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Wherever you may go this summer (car, train, airplane, restaurant, Grandma's house, campsite or hotel) these printable games just require a bit of planning to print out a stack of them before you leave.
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games, word scrambles, and interactive flashcards make studying vocabulary words fun and can improve retention. Some of this week's sites offer built in vocabulary lists, and others allow you to input your own words. Have fun!
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This summer will be huge for Harry Potter fans, as both book number seven ( "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows") and movie number five ("Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" ) will be released in July.
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Because of Halloween's popularity with kids and adults alike, there are a lot of websites with a Halloween theme. Today's focus is on interactive Halloween games, although many of this week's picks also have other free Halloween goodies such as e-cards, s
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Because a democracy is a government led by its people, voting to elect our leaders is a vital responsibility. With November's presidential election just four months away, the campaigns are heating up. Here are some online resources for kids and teens to l
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Created to mobilize twenty million potential voters under the age of the thirty, Choose or Lose is one part education, one part entertainment, and one part promotion.
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This PBS site for grades three to six is evergreen because it does not specifically cover the 2004 elections, but rather the process itself.
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Rock the Vote makes "political participation cool" by "incorporating the entertainment community and youth culture into its activities.
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Scholastic: Election 2004 is my pick-of- the-day for grades three through eight.
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On August 13, 2004 the XXVIII Olympiad will begin in Athens, Greece, the 776 BCE birthplace of the original games and host of the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. This year, nearly 10,500 athletes will compete in twenty-eight sports, vying for 903 meda
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The Internet address (or URL) of the kids section of the official Athens 2004 site is so long, that the easiest way to get there is simply to click on Youth 2004 from this front page.
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The five interlacing rings of blue, yellow, black, green, and red became the official Olympic logo in 1913.
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