
General Information. We
can recommend the following sites as good places to start looking for
subject information:

B.J. Pinchbeck's Homework Helper.
- http://tristate.pgh.net/~pinch13/

Kids Web: A World Wide Web Digital Library for Schoolkids
- http://www.npac.syr.edu/textbook/kidsweb

Kid Info: Your E-Zine to the Best Info on the World Wide Web
- http://www.kidinfo.com
Subjects We've Been Asked About

Explorers of the World is a site developed by Bellingham Public Schools,
Bellingham, Washington. It includes explorers of land, ideas, sky, and art; and has links to
other sites as well.
- http://www.bham.wednet.edu/explore.htm

IPL (Internet Public Library) Science Fair Project Resource Guide.
- http://www.ipl.org/youth/projectguide/

License Plates of North America provides pictures of all the U.S. state and Canadian provincial plates, plus some
specialty plates like those belonging to the U.S. military, American Indian tribes, the Canal zone, and Guam.
- http://danshiki.oit.gatech.edu/~iadt3mk/world/LP_NA.html

National Parks is produced by the National Park Service and provides most of the
introductory information any report writer or would-be visitor might desire.
- http://www.nps.gov/

Native American Sites, a collection of sites provided by individual Native American groups.
- http://www.pitt.edu/~lmitten/indians.html
Referring to web stuff.
You've found things on the Web that you can use for a homework project. But how do you put them in the bibliography? Here are some guides:

Referencing Web Documents, Gillian Westera's collection of guides.
- http://www.curtin.edu.au/curtin/library/staffpages/gwpersonal/senginestudy/zref.htm

Beyond the MLA Handbook, a guide to documenting electronic sources by Andrew Harnack and Gene Kleppinger of Eastern Kentucky University.
- http://falcon.eku.edu/honors/beyond-mla/
Rev.4Mar98
Mod.