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October 14, 2010

From our friends at Makeuseof.com: 5 Free Online Encyclopedias for Kids

5 Free Online Encyclopedias Suitable For Kids

by Saikat Basu on Oct. 1st, 2010

free online encyclopediasThe entire World Wide Web can be seen as an informational ad reference source. But when it comes to kids, the nature of content presents a challenge of comprehension. You cannot tell a kid to go to Wikipedia and find out about “plastics” for instance. Well, he or she can, but a phrase like “semi-synthetic organic amorphous solids” would be beyond the grade level of many kids.

To revise the information to the level of a child’s knowledge requires effort on the part of the teacher or the parent. So, right here, let’s introduce ourselves to five free online encyclopedias which have simplified explanations of deeper topics.
The five online encyclopedias also help the parent or the teacher to free the kids to do their own browsing and research. Wouldn’t it be great if your kids could complete their homework without your handholding?

Simple English Wikipedia

free online encyclopedias

Simple English Wikipedia defines ‘plastics’ in much simpler words. The explanation is of course, not as detailed as its full blown version, but it is more basic for a child to grasp.

The online reference source is running around 64,555 articles right now in alphabetized categories. Simple English Wikipedia uses simple English words, grammar, and shorter sentences. Just like its big brother it also is available in many languages and you can note the number of articles available under each on the landing page itself.

Use the search bar or drill down the Knowledge Groups to search for topics. Similarly, other tools that come under Print/Export are also available.

Yahoo Kids

A Yahoo search taps into the 52,000 entries and 84,000 cross linked references brought together by Columbia University Press. Yahoo Kids is a good enough homework help site with tools like a World Factbook, dictionary, a Q& A service, and small sections on science and animals etc.

The most direct way to access the encyclopedia is to use the search bar. The information contains further links which can take you deeper into related areas. The language according to the target audience is pretty basic.

Fact Monster

The child pleasing interface of Fact Monster includes an almanac, a dictionary, a thesaurus, and an encyclopedia, along with other homework aids. This child friendly site is a part of Infoplease.com, the reference portal. Fact Monster also uses the database of the Columbia Encyclopedia.

You can use the search bar or browse by subject. Each subject covers a range of sub-topics. The information is brief and to the point.  You can also tap into the Almanac which gives a lot of space to topics on science, math, and world facts.

Kids.Net

Kids.Net.au is actually an Australian ‘not for profit’ kids safe portal run by a team of volunteers. The seven year old site has an encyclopedia among other informational tools. With one million articles on a variety of topics, the site is a good place to visit if you want child-safe and easy to understand information.

The Library of Congress

free online encyclopedias

The Library of Congress as a reference site for children sounds a bit odd. But the world’s largest library has to be a great melting pot of knowledge. And the child won’t get lost as it has a separate online section for kids and families. If you want to know about American history for instance, this is a great starting point. Click on America’s Library and you get to read America’s Story and learn about the people and events that forged the nation. The America’s Library sub-site is filled with interesting facts, and to get an overview of all that, read the Welcome page.

While compiling this small list, I did not find many free encyclopedias for children with blanket coverage on a variety of topics. These five though stand up to the task adequately enough. But you might have to go back to the search engines for more in-depth information or you can also try out these tips on researching for homework.

Can you add your favorite to this list of free online encyclopedias if it’s not among the ones mentioned here?

Image: Shutterstock

(By) Saikat is a techno-adventurer in a writer’s garb. When he is not scouring the net for tech news, you can catch him on his personal blog ruminating about the positves in our world.

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September 15, 2010

Minute Papers for Encouraging Active Listening

Filed under: Assessment,Learners,Learning strategies,Teaching ideas — daviss @ 4:57 pm

Have you ever tried “minute papers” in your classroom?

A minute paper is just what it sounds like–a paper written in one minute.

