|  |  | 1. Selected Model Internet ProjectsWhere can you find and join ready-to-go exemplary Internet projects? If
    you've never done an Internet project before, we suggest you get started with one of
    these. You can also find ready-made projects developed by other teachers in the Teacher Project Registries and Lists section. We provide four categories of model and example projects: 
  1. Sources of
  General Projects2. Field Trip Project
 3. Information Exchange Projects
 4. Other Project Sources
 
 1.
Sources of General Projects 
  The Global Schoolhousehttp://www.gsn.org  The Global Schoolhouse is the "educational pioneer" of networked based
    projects. This site maintains a searchable database of projects submitted by many sources,
    including  Global Schoolhouse, I*EARN, NASA, GLOBE, and individual teachers
    from around the world. You can participate in any of the ongoing projects, or design your
    own. Check out the pioneering articles on
    telecollaboration. The four projects summarized below are just a few of the many
    projects available at this great site.
 
 
      Geogamehttp://www.gsn.org/project/gg/
        index.html
  Students research geography facts about their city. When they submit their data, they
        leave off the name of their city, state, & country. All students use one another's
        facts to figure out where the others live.
 
 
      Project Noonhttp://www.gsn.org/project/noon/
  At noon on a given day, schools around the world follow a procedure available on the Web
        site to measure the angle of the sun's shadow. By exchanging their measurements with
        students from another school at a latitude far enough away, the schools calculate the
        circumference of the earth. All participants' findings are posted for viewing, comparing,
        and learning.
 
I*EARN (The International Education and Resource Network)http://www.iearn.org  Students from around the world collaborate to solve real world problems and positively
    effect the resources and peoples around the globe. They share their understandings
    about each others' cultures and envision the future. All projects available on the I*EARN
    site are described in both Spanish and English. These four projects are just a sample of
    the many projects you'll find at I*EARN.
 
 
      Child Labor Projecthttp://www.igc.apc.org/iearn/projects/
        labour.htm
  Students research the history of child exploitation and the child labor used to produce
        goods sold in their own communities. They share their thoughts, feelings and research
        findings through essays, reports, survey results, and art work. Students prepare materials
        for those marching in the 1998 Global March Against Child Labor. Project participants are
        asked to write letters to the ILO and the UNO to speak out against child labor.
 
 
      Faces of Warhttp://www.igc.apc.org/iearn/
        projects/ facesofwar.html
  Classes interview veterans, refugees and holocaust survivors. They gather data and perform
        research about lifestyles, conditions and places effected by the wars of our world.
        Students submit contributions to the WWW. Project tasks change regularly and challenge
        students to design and share medals, present works on particular themes, and email
        government officials about war and war tactics.
 
"A Vision" Literary Anthologyhttp://www.igc.apc.org/iearn/
        projects /av.html
  Teenagers illustrate their hopes, fears, and concerns through art and creative writing (in
        their own language). Students learn that people of different cultures share many of the
        same thoughts, feelings, and dreams.
 
First/Indigenous Peopleshttp://www.igc.apc.org/iearn/
        projects /fp.html
  Indigenous students collaborate with each other and their non-indigenous peers on research
        projects. They share writing and art work and communicate to learn about one another. Each
        month a different student's artwork and writing is showcased on the Internet.
 
ThinkQuest®http://www.advanced.org/ThinkQuest
     An annual web project contest for students ages 12-18 that has them build an an
    interactive teaching tool on the Web. Winners receive $25,000 scholarships; coaches can
    get up to $5,000, with another $5,000 going to their school or institution. Winning
    projects are available on-line.
 
Project co-NECThttp://www.co-nect.com/Schools/
    Ops/ Projects/  Co-NECT sponsors projects that you and your students may participate in with other
    classes. These projects are interdisciplinary, focused on real world authentic issues,
    force kids to think and solve problems cooperatively and use technology to extend and
    enrich the learning process.
 
 
 2. Field Trip Projects 
  A person or group travel to a place or participate in an exciting event
  while communicating their experiences through written reports posted to a Web site, email,
  videoconferencing, and/or multimedia. Students become traveling companions, asking
  questions and providing suggestions for travel routes. Travelers perform research to
  report answers and enlighten students about what they learn and the resources they
  encounter. Virtual field trips allow students to vicariously visit and learn about places,
  people, and events they cannot experience first hand.  
  Classroom Connecthttp://www.classroom.com
     Classroom Connect, a reliable source of much good information about the educational uses
    of the Internet, sponsors regular "adventure treks" each year. Two recent
    examples:
 
Global Online Adventureshttp://www.goals.com/index.htm
     Travel with Amalia, the first woman to sail around the world, or go on a two-year cruise
    with the three Laffitte Brothers. Your class can follow these and other expeditions while
    communicating with the travelers, reading their reports, and accessing the sounds and
    sights they come across.
 
