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Secondary Education
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Part of The Mining Company, this Science and Nature for Kids site has a lot to offer. You can chat to other kids or teens, enjoy the weekly theme articles, or make use of the vast resources gathered here and indexed by subject. If you have a question not answered in The Nature Guide, you can "Ask the Nature Guy."

The Internet Scout project at the University of Wisconsin provides here a valuable resource tool "to support effective use of the Internet by educators and researchers in the US." These folks provide Internet announcements updated daily and available in archive, explanations of the best Internet tools, and a KIDS section where K-12 students review sites.

The Site offers information and links to services relevant to young people in the UK. It's large, with annotated resources in a number of categories (education, health, housing, etc.) and a magazine section with news, fashion, music and other information of interest to those within and outside Great Britain.

Sponsored by the Royal Canadian Mint, this spot offers money management talk as it relates to teens. Pizza, fashion, sports, so many topics they offer their own search engine.

Here's a huge research library of annotated links in 25 categories, bringing the resources of the Web to you quickly and easily. Grade level sorting and visual content notations will be helpful additions for teachers and students alike.

This is your "on-line study abroad information resource." Search by country or subject for academic, summer, and intensive language programs in more than 100 countries, plus related services and tips.

Should you take time off during or before college to work full-time, do community (or world community) service, or see the planet? This site tells you why you should, and even how you could. Lots of links and the chance to buy the book, endorsed by Ann Landers and others, that started this discussion.

An online scientific playground for kids and adults, and a great way to learn about how technology impacts our lives. The interactive exhibits are a delight.

Take complete practice tests as you get ready for the SAT on this site, review answers and the reasons they're right or wrong, and figure out where your weak spots are. A great resource!

ThinkQuest is an international contest for students 12-19 years old. Under the direction of coaches and teachers, they build educational (and frequently exceptional!) Web sites. This site explains the program and gives examples of winning sites from past years.

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock's College of Education site is a marvelous resource for students, teachers, and parents. The authors have taken ERIC, broken it up into easy-to-use bits, and explained them all! The Libraries, Education Resources, and Parents sections are excellent. In Teacher Links, click on your area of study and bring up a substantial list of annotated links, plus a lesson plan section, and a number of special education categories. A winner!

The Kent School District Social Studies site offers a perspective on understanding citizenship through participation in changes. This site targets high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors.

Who knows more about how to find information than your friendly librarian? Here Marylaine Block offers you a large Reference Desk, Hot Paper Topics, Faculty & Administration Resources, databases, full text sources, several ways to search, an award-winning guide on how to use the Web, and much more.

Published by Educational Communications, Inc., this is the nation's largest recognition publication and program honoring high achieving high school students. Select the search option and display the Site Tree for a handy table of contents. You'll find information including college scholarship opportunities, the College Referral Service, the selection process, the Free Book Program, and more.

Begun in 1951, Youth For Understanding is a nonprofit international student exchange program. This site offers information on becoming a YFU exchange student or host family and on volunteering in other ways. There are links to YFU sites from countries all over the world.


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