This link has been bookmarked by 73 people . It was first bookmarked on 14 Sep 2007, by cahse cahse.
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Kellie 80Collection of web-based resources for the major content areas (didn't see World Languages, though) -- all free -- from the USDept of Ed.
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Allie FiesTeacher resources from the federal government. Includes animations, documents, photos, videos, and more.
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Valerie B.great use of our tax dollars -
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Ann GrossklausMore than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
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Patty McGinnisThis site has animations, lesson plans, photos and videos for all subjects
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Colleen FarrellA website compilation of free online resources for a variety of topics.
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Emily MustellFree site from federal gov't of educational resources, several subjects.
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Michelle CarperMore than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
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Greg Limperis
FREE makes it easier to find teaching and learning resources from the federal government.
More than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources are included from dozens of federal agencies. New sites are added regularly.
You are invited to link to FREE. (Use a FREE logo, if you'd like).
Get new resources delivered to you several times a week: sign up for the FREE RSS.
Federal agencies, if you're looking to involve teachers in developing teaching resources, see our lessons learned.
FREE was originally conceived in 1997 by a federal working group and launched a year later. It was redesigned and relaunched for the first time in November 2006.
The 2006 redesign was made possible by many, including Jerry Alexandratos, Rob Barthle, Sally Budd, Rob Duckwall, Andrew Miller, Simone Miranda Olson, Cory Lebson, Jennifer Reeves, Chhavi Sharma, Keith Stubbs, Joe Wang, David Zwack, and teachers who reviewed the site.
FREE is maintained by Peter Kickbush and Kirk Winters, Office of Communications and Outreach, with support from the Development Services Team in the Office of the Chief Information Officer, U.S. Department of Education.
Please send any comments or questions to us at FREE@ed.gov.
FREE is among the most popular K-12 websites maintained by the U.S. Department of Education because of the many great resources being offered by contributing federal agencies.
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debbie oestreicherFree Federal Resource for Educational Excellence (that is a mouthful, hence forth shall be known as FREE) is a excellent resource for finding teaching and learning resources from federal agencies. Resources are broken down in to subjects arts and music, health and physical education, history and social studies, language arts, math, and science. Subjects are further broken down in to sub categories making it simple to find exactly what you are looking for quickly. There is also a great section called U.S. Time periods where you can search US history resources by time period. New sites are added to FREE regularly, you can get the new resources delivered to you by subscribing to the FREE RSS feed. The teaching and learning resources linked to from the FREE site are valuable to your classroom and will save you loads of time in searching for quality resources.
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Janice Stearnsportal of resources in all content areas from the US federal gov.
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Mecca SadlerCategorized by subject areas
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Kathy Lawrenceall subjects
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Don ShegogA little bit of everything for everyone. There are resources for Science to PE to Music to Social Studies. It is all here in free resources.
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Jorge AcostaFREE makes it easier to find teaching and learning resources from the federal government.
More than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources are included from dozens of federal agencies. New sites are added regularly. -
Susan JenkinsMore than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
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Jay SwanFree teaching resources and lesson plans from the federal government broken up by discipline.
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Heather HurleyMore than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
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Lane Grann-Stahlfree teaching and learning resosurces from federal agencies;
some pretty amazing stuff; very high quality -
Kay CunninghamEducational material in government agencies' collections: primary sources, animations, photos, videos--history, literature, science, etc.
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Jennifer BarnettUS History web resources - excellent!
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Brenda Muenchgreat list of free resources
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Ty YostSite has links to resources every subject area in schools today, and many of the links have lesson plans, digital content, and other lesson adders.
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Valor LibraryFederal Resources for Educational Excellence (FREE) offers more than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources from dozens of federal organizations (arts, health, U.S. history and government, math, science, language arts and world studies)
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Laura BaasFederal Resources for Educational Excellence (FREE) offers more than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources from dozens of federal organizations (arts, health, U.S. history and government, math, science, language arts and world studies)
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Mitch BleierTeaching and Learning Resources from US Federal Agencies.
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K RuhfFederal Resources for Educational Excellence - Teaching and Leraning Resources from Federal Agencies
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Philip FranklinMore than 1600 federal teaching and learning resources organized by subject: art, history, language arts, math, science, and others -- from FREE, the website that makes federal teaching and learning resources easy to find.
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Dana DiNittoFree resources for educators in all suject areas
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