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Volume 15 • Number 3

2005



 
Teaching Resources
EE-Link, Environmental Education on the Internet

EE-Link, provided by The North American Association for Environmental Education, is a resource designed to support "students, teachers and professionals that support K–12 environmental education, such as media specialists, in-service providers, nature center staff and curriculum developers." The site contains Internet environmental-based school projects, classroom activities, including many lesson plans, environmental facts and data from many sources, curriculum directory guides, organization and audio visual catalogs, software, conference and workshop announcements, higher education links, facts, grants, literature pointers, regional information, and links to other environmental sites. See http://eelink.umich.edu/ee-linkintroduction.html.


Gateway to Educational Materials (GEM)

The Gateway to Educational Materials is a Consortium effort to provide educators with quick and easy access to thousands of educational resources found on various federal, state, university, nonprofit, and commercial Internet sites. See http://thegateway.org.


Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

MERLOT is a free and open resource designed primarily for faculty and students of higher education. Links to online learning materials are collected there along with annotations such as peer reviews and assignments. Everyone is welcome to browse the collection or search for materials. Members may add materials, comments, and assignments to MERLOT. Membership is free. The site is located at: http://www.merlot.org.


Social Movements & Culture: A Resource Site

This resource, created by Washington State University, provides a space for the study of social movements in the U.S., including those movements as linked to transnational and global movements. The emphasis is on recent and contemporary movements, but they also aim to provide materials on earlier movements. The site brings together the insights of sociology, political science, anthropology, history, cultural studies, American studies, ethnic studies, women's studies, and other fields of social movement analysis, as well as the insights of movement activists inside and outside of academia.

The site currently consists of links to online articles, bibliographies, course syllabi, conferences, a glossary of terms for movement analysis, and sets of links to historically-oriented and contemporary sites categorized by movement type. A listserv on social movement cultures, as well as other interactive elements, are planned for the future. WSU hopes the site will prove useful to a variety of scholars, activists, and activist-scholars. The site is available
at: http://www.wsu.edu/~amerstu/smc/smchomefr.html


Special Education Resources on the Internet

Special Education Resources on the Internet (SERI) is a collection of Internet-accessible information resources of interest to those involved in fields related to Special Education. This collection exists in order to make online Special Education resources more easily and readily available in one location. This site will continually modify, update, and add additional informative links. It may be viewed at http://seriweb.com.

 


 

 

 
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