(from the )
Parents Guide to the Internet - November
1997
Sites Along the Way
This section offers a sampling of some Internet sites waiting for
you and your children. (Addresses are current as of November 1997 but
may change at any time. If an address does not work, use the search
feature on your Web browser to enter the site name and get the
updated link).
Family-Friendly Places
- The Franklin Institute Science Museum
http://sln.fi.edu/
offers online exhibits on an array of science and technology
topics.
- Find good books to read, including Newbery and Caldecott Award
Winners, at the American Library Association site
http://www.ala.org/parents/index.html. This site includes
information about authors, KidsConnect (for help locating all the
information online), and educational games.
- Watch Live from Mars, audio and video transmissions of the
Pathfinder's explorations, at NASA's Quest
Project site
http://quest.arc.nasa.gov.
Find more adventures in space, including views from the Hubble
Space Telescope, at a different NASA site
http://spacelink.nasa.gov.
- Climb Mt. Everest, explore inside the Pyramids, and go on
other electronic field trips with the Public Broadcasting
System at
http://www.pbs.org/. Preschool
children can enjoy children's programming here, elementary school
children can practice story telling, and teenagers and adults can
take telecourses.
- Join an interactive exploration of the oceans, on earth and
beyond, with the Jason Project
http://www.jasonproject.org.
- Puzzle over optical illusions, take memory tests, and conduct
experiments, online and off, at the
Exploratorium
http://www.exploratorium.edu.
- Enjoy materials from the Library of Congress
http://www.loc.gov, including
exhibits on topics ranging from ballet to Jelly Roll Morton,
Native American flutes to Thomas Jefferson's pasta machine.
- Read stories with your children, let them add to the stories
told around the Global Campfire, and find links to other good
family sites at Parents and Children Together
Online
http://www.indiana.edu/~eric_rec/fl/pcto/menu.html.
- Get educational resources through distance learning from
Healthlinks
http://www.mcet.edu/healthlinks/index.html.
- Find information on blocking software from
Netparents at
http://www.netparents.org.
- Try the Air Force's new family-friendly site
for kids at
http://www.af.mil/aflinkjr.
Megasites (extensive links)
- 50+ Great Sites for Kids & Parents, from
the American Library Association (ALA) enables preschool through
elementary school children to explore rainbows, black history,
castles for kids, award-winning news reported by children for
children, the Kids Web Page Hall of Fame, to say nothing of
watching dolphins, learning lullabies, and much more
http://www.ssdesign.com/parentspage/greatsites/50.html.
- Jean Armour Polly's Fifty Extraordinary Experiences
for Internet Kids invites viewers to make their own home
page, visit the Kremlin, look inside the human heart, take Socks'
special VIP tour of the White House, and make a boat trip around
the world
http://www.well.com/user/polly/ikyp.exp.html.
- Berit's Best Sites for Children helps you
learn about earthquakes, visit the imagination factory and make
junk mail jewelry, descend into a volcano, tour a human cell, go
on a world "surfari," solve a crime, and fly a
kite
http://db.cochran.com/db_HTML:theopage.db.
- Steve Savitzky's Interesting Places for Kids
is an award-winning site in its own right with many unusual links
http://www.crc.ricoh.com/people/steve/kids.html.
Online Reference Material
- The American Academy of Pediatrics'
http://www.aap.org has a
wide variety of information for parents concerning their
children's health and well-being; covering topics such as
immunizations, sleep problems, newborn care, and television.
- The National Urban
Leaguehttp://www.nul.org
is a useful resource for tracking programs and events related to
African-American issues. It is a rich reference area for students,
parents, teachers and history buffs.
- AskERIC, a free question-answering service
provided by the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC),
invites people to submit their questions about education,
parenting, and child development to
askeric@askeric.org for
an e-mail response within 2 working days.
- B.J. Pinchbeck's Homework Helper is a
wonderful guide to encyclopedias, dictionaries, reference works,
and other resources on a great variety of subjects
http://tristate.pgh.net/~pinch13/.
The enthusiasm of its 10-year-old creator adds appeal to
everything from the Ultimate White Pages to Bugs in the News.
- My Virtual Reference Desk
http://www.refdesk.com offers
dozens of links to dictionaries, encyclopedias, reference/research
materials, thesauruses, atlases, sports, entertainment, and much
more,as well as a search engine for locating more information.
- The Internet Public Library: Reference Center
http://www.ipl.org/ref
provides an "ask a question" feature and a teen collection, as
well as sections on reference, arts and humanities, science and
technology, and education.
Sites for Parents and Parent
Groups
- The Children's Partnership
http://www.childrenspartnership.org
offers, for free, the full text of its useful guide, The
Parents' Guide to the Information Superhighway: Rules and Tools
for Families Online, prepared with the National PTA and
the National Urban League. A printed version of the guide, which
provides common-sense guidance and encouragement for parents and
tips and computer activities for children, is available for $8
from The Children's Partnership, 1351 Third Street Promenade,
Suite 206, Santa Monica, CA 90401-1321; 310-260-1220.
- The National Parent Information Network
http://npin.org cosponsored by the
ERIC Clearinghouses on Elementary and Early Childhood Education
and Urban Education, includes extensive articles on parenting,
listservs, and links to more than 100 sites on education, health
and safety, family issues and interests, and parenting and
development of children from infancy to adolescence.
- At the National PTA site
http://www.pta.org/ learn about
PTA education programs and participate in a discussion group, chat
room, or bulletin board. The site also includes links to sites of
many organizations concerned with children.
- The Family Education Network
http://www.familyeducation.com
offers hundreds of brief articles on parenting, links to local
sites, and discussion boards that connect parents with online
experts.
- The Partnership for Family Involvement in
Education
http://www.ed.gov/PFIE
sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, highlights
school-community- business partnerships and includes a calendar of
events. At the home page for the Department of Education
http://www.ed.gov, parents will
find information about the President's education initiatives,
college financial aid, and parenting publications, along with
links to other useful education sites.
- The National Coalition for Parental Involvement in
Education
http://www.ncpie.org/ provides
a catalog of resources available from all its member
organizations.
- Parent Soup
http://www.parentsoup.com
includes an archive of answers to questions asked of pediatricians
and child development experts and advice about helping your
children succeed in school.
- The Parents at Home site
http://advicom.net/~jsm/moms,
especially for at-home parents, offers e-mail pen pals, a
booklist, and links to children's sites.
- Magellan
http://www.mckinley.com/magellan
uses a rating scale to evaluate parenting sites. To look at the
ratings or follow the links, select Reviews, Life & Style,
Family, and Parenting.
- The ASPIRA Association, Inc.
http://www.incacorp.com/aspira
highlights its two national parent involvement programs ASPIRA
Parents for Educational Excellence Program (APEX) and Teachers,
Organizations, and Parents for Students Program (TOPS). Each
program provides a Spanish/English curriculum that strives to
empower Latino parents and families.
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