At the beginning of a lecture, let students know that you will be asking them to write a minute paper at one or two points in the class. Of course, be sure to provide an explanation and parameters for the assignment. This paper, for example, can address a particular topic in the course of the lecture, provide an opinion about an issue,  summarize what has been discussed, explain the most important thing derived from preparatory reading for the class, or describe the most important thing they have learned during this or a previous class. The important thing about a minute paper is that it can encourage students to engage in the lecture or presentation or, at least, think more deeply and actively about learning. As informal assessments, minute papers can also tell you who has prepared, listened, thought deeply, or misunderstood. In this context, they can help you with planning, addressing misconceptions, or re-teaching important concepts.

September 14, 2010

Wordia: Free visual video dictionary

Wordia Brings Words to Life in Video

Wordia is a free visual, video dictionary. Wordia features a selection of user-submitted and professionally created videos explaining the meaning of a word. The videos focus on the everyday use of words while the text accompanying each video provides the dictionary definition of the word. The video below explains the word literacy.

Applications for Education
Wordia is now offering an education section of their service. Wordia Schools provides a private area for students to share videos that they have created for the vocabulary covered in your curriculum. Wordia Schools is free, you can take a tour and sign up here.

Here are some related resources that may be of interest to you:
Visuwords – Online Graphical Dictionary
Lexipedia – Webbed Word Connections
Snappy Words – A Visual Dictionary and Thesaurus

September 13, 2010

Spotlight on Faculty: Margaret Hagood

Bring It to Class: Unpacking Pop Culture in Literacy Learning (Grades 4 through 12)

by Margaret Hagood, Donna Alvermann, and Alison Heron-Hruby

ERIC Abstract:

Students’ backpacks bulge not just with oversize textbooks, but with paperbacks, graphic novels, street lit, and electronics such as iPods and handheld video games. This book is about unpacking those texts to explore previously unexamined assumptions regarding their usefulness to classroom learning. With a strong theoretical grounding and many practical examples, the authors speak to both skeptical instructors who favor traditional canonical literature and to technology enthusiasts who already use popular music or video in their classrooms. Each chapter includes teacher, administrator, media specialist, librarian, and student voices; classroom activities; adaptable lessons; and professional study-group questions. “Bring It to Class” features: (1) A researched rationale for using pop culture in middle school and secondary classrooms as well as school libraries and media centers; (2) Field-tested teaching approaches that will connect adolescents with school-based learning and motivate their literacy practices in and out of class; and (3) An easy-to-use format that includes classroom vignettes, sample lessons, and a glossary of key terms.


Kappan: Formative Assessment

Filed under: Assessment,Learning strategies,Teaching ideas — daviss @ 10:00 am

This month, Kappan is reprinting an article from 1998 about the intricacies of the interaction of students and their teachers during formative assessment, and how this formative assessment process can be improved. The focus of the article is raising standards by changes occurring where the rubber meets the road, in the classroom with students and teachers. Worth a reprint–worth a read.

September 10, 2010

Games to Teach Kids About the Environment

1. Planet Science: online interactive science games

2. BBC Climate Change: decision-making

3. Clim’way: create plans to reach climate goals

4. Web Earth Online: Coping with today’s environment as an animal

5. Earth Day Games

6. Recycle City

7. World Wildlife Fund: list of more games

8. Ecokids: collection of environmental games

9. Adventures of Vermi the Worm: vermicomposting and other waste management ideas

10. Environmental Education on the Internet: huge list of games

September 3, 2010

ShowandKnow.com

There are so many great videos on this site for K-12 students, it is difficult to choose just a couple of examples for you to see here. This site is great for our teacher ed candidates and for parents. What a great resource for the classroom. Check it out and you will be hooked.

Panoramic Views of the World: 8 Great Teaching Tools from MakeUseOf

The beauty of a panorama can never be described in words; it has been to be seen to be believed. In an extremely crowded world, panoramic spots are few and far between. Oh yes, you can see an entire city laid out in front of you from the top of a skyscraper. But nothing beats watching the natural ones. For instance, the one from Yavapai Point at Grand Canyon is a natural wonder. Check these out and share with your students. A great addition to Google Earth.

