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  1. Added Jun 19, 2007 by aseldow
    * Glubble Trusted Surfing for children under 12 years of age enables families to be sure they only see the best of the web they choose to allow. * Glubble Altered Search makes Google and Yahoo show results from childrens trusted Glubbleworld instead of the world wide web. * Child friendly look and feel with interfaces for pre-reading and reading age young children.
  2. Added Jun 13, 2007 by aseldow
    Sign up for free in under a minute. Your free account comes with a host of easy-to-use features so you can customize the look of your portal, build engaging courses, enroll students, and track how they're doing. You can even publish your course to the Courses Market, where the world comes to learn.
  3. Added Apr 18, 2007 by ialja and 2 others
    The latest addition to the EDUCAUSE briefing documents about new technologies for educators is finally about RSS.
  4. Added Mar 06, 2007 by ialja and 2 others
    A great list of positive impacts the open source movement has had and is having in education.
  5. Added Mar 06, 2007 by ialja and 1 other
    A report on Web 2.0 and its uses in education by Paul Anderson.
  6. Added Feb 23, 2007 by jkali and 4 others
    A wide variety of scientists, educators, celebrities, and luminaries present talks on a variety of subjects from past TED conferences on this site: Jeff Han, NicholasNegroponte, Dan Gilbert, Anna Deveare-Smith, Ray Kurzweil, Peter Gabrielle, Robert Neuwirth, Al Gore, Bono, Steven Levitt, Eve Ensler, ZeFrank, Jimmy Whales, Richard Baraniuk...and more.
  7. Added Feb 16, 2007 by ialja and 2 others
    This site provides information about and a link to Coming of Age - a free booklet with case studies and how-tos on using emerging Web 2.0 technologies (such as blogging, wikis, podcasting,...) in education.
  8. Added Feb 14, 2007 by msudra and 1 other
    I believe it is in understanding the role that children can play in the technology design process that will lead to answers. The better we can understand children as people and users of new technologies, the better we can serve their needs.
  9. Added Feb 12, 2007 by pham and 2 others
    Take a look inside the brains of mice on drugs! Every drug of abuse has its own unique molecular mechanism. You'll learn how these various drugs disrupt the synapse to make the user feel "high."
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