This collection of thirty-nine facts includes a bibliography, making it a great place to begin a school report.
The kid section at Great Wall of China includes two fact pages and a map, but the rest of the site is completely kid-friendly and also worth a visit.
Although the grammar isn't perfect, there is a lot of detail here about the history of the Wall, and the many battles it survived.
This interactive, seven-question map game is part of the National Endowment for the Humanities' EDSITEment site. If you answer any question incorrectly, it will point you to a Library of Congress resource for the answer.
This Activity Village page starts with craft (Great Wall of Friendship) and then tells the story of the Wall with answers to frequently asked questions such as: "How tall is the Great Wall of China?" and "When was the Great Wall of China built?"
Surfnetkids.com recommends five websites about the Great Wall of China.
American geography games that are both fun and educational.
This fifty-page PDF from the European Central Bank tells the history of the euro from the early 1990's to release in 2002. It includes pictures of some the currencies it replaced, and a chapter on the design of the euro banknotes.
For high school students and grownups, CNN presents a roundup of news articles about the euro's current crisis.
What fun! These printable euro banknotes come in denominations of 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 euros. There is even a printable set of coins.
Surfnetkids.com recommends five websites about the Euro.