ED429593 99 An Introduction to Internet Resources for K-12 Educators. Part I: Information Resources, Update 1999. ERIC Digest.
Author: Morgan, Nancy A.

ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology, Syracuse, NY.

THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC

An Introduction to Internet Resources for K-12 Educators.
Part I:
Information Resources, Update 1999

The Internet is an international computer network composed of thousands of smaller networks. Recently, through state and regional education networks and commercial providers, the vast resources of the Internet are increasingly available to administrators, school library media specialists, and classroom teachers. This Digest lists a sample of no cost Internet resources of special interest to K-12 educators. Readers should be aware that the resources and their Internet addresses below are subject to change.

GUIDES TO INTERNET RESOURCES:

---The Argus Clearinghouse: A large collection of guides to Internet resources categorized by topic.

http://www.clearinghouse.net/

---AskERIC InfoGuides: Topical guides to Internet, ERIC, and print resources.

http://www.askeric.org/Virtual/InfoGuides/

LESSON PLANS AND TEACHING MATERIALS:

---The AskERIC Virtual Library contains hundreds of lesson plans, including, but not limited to, language arts, mathematics, social studies, and science. Also included are lesson plans from School Library Media Activities Monthly, Newton's Apple Educators Guides, and Crossroads: K16 American History Curriculum.

http://www.askeric.org/Virtual/Lessons/

---The Gateway to Educational Materials (GEM) is a "virtual card catalog" to lesson plans, activities, projects, and curriculum found all over the Internet.

http://www.thegateway.org

KEYPALS AND PENPALS:

---IECC-Intercultural E-mail Classroom Connections maintains a suite of listservs that facilitate international and cross-cultural classroom exchanges via e-mail over the Internet. Archives and general information can be found on the St. Olaf's WWW server.

http://www.stolaf.edu/network/iecc/

ACCEPTABLE USE POLICIES:

Many schools provide Internet access to students, and staff have created policies and agreements for the appropriate use of Internet accounts. Samples of agreements, policies, and opinion pieces have been collected at:

---Armadillo's WWW Server

http://chico.rice.edu/armadillo/Rice/Resources/acceptable.html

TECHNOLOGY PLANS FOR K-12 SCHOOLS:

---The National Center for Technology Planning collects technology plans and makes them freely available over the Internet. Guidebooks and articles for developing technology plans are also included.

http://www.nctp.com/

INTERNET PROJECTS FOR THE CLASSROOM:

Examples of telecommunication projects that incorporate the use of the Internet in the classroom can be found on the following sites:

---Global SchoolNet Foundation: Internet Projects Registry Archive Service:

http://www.gsn.org/project/index.html

---Pitsco Online Collaborative Projects:

http://www.pitsco.com/p/Respages/collab.html

GRANT INFORMATION:

---U.S. Department of Education Grants & Contracts Information: Includes current grant application announcements.

http://gcs.ed.gov/

Select "Grants Information"

---Foundation Center: Provides a searchable database of funding activities as well as links to private or corporate foundations' Web sites.

http://fdncenter.org/

E-RATE INFORMATION:

---The Schools and Libraries Division (SLD) of the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC): This site has the most current information on E-rate. The Schools and Libraries Division administers the E-rate program. The site has examples of technology plans, as well as online versions of the relevant program forms.

http://www.sl.universalservice.org/

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INFORMATION:

---The Federal Web Locator: From the Villanova Center for Information Law and Policy

http://www.law.vill.edu/fed-agency/fedwebloc.html

---FedWorld Information Network

http://www.fedworld.gov/

---Ingram Library - Government Sites for Kids

http://www.westga.edu/library/depts/govdoc/kids.html

---LinxNet U.S. Government Index

http://www.linxnet.com/gov.html

STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENTS:

---U.S. Department of Education Links and Addresses of State Education Agencies

http://www.ed.gov/Programs/bastmp/SEA.htm

---Links to State Education Agencies from the Council of Chief State School Officers

http://develop.ccsso.cybercentral.com/seamenu.htm

STANDARDS-BASED EDUCATION:

---The Mid-Continental Regional Educational Laboratory (McREL) is recognized for its work in standards-based education. This Web site includes several full-text online resources that will assist educators in developing their own standards-based curriculum.

http://www.mcrel.org/standards/

---Developing Educational Standards

http://www.putwest.boces.org/Standards.html

REFERENCE RESOURCES:

---Internet Public Library Reference Center. An excellent collection of reference sources, also allows patrons to ask reference questions through e-mail or on the Web.

http://www.ipl.org/ref/

---The Libraries at Purdue University: The Virtual Reference Desk. An extensive collection of online ready reference resources, such as dictionaries, thesauri, phone books, and zip codes.

http://thorplus.lib.purdue.edu/reference/index.html

LIBRARY CATALOGS:

---webCATS, from the University of Saskatchewan Libraries is a directory of library catalogs which can be searched via the Web. webCATS is organized for searching geographically, by type of library, and by library catalog vendor.

http://www.lights.com/webcats/

---Library of Congress: Provides access to the holdings of the Library of Congress, U.S. Government copyright files, federal legislation, foreign law, and gateway access to many other library catalogs.

http://lcweb.loc.gov/catalog/

OTHER RESOURCES:

Hundreds of resources covering almost every subject imaginable exist on the Internet. Here are some additional ones that would be of special interest to K-12 educators.

---ACCESS ERIC: Gateway to the Internet sites of the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC).

http://www.accesseric.org/

---Consortium for School Networking (CoSN)

http://www.cosn.org/

---Education World: A searchable database of 50,000 education links for teachers, parents, and students. Includes lesson plans, education news, an educators' forum, and more.

http://www.education-world.com/

---NASA Spacelink: Information about NASA, including the space shuttle program and science curriculum activities.

http://spacelink.nasa.gov/.index.html

---Roadmap: An Internet Training Workshop

http://ua1vm.ua.edu/~crispen/roadmap.html

---Web 66: A K-12 WWW Project from the University of Minnesota.

http://web66.coled.umn.edu/

---Yahoo: A hierarchical subject-oriented catalog for the World Wide Web and Internet.

http://www.yahoo.com/

REFERENCES

Cotton, E. G. (1998). "The Online classroom: Teaching with the Internet, third edition." Bloomington, IN: EDINFO Press. (ISBN-1-883790-29-8). (ED 413 606)

Junion-Metz, G. (1996). "K-12 resources on the Internet: An instructional guide." Internet workshop series, number 5. San Carlos, CA: Library Solutions Press. (ISBN-1-882208-14-5). (ED 389 316)

K-12 computer networking. (1995). "The ERIC Review," 4(1). (ED 392 413)

Lankes, R. D. (1996). "Bread and butter of the Internet." ERIC Digest. Syracuse, NY: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information & Technology. (ED 402 925)

Serim, F. & Koch, M. (1996). "NetLearning: Why teachers use the Internet." Sebastopol, CA: Songline Studios, Inc. and O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. (ED 396 700)

Tennant, R. (1996). Internet basics: Update 1996. ERIC Digest. Syracuse, NY: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information & Technology. (ED 392 466)

Valauskas, E. J. & Ertel, M. (1996). "The Internet for teachers and school library media specialists: Today's applications, tomorrow's prospects." New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc. (ISBN-1-55570-239-2). (ED 395 594)

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This publication is funded at least in part with Federal funds from the U.S. Department of Education under contract number ED-99-CO-0005. The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Education nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. government. The U.S. Department of Education's web address is: http://www.ed.gov/