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  1. Added Sep 23, 2007 by aseldow
    Statetris is an interesting game mixing aspects of the popular game 'Tetris' and geography. Instead of positioning the typical Tetris blocks, you position states/countries at their proper location. Fun, challenging and educational!
  2. Added Feb 21, 2007 by hunter and 1 other
    Website that allows educators to learn ways to apply social psychology to their educational setting.
  3. Added Dec 24, 2006 by jrubinwills
    This is not technically fiction, but it’s a classic memoir of a family with 12 children growing up in the early 20th century. The parents are efficiency experts, and the father has developed schemes for making their home run smoothly. The book provides insight into the lifestyles of the era, and it is written in a funny, entertaining style. Certain chapters could stand alone for use in class.
  4. Added Dec 24, 2006 by jrubinwills
    The Civil War film "Glory" tells the powerful story of the all-black Massachusetts 54th Regiment and their leader, Robert Gould Shaw. The story will appeal to students because of the vivid characterizations and the focus on unsung heroes. It also gives a memorable visual representation of the uniforms, weapons, and battlefield conditions of the Civil War.
  5. Added Dec 24, 2006 by jrubinwills
    This website is based on the work of Harvard history professor Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, whose Pulitzer Prize-winning book A Midwife’s Tale focused on an ordinary midwife, Martha Ballard, who lived in Maine in the late 1700s. Ulrich pieced together a full story of the midwife’s life and her world based on a diary that she left behind. The website emphasizes the techniques that Ulrich used.
  6. Added Dec 24, 2006 by gutman_librarians and 3 others
    Harvard’s Open Collections Program brings together thousands of primary sources from the university’s libraries and allows users to search and view them online. This extensive collection of historical material is available to the public free of charge. The site includes manuscripts, books, and images on the subjects of “Women and Work, 1800-1930" and "Immigration to the United States, 1789-1930."
  7. Added Dec 19, 2006 by vago
    Two different, paid, Constitution and American Government-related summer programs for teachers. A great opportunity to gain some teaching skills in knowledge in a great city while also receiving money for your effort!
  8. Added Dec 10, 2006 by aseldow and 1 other
    American schools aren't exactly frozen in time, but considering the pace of change in other areas of life, our public schools tend to feel like throwbacks. Kids spend much of the day as their great-grandparents once did: sitting in rows, listening to teachers lecture, scribbling notes by hand, reading from textbooks that are out of date by the time they are printed.
  9. Added Dec 06, 2006 by t502_TFs and 1 other
    A community mapping website, in our definition, is a service that gets its members to map and define places. Through crowd-sourcing, these sites are building a database/directory of local and nearby locations that their users can discover and visit.
  10. Added Dec 04, 2006 by aseldow and 1 other
    This looks like a well-constructed site to share resources, use FREE tools, and build teacher community.
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