every entry is
rated for reading level and amount of illustration -a great
starting place for student resources.
- *
Kindersite
- (Click the Directory Link--then choose Games, Music/Songs or
Stories) - The Kindersite is designed for child-care, pre-school,
kindergartens, elementary and primary schools plus home school,
libraries and the home. In fact everywhere where young children
access computers. Games, stories, songs and more for ages 2-8.
Some great activities for beginning readers. Can also be used by
older students with limited English if they don't mind the
children's content. Sites are organized alphabetically and are
labeled by age group.
- Multnomah
County Library Homework Center -
Over 4,000 sites were especially selected for Multnomah County
students. Excellent job by this Portland, Oregon based
library.
- *
Storyplace
(Children's Digital Library) -
It's all about literacy, traditonal and electronic. Choose from
Pre-School Library, Elementary Library and Book Hive. This site is
fully bilingual in English and Spanish!
- Yahooligans
- This is best-known kids' Web directory and is first rate (the
best in my opinion). I still recommend that teachers find the
sites *for* kids, especially in elementary school.
IV. What sites contain
materials and activities for teachers of younger learners?
*
Here is the most
comprehensive collection of resources for teachers of young learners
put together by IATEFL. There are
some out of date links, but you can Google the titles of the
resources and usually find the working URL.
- ABCteach
- a site with free printable activity sheets, templates for
graphic organizers, and many more ideas for their use in the
classroom
- Education
World - This megasite for
educators includes sections on Lesson Planning, Administrator's
Desk, Professional Development, Technology Integration, and School
Issues. A treasure chest for teachers, Education World contains
over 120,000 education-related sites.
- Kathy
Schrock's Guide for Educators -
Continually updated sites categorized by topic, e.g. arts/lit.,
business, education, health, history,holidays, humor, math, news,
etc. Aimed at K-12.
- Mrs.
Mitchell's Virtual School - Wow,
this is an amazing collection of Web resources. Very practical and
thorough. Sites organized by subject, but also by indvidual grade
level (from K- Middle School). Be sure to scroll down through the
entire page.
- Theme
Pages - Quite an amazing
collection of resources and activities on very common themes that
are appropriate for elementary age students.
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Created by: krauss@lclark.edu
Updated: 2/22/07