3. http://www.khanacademy.org
This famous site features K-12 video tutorials created by Salman Khan
and his team. It currently gives students access to thousands of video
tutorials that explain the ins-and-outs of Algebra, Geometry,
Trigonometry, Calculus, Statistics, Finance, Physics, Economics and
more.
5. http://www.goorulearning.org/#discover
Gooru is a free, teacher-curated search engine for multimedia resources
quizzes, assessment tools and lesson plans for grades 5-12. Sign-in isn’t
required, but if teachers set up a class page by signing in, they can
track each student’s topics and performance on the assessments, and
suggest additional resources to help them achieve mastery of a topic.
6. http://www.hippocampus.org/
HippoCampus is a collection of online presentations and activities on
math, science, history, and other academic subjects, created by the
Monetary Institute for Technology and Education. Most of the content
is geared toward high school and college students. Anyone can view the
lessons, but registration is required for personalized activities.
7. http://www.curriki.org/
Curriki is an exciting community filled with volunteers, teachers,
contributors, and partners who support technology blended with
teaching. Teachers can either sign up for membership or peruse
over 50,000 free resources that are accessible without joining.
10. http://ed.ted.com/lessons
The maker of TED Talks now provides carefully curated educational
videos or lessons worth sharing. Topics range from Literature and
Language, to Mathematics, Science and Technology. Teachers can
flip these videos to create their own lessons by adding their
questions, notes and resources.
11. http://www.youtube.com/education
A curated collection of educational videos from sources ranging
from Sesame Street to Harvard. YouTube EDU provides a way to
organize YouTube’s educational content into one location. Users
can search by categories: K-12, Higher Ed, or Life-Long Learning.
12. http://www.youtube.com/schools
YouTube for Schools is what makes YouTube EDU a great
tool for educators. It allows schools to block the rest of
YouTube while providing access only to the educational
videos found on YouTube EDU.
13. http://www.teachertube.com/
Teacher Tube is a video sharing website by teachers for
teachers. Hundreds of K12-appropriate videos in a variety of
subject areas as well as videos for professional development
uploaded by teachers worldwide are available here.
14. http://www.e-learningforkids.org/
This website offers interactive courses for K-6 students in Math,
Science, Language Arts, Health, Environmental skills, Computer skills
and life skills. Most of the interactive Math lessons are based on the
International Baccalaureate standards and they say new Science lessons
based on IB standards are on the way. They also offer free online
courses for teenagers on information, media, technology, life, career,
learning and innovation skills.
17. http://www.lessonpaths.com/
Lesson Paths allows you to create, share and explore
learning playlists made by teachers. Online lessons on all
subjects, including College Prep, are available for all
levels.
18. http://learner.org/
Run by The Annenberg Foundation, Learner.org hosts
high-quality multimedia resources for teachers and
students.
19. http://www.watchknowlearn.org/
This site has indexed over 33,000 educational videos from YouTube
and placed them into a directory of over 3,000 categories. The
videos are available without registration or fees to teachers in the
classroom and to students at home 24/7.
21. http://k12videos.mit.edu/
MIT is now producing ”short videos teaching basic
concepts in science and engineering” for K-12 students.
The videos are generally created by MIT students. You
can sort the videos by topic and grade level.
27. http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/me5l/html/math5.html
MathLive is a math website for students in grades 1-6 hosted by Learn
Alberta from Canada. Each lesson is presented with animated stories
that offer some real world examples of the uses of mathematics and
accompanied by a worksheet that students complete either while
watching the lesson or after viewing it.