Top 14 websites for students
If you want to a see a blank look on students’ faces, ask them about the Dewey Decimal library classification system. For better or for worse, the Internet has become the alternative to a library card catalog for browsing and locating resources. But how do you navigate that system, and how can you trust what you read on the web?
"Frankly, this is my main concern, along
with stumbling onto inappropriate material," admits Bonnie Marks, a
mother of two. "Just because someone publishes something on their home
page, it doesn't make it gospel—many kids don't know this."
Learning how to find the information you
need on the Internet, and how to evaluate and appropriately use the
information you find, can be challenging for both parents and students.
The following is a look at some of the most comprehensive—and
reliable—educational websites a student can bookmark and use to research
school projects and homework assignments.
Web literacy and general reference
All students—no matter what age—need help
navigating and evaluating the ever-growing store of information
available on the web. This University of Idaho site is an information
literacy primer that will quickly turn any half-hearted or random
searcher into a savvy Internet detective. It guides students through a
series of modules that teach them how to distinguish different kinds of
information on the Internet, search for and select research topics,
search databases and other collections, locate and cite sources, and
evaluate the sources they find.
A merger of the Internet Public Library and
the Librarians' Internet Index, this site is a comprehensive source of
"information you can trust." Thousands of volunteer library and
information science professionals created and maintain the site’s
reference collections—sets of links to websites on U. S. presidents,
author biographies, museums, research and writing, literary criticism,
and many more topics. The Ask an ipl2 Librarian reference service,
available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, provides individualized
help finding authoritative, free online sources for specific topics.
Checking facts in Internet sources is one
of the key ways to evaluate them, and Refdesk.com, which stands for
"reference desk," simplifies this essential step. Since 1995,
Refdesk.com has served as a one-click springboard to many of the web's
top dictionaries, encyclopedias, calculators, atlases, news headlines,
and search engines. The site also includes a handy
Homework Helper
section (under the Help and Advice column on the lower right of the
page) that provides help in all subjects to students in every grade.
For younger students who are not quite
ready to navigate Refdesk, Fact Monster from Information Please is the
tool to use. The Reference Desk on this site features a layout that is
designed for easy fact-finding and includes timelines and an almanac,
atlas, dictionary, and encyclopedia, as well as a Homework Center.
Students can also search by visually identified topics or by typing in
keywords. Check out fun features such as Biographies of the Presidents,
the Geography Hall of Fame, and the Tallest Buildings Slideshow.
Consider the Microsoft Download Center your
ultimate file repository. It links to tens of thousands of downloadable
free or shareware programs. These include updates, utilities,
applications, and extras for Windows, Macintosh, and other platforms;
Internet tools; security essentials; developer resources; mobile
devices; and, of course, computer games. You can search for what you
need alphabetically, by product family, by download category, or by
typing in a keyword. The
Microsoft Worldwide Downloads site enables you to download files in more than 80 different languages.
This site is the cool place for the
technology leaders of the future. It offers student resources, helps
students stay connected through its newsletters and technology clubs,
and provides a career portal and Students-to-Business program. The links
to scholarship competitions and to TechStudent—a site for website
builders, designers, and software developers in training—encourage
creativity and skill development. The Student Experience site also links
to DreamSpark, which enables students not only to download professional
software such as Microsoft Visual Studio, SQL Server, Visual C++
Express Edition, and Robotics Developer Studio for free but provides
free training for using these tools as well.
English and history
Sprechen Sie Deutsch? Perfect for language
studies, this handy website automatically converts text from one
language into another, such as English to Simplified Chinese or French
to English. You can type and paste up to 10,000 characters (about 1,800
words) into the search window and then select the desired language. Or
cut and paste a web URL to convert the entire site.
As every parent and student knows, books
that are required reading are not always available, or if they are,
students may misplace their copy before they finish the assignment.
Project Gutenberg to the rescue. This site enables you to download more
than 30,000 free electronic books to read on your computer, iPhone,
Kindle, Sony Reader, or other portable device in a variety of file
formats. You can search by title and author or browse their collection
of classic works, many of which are available in audio editions as well.
This site, sponsored by Fordham University
and edited by Paul Halsall, provides older students with access to a
collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts for
educational use. It includes collections of primary sources in ancient,
medieval, and modern history, as well as history of science, women's
history, African history, and others.
The web's answer to those black- and
yellow-striped Cliff Notes is Novelguide.com, a reliable and free source
for literary analysis of classic and contemporary books such as Mark
Twain's
Huckleberry Finn and Fyodor Dostoyevsky's
Notes from the Underground. The site offers character profiles, metaphor and theme analysis, and author biographies.
This website can be filed in the "where was
this when I was a kid?" category. On this aptly named site, visitors
can read every play or poem from the world's most celebrated writer and,
more importantly, make some sense of his works with free analysis, Old
English language translations, and famous quotes.
Math and science
This site provides help in a number of
mathematics-related subjects, including basic grade-school math,
calculus, algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and statistics. Practice
exercises are automatically graded—and this free site also features a
glossary, calculators, homework tips, math games, and lesson plans for
teachers.
Science classes—including the ubiquitous
science project—aren't as easy for some to grasp as they are for others.
At Science Made Simple, elementary and middle school students can get
detailed answers to many science questions, read current news articles
related to science, get ideas on school projects, and take advantage of
unit conversion tables. Users can also find out if their school's
textbooks pass the test.
Ever wanted to know why earthquakes happen?
How CD burners work? What the sun is made of? These questions, and many
others related to computers/electronics, automobiles, science,
entertainment, and people, are all answered at this award-winning
website. Simply type a query into the search window or peruse the topics
by category. Extras include free newsletters, surveys, and printable
versions of all answers.
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