Methods of teaching mathematics course at Harvard Graduate School of Education
Scours the movie sites for your keywords.
This searches using many of Google's features at once. Nice one-stop-shop for search; however, I still prefer Alexa...
Interesting concept for educators, but a bit complex. This site basically allows you to turn any web content into an API (usable data) and magically turn it into many kinds of data formats (XML, RSS, HTML, etc...)
Thanks to the hype generated by Business Week, The New York Times, Fortune, and Newsweek (among others), Web 2.0 has captured the imagination of consumers and businesses alike.
One stop for your RSS daily news. No software to install. Online news from most read RSS sources: Yahoo, BBC, Wired, Reuters, Moreover, ESPN, Variety and more.
Social meter scans the major social websites to analyze a webpage's social popularity. Currently we scan Del.icio.us, Digg, Furl, Google, Jots, Linkroll, Netscape, Reddit, Shadows, Spurl, Technorati, and Yahoo My Web.
It's called PULP...for "personal ubiquitous library project." (It was originally just "personal library project," but I added the "ubiquitous" so it would have an easy to remember name.) And it's the result of mashing up features from social bookmarking tools like del.icio.us and CiteULike and LibraryThing, personal library tools like Delicious Library and MediaMan, and mobile scanning and annotation tools like Aura.
Blog post by Signum sine tinnitu--by Guy Kawasaki. "I’m on the campus of UCSB this week at family camp, and it's inspired me to blog about what students should learn in order to prepare for the real world after graduation."
The Otter Group wrote some excellent papers on podcasting, RSS aggregators, etc. and how they are and can be used in education. Excellent resources here!