All About Explorers was developed by a group
of teachers as a means of teaching students about the Internet.
Although
the Internet can be a tremendous resource for gathering information
about a topic, we found that students often did not have
the skills to discern useful information from worthless data. So we set out to develop a series of lessons for elementary
age students in which we would demonstrate that just because
it is out there for the searching does not mean it is worthwhile.
A typical novice strategy for searching the Internet is
to type the topic into the address bar. For example, if you
are researching Christopher Columbus, you naturally would look
first at www.columbus.com.
Unfortunately, as you will see if you click on this link, that
is not helpful. Neither is www.columbus.org,
which takes you to the Columbus, OH, Chamber of Commerce.
There are many less benign examples of site names that do
not relate to the topic they appear to be about. While we could
use many of the existing sites that make this point for us,
we did not want to run the risk of finding out in a year or
two that the site had new, undesirable content. The only
way we could guarantee this would be to create our own site
in which we could control the content ourselves. The result
is what you are exploring right now.
A Note About the Content In This Site:
Because we wanted to make a point about finding useless
information even in a site which looked at first to be fairly
well put together, all of
the Explorer biographies here are fictional. While
many of the facts are true or based on truth, many inaccuracies,
lies, and even downright absurdity are mixed in indiscriminately.
As such, it is important that you do
not use this site as a source of reference for your own research!
Any references to outside source materials, however, are
quite accurate to the best of our knowledge. Books and other
print materials are listed throughout. In most cases these
are the references we give to our students when they are looking for reliable information about these explorers. Links to other
web sites have also been evaluated for accuracy and usefulness.
Our lesson plans have also been incorporated into this
site along with an Explorer WebQuest which we use with
our own students to do valid research about these same explorers
after showing them the pitfalls of poor planning and searching.
In both cases, again, the information we include will be as
accurate as possible. All of our lessons have been tested with students in the upper elementary grades.
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