6. NASA for Students http://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/index.html Detailed information on space exploration Kid-friendly interface, media-rich Teaching tools
9. Smithsonian Kids Zone http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/students/ Online exhibits, games, & activities in art, science, & history
10. BLM Learning Landscapes http://www.blm.gov/education/LearningLandscapes/students.html Classroom activities, homework helpers, about the BLM
11. Ready Kids http://www.ready.gov/kids/home.html Kid-oriented information on planning for emergencies Making “just-in-case” family plans What should go in an emergency kit Facts about different kinds of emergencies
12. Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/k12 Aimed more at teens: career guidance Links to the Occupational Outlook Handbook for more information
32. CDC Data & Statistics: http://www.cdc.gov/DataStatistics/
33.
34. Environmental Protection Agency EPA website: http://www.epa.gov/ Always a good place to start for environmental topics “My Environment” functions are powerful Data on air, water, Superfund sites, etc.
35. Climate Science Resources National Climatic Data Center (NCDC): http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov Free access to detailed climate data for users from .gov, .edu, .k12, .mil, and .us domains U.S. Climate Change Science Program: http://www.climatescience.gov/ Key climate change reports EPA : http://www.epa.gov/climatechange Links to policy documents Information on climate factors
36. National Park Service Nature & Science: http://www.nature.nps.gov/ Terrific site with biological, geological, and general environmental information Air & water quality data Noise monitoring information Wildlife management
37. Consumer-oriented Health Information MedlinePlus: http://medlineplus.gov/ Consumer-oriented side of Medline Overview information on conditions Medical encyclopedia & dictionary Descriptions of drugs, supplements, and herbal remedies Healthfinder: http://www.healthfinder.gov/ Health library describing illnesses and treatments Drug interaction checker
38. Nutrition & Wellness Nutrition.gov: http://www.nutrition.gov Quick links to dietary guidelines & other nutrition info Health.gov: http://www.health.gov/ Portal to multi-agency health initiatives HealthierUS: http://www.healthierus.gov/ Tips for nutrition, physical activity, & prevention Aggregates best practices info from several agencies Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/list.html
40. Montana Historical Society A Student Guide to the Study of the Statehttp://mhs.mt.gov/education/studentguide/default.asp Montana History wiki: http://montanahistorywiki.pbworks.com/
41. Making of America Making of America: http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/ The Cornell site has the War of the Rebellion series for the Army and Navy.
42. Bureau of Land Management General Land Office records: http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/ Land Patent search for all available states Plat maps for some states (not Montana) Montana plat maps: http://glo.mt.gov/
43. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Electronic Reading Room: http://www.foia.cia.gov/ Family Jewels UFOs Psychological warfare Space weapons Memos about other countries
44. American Presidency Project American Presidency Project: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu Public papers of the Presidents: Washington to Obama Speeches: Inaugural addresses, Fireside Chats, debates
46. Core sites for Civics/Government Projects White Househttp://www.whitehouse.gov THOMAShttp://thomas.loc.gov GPO Accesshttp://www.gpoaccess.gov Supreme Courthttp://www.supremecourtus.gov
47. Sites for Government Projects Follow the Money http://www.followthemoney.org Open Secrets http://www.opensecrets.org
48. Congressional Research Service (CRS) Open CRS: http://opencrs.com/ Surprisingly difficult to get CRS reports Government-funded “think tank” analysis of policies, issues, trends
The general sense of librarians is government information is difficult to use and geared toward adults.But the government is also for kids and takes the role of education and civic ownership seriously.Game plan is to: look at some interesting government websites geared for kids (which can be helpful in the classroom or for parents to look at with their kids)Look at a couple of great educator-oriented government websites (with lesson plans and learning objects)Look at tools for older kids and teens—some cream of the crop resources for student projects.Warning: I will show you a ton of sites; slides will be posted; want to give an overview of scope and some new ideas
Government mandate (Clinton era) to have government sites targeted to kids to raise student interest in government. Some are fabulous, some are a little odd.Some teach & introduce concepts at a elementary or high-school level, some provide guidance (social, career), some talk about the work of government agencies at a level that kids can grasp.Kids.gov is a good starting point website that will point to great kid- and educator-oriented websites.
Another great starting point.MontanaKids is the MT portal for child-oriented government information.Very much geared as a kid-friendly site.Library Media Infozone?