Globalearnhttp://www.globalearn.org
     Explorers in South America shoot videos, stream audio, and take lots of pictures of the
    people, animals, and places they visit. The multimedia informational reports these
    explorers post to the web site allow students to learn about the customs, talents,
    geography, and resources of the locations they visit. Students have the option of
    following one of the explorers or the whole team. So much information is provided for each
    location that this project can be used for almost every curricular area.
 
Adventure On-line $http://www.adventureonline.com
     Provides on-line expeditions to distant places, such as Arctic, Central America, and
    Egypt.
 
Passport to Knowledgehttp://quest.arc.nasa.gov/hst/
    aboutptk.html  An ongoing series of electronic field trips to scientific frontiers via interactive
    television and the Internet for middle schools. Supported by NASA, the National Science
    Foundation, and PBS K-12 Learning Services.
 
 3. Information
Exchange Projects  
  Some projects ask students to contribute poetry, stories,
  experiences, thoughts, or other writing or they ask students to investigate research
  questions. Teachers work with their students to gather information, perform research when
  needed, and report results.  Students learn to appreciate each other's cultures,
  contributions, and customs. Sometimes students help experts with important research by
  reporting scientific phenomena in their area. Information exchanges prompt students to
  contribute to world-wide research. They learn that their contributions are valued,
  necessary, and utilized. Judi Harris has developed a more detailed classification in her Network-Based Educational Activity
  Structures. 
  The
    Roadkill Projecthttp://earth.simmons.edu/roadkill/
     Join Dr. Splatt to collect and share data about the diversity and numbers of animals
    killed on highways. This environmental monitoring project raises awareness of fragmented
    wildlife corridors as it documents an often-overlooked environmental situation. The
    Roadkill Project is one of several at EnviroNet,
    including BatNet, CoyoteHowl, SaltTrack, Vernal Pools, and others.
 
Global
    Grocery Listhttp://landmark-project.com/
    ggl.html  A pound of hamburger, a gallon of unleaded gas and the average cost of housing are just
    three of the seventeen items on the Global Grocery List.  Class averages computed
    from individual student research are submitted and available on the Web site. The Global
    Grocery project has been in existence for ten years. Students compare their price
    list to those of earlier years and to other states and countries. Since not all countries
    use the same monetary units, or the same scales for weights and measures, often students
    use conversion resources.
 
Earth Day Grocery Projecthttp://www.earthdaybags.org/
     Students take action to encourage their local community to "Save the Earth".
    They approach managers from local grocery stores and ask for paper bags. They then
    decorate the bags with artwork and environmental messages and return them to the local
    grocery store. Stores use the bags to pack groceries on Earth Day. Teachers send a short
    email, listing their school, location, and how many bags they decorated. Student artwork
    from around the world, the widespread effects of this project, curriculum ideas, and a
    whole lot more are available at this Web site.
 
Save the Beacheshttp://ednhp.hartford.edu/WWW/Nina/
     Students visit a local beach and conduct a cleanup. They paint a picture of their local
    beach and analyze the waste they collect by submitting a data form. Project questions help
    teachers to process and interpret classroom data as students compare their litter
    collections with others around the world. Based on their findings and interpretations,
    classes suggest actions for cleaning up beaches. Bonus project ideas help teachers who
    want to further enrich the curriculum content of this project.
 
The Journey Northhttp://www.learner.org/jnorth/ A free seasonal project that has North American students tracking seasonal changes and
    migrations... south in the Fall, north in the Spring. Students observe and report data on
    animal migrations and changes in temperature, flora (leaves budding or dropping), fauna
    (fur, hibernation), etc. When pooled with data from other students across America,
    students discover first hand the significance of familiar phenomenon. Many related
    activities and data sharing stimulate discussion and exchanges with other classrooms.
 
 4. Other Project
Sources 
  Maryland Virtual High Schoolhttp://mvhs1.mbhs.edu/mvhsproj/project1.html A source of several good collaborative project ideas: Boiling Point, Tap Water, Carbon
    Dioxide Monitoring, Earthquakes, Sound, and Shadow Tracks projects.
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