Social
Studies
- Geography
World: Designed for
use in junior and senior high schools with links to almost any
geographic subject.
- EuroDocs:
Primary Historical Documents from Western
Europe Maintained by
Richard Hacken, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young
University
- Social
Studies School Service
Resources for school teachers on the American Revolution, Women's
History, Black History, Shakespeare, and more . . .
- American
Memory Historical
Collections for the National Digital Library, maintained by the
Library
of Congress. Take a
look at the excellent Learning
Page that accompanies
this site.
- Documents
for the Classroom at
the Maryland
State Archives
- Jamestown
Rediscovery Sponsored
by the
Association for the Preservation of Virginia
Antiquities
- Freedmen
and Southern Society Project
- A project drawing on the
resources of National
Archives of the United States,
developed at The University of Maryland
- The
Valley of the Shadow: Two Communities in the American Civil
War An archive for
teachers developed at The University of
Virginia
- The
California Heritage Digital Image Access
Project The California
Heritage collection offers direct access to unique, primary source
materials documenting California history.
- Oyez,
Oyez, Oyez: a Supreme Court WWW
Resource Developed by
Jerry Goldman at Northwestern University; also visit
- U.S.
History Out Loud
- Project
Diana Online human
rights archive at Yale Law School; also visit Barry
Goodman's
- Crimes
Against Humanity During the Gulf War
- The
Perseus Project
Resources for teaching the classics; preview Roman
Perseus and
VRoma,
a virtual community for teachers of classics
- Greek
Mythology Link
Resources in Greek Mythology, from Lund,
Sweden, based on Genealogical
Guide to Greek Mythology,
by Carlos Parada
- The
FORVM ROMANVM,
exploring an ancient marketplace
- A ThinkQuest
site created by three students of De
Grundel High School in
Hengelo, the Netherlands
- The
Encyclopedia Mythica
An encyclopedia of mythology, folklore, legends, and more . .
.
- World
Cultures An online
resource for the study of world cultures from antiquity to
modernity, designed by Richard Hooker, Washington State
University
- Why
is the Mona Lisa Smiling?
A site developed by students at the John F. Kennedy High
School in Bronx, New York, in collaboration with students from
the Soltorgymnasiet in Borlange, Sweden, as part of a
ThinkQuest
project