Kids sites can be really informative.Example: Good science info at a kid’s level.
Another example of a good science-oriented site
Fantastic astronomy siteLots of thought went into kid-friendly designBreakdown in resources by age/audience (including educators section)
Ben’s Guide desperately needs an update (and is getting one).Core, civics information about government structure and processes.
Another good “basic Americana” site is the LoC site for kids.A more basic approach than the American Memory collection (which we’ll talk about in a bit & which could be good for teens)
Some dead links, but covers a different areaResources for students & educatorsHomework help goes to recommended linksGeneral info about what the BLM does and potential careers with the BLM
Some kids sites serve a social purpose.Provide kids with a concept of how to handle emergency/scary situations
Another “social” purpose site: government can help teens with career planning
Another “purpose” siteMixes basic health information (fitness, nutrition, illness) with self-esteem oriented informationGuidance on emotions, relationships (especially abuse in relationships), bullying, career planning
Some kids’ sites are really unexpected.
This came up as a suggestion/questionin a session I was teaching. Sure enough, there’s an ATF site for kids.
A few more focused on educatorsTerrific curricular materialsDoes not seem to list grade levels for materialsKids.gov, first site we looked at, also has an educator’s tab for teaching tools and sites with lesson plans
Middle school students and teens need government information too.While some of the preceding sites will work for older students (like the NASA site and the Girls’ Health site), many of them are pitched too young to be appealing to tweens and teens.Here are some “grown-up” but accessible government sites that will help students with projects and homework.
Talked about this last week—good starting site for many age groups (middle school through lifelong learners and professionals)Recommends robust government sites by topicSearch function searches all federal and state governments for relevant web pages (can also limit to federal or state only)
I’ll try to group these sites by class subject or type of info. First: sites for statistics, because many types of student reports could use some data from trusted sites.Good starting point for any statistical workPoints to more detailed dataCurrent version online, easy access to earlier editionsDownloadable data tables
The best place to start when looking for Montana-oriented data (especially population or demographic data and economic data).
Two sites I use a fair amount for statistics work
A couple of subject-specific examples (beyond basic demographic data)Many agencies will have statistics sub-agenciesFedStats will point you to these, but they are somewhat intuitive (Dept. of Energy has an Energy stats branch, Department of Labor collects Labor Statistics, Department of Education has NCES).
Several parts of the Dept. of Health and Human Services collects health-oriented data.Officially under the CDC.
UVA has a great site for quick and easy access to basic, historic demographics
Science websitesGovernment has tons of great science sites that are accessible to the general public (accessible in terms of being written in layperson’s language)Looked at kids-oriented EPA site; “adult” version is also very easy to useDemonstrate “My environment” piece
Climate change is a common topic in schools—several government sites with relevant information
Good for biology classes
Two great sites for overview informationUseful for nurses for overview info they can share with patientsDetailed, but accessibleMedlinePlus especially good for referring to further information (and pointing to credible sources)
Health.gov points to some core initiatives & sites (like Womenshealth.gov)CFSAN gets into labeling
History and government projects (some overlap, so I’ll push these together)Probably familiar to many librariansBeautiful site with loads of fascinating contentAll sorts of media, time periods, subjects
Nice starting point for students of Montana history (probably familiar)Wiki is a good spot for quick facts
Huge series (20+ shelves?). All scanned.Primary source material from the Civil War.Read field reports and reports of generals.
Database of recordsHugely usefulEspecially helpful for questions on archaeology & MT history questionsGives a more visual perspective to how Montana used to look
The CIA has a fascinating collection of declassified historic documents on its website.Mishmash, but would be interesting to studentsA juicier version of history
Begins to bridge History and government classes
Another site that is useful for history and government classes
Will talk about these more in depth next week.Some are easy to use, some take a little practice, but are worthwhile.
Follow the Money: tool for seeing financial contributions in state politics (who is donating campaign money, where campaign funding comes from in state races). Fills a gap that FEC fills for national campaigns.Open Secrets: federal counterpart to Follow the Money; good information on lobbying and influenceVery easy to use; great graphics
Open CRS is a non-profit site (not governmental) that gathers CRS reports from multiple sources.Government products, but not readily accessible to the public.Marvelous overviews of hot-button political topics