360Cities: 360Cities.net has a good collection of panoramic vista from around the world. Most of the panoramic shots are geo-referenced and interactive. You can start off from the Editor’s picks or go to their World panorama map and the Photographer map for travelling to a spot from a world map. You can watch the panoramas in full screen and navigate on it with the controls provided. The sweep of the eye is also represented on a Google map alongside.

If you have Google Earth installed, you can literally travel to spots around the world and view panoramas using a downloadable KML file.
But right now, I am checking out what they advertise as the world’s largest 360 panorama – an 18 Gigapixel shot of Prague.

Panoramas.dk: The panorama website is the work of Hans Nyberg, a photographer and an enthusiast of immersive panoramic images. As he says, an interactive VR panorama cannot be seen in a book or on a printed image. It has to be experienced on a computer screen. The site also has links to other great resources for learning more about the art of VR photography. The site has a huge collection of panoramas from around the world. You can even check out Obama’s Nobel Prize speech or panoramic photos from Tour de France.

Gigapan: The Gigapan panorama website is all about gigapixel panoramic images from around the world. What’s interesting is that GigaPan was developed by Carnegie Mellon University in collaboration with NASA Ames Intelligent Robotics Group, with support from Google.

The panorama website also has a community formed around the common passion for panoramic photography. You can join for free. Use their uploader to share your panorama shots with the general community. You can search through the collection using the search box, or go for the orange filters at the top that are marked as – Most Popular, Most Recent, Tags, and Conversations. You can view a lot of the panoramas on Google Earth using the link given just below the snaps. The site does not give a full screen view, but Google Earth does.

ARounder: Immerse yourself in panoramic vistas of cities, museums, parks, local cafes and stores, cathedrals, and more. ARounder is an online travel magazine and a neat panorama website with a smaller collection than the ones before it. But it is neatly arranged according to region. And there are two outer-worldly places on the moon and Mars too for the space buffs. You can click a location and take a wide-eyed virtual tour through the place. You can also get ARounder’s free iPhone app for some virtual sightseeing while on the move.

I am not going to Tahiti; instead let me do a bit of virtual roaming across the landscape of Mars for a change.

Panoguide: Panoguide is a free central stock of information and community discussion on panoramic photography. Their About page says that the panorama website is also a how-to on techniques for creating panoramic images using a conventional camera and “stitching” the images together on a computer. Click on the tab that says Gallery and dive into their collection that’s arranged around country names. You can also use the Google Map for a point and click approach.

ViewAt: Select the wide variety of locations from the dropdown or on the map and you are there with two clicks. You can watch the default panorama or go for the high resolution image. The site’s forum is also a spot to visit if you are interested in panoramas and photography.

Panedia: Panedia is a combination of Panoramic & Encyclopedia. It is actually a professional services site for ‘georeferenced photography using immersive panoramic technologies’. The site has a small collection of panoramic photos, all on Australia. Every panorama has hotpsots which are clickable links to more panoramas. If you like the Australian outdoors you can check out their small demo collection.

1001 Wonders: This is a panorama tour of the sites that are listed on the World Heritage List compiled by UNESCO. Presently, 263 places are being showcased on the website. The ultimate goal is to panophotograph 1001 sites.

August 30, 2010

SNAG Learning: Documentaries for Schools

From Free Technology for Teachers: Snag Films, a provider of high quality documentaries for online viewing, has now launched Snag Learning. Snag Learning offers access to most of the same films available on Snag Films. Snag Learning categorizes documentaries by grade level and content area. Additionally, Snag Learning offers a series of guiding questions for each film. You can embed previews of each video into your blog, but you have to watch the full-length versions on Snag Learning.

Applications for Education
If you can live with the pre-roll advertisement on the films, Snag Learning could be a good resource for teachers who want to use documentaries in their classrooms, but don’t have the funds for purchasing DVDs. Snag Learning is planning to add lesson plans to accompany the guiding questions attached to the films they host.

140 Things to Try from Free Technology for Teachers

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