INTERNET DRAFT J. Sellers [Request for Comments: XXXX] NASA NREN FYI: XX] September, 1993 draft-ietf-isn-faq-02.txt FYI on Questions and Answers Answers to Commonly Asked "Primary and Secondary School Internet User" Questions Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas, and its Working Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months. Internet-Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is not appropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as a "working draft" or "work in progress." Comments on the following draft may be submitted to Jennifer Sellers (sellers@quest.arc.nasa.gov). This Internet Draft expires December 30, 1993. Abstract The goal of this Internet Draft, produced by the Internet School Networking (ISN) group in the User Services Area of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), is to document the questions most commonly asked about the Internet by those in the primary and secondary school community, and to provide pointers to sources which answer those questions. It is directed at educators, school media specialists, and school administrators who are recently connected to the Internet, who are accessing the Internet via dial-up or another means which is not a direct connection, or who are considering an Internet connection as a resource for their schools. Internet School Networking WG [Page 1] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Table of Contents 1. Introduction........................................................2 2. Acknowledgments.....................................................3 3. Questions About the Internet in an Educational Setting..............3 4. Questions About School Support for an Internet Connection...........5 5. Questions About Implementation and Technical Options................8 6. Questions About Security and Ethics.................................9 7. Questions About Educational Collaboration, Projects, and Resources..11 8. Suggested Reading...................................................13 9. Resources and Contacts..............................................14 10. References..........................................................18 11. Security Considerations.............................................19 12. Author's Address....................................................19 Appendix A: Examples of Projects Using the Internet................20 Appendix B: How To Get Documents Electronically....................27 1. Introduction The elementary and secondary school community of teachers, media specialists, administrators, and students is a growing population on the Internet. In general, this group of users approaches the Internet with less experience in data network technology and fewer technical and user support resources than other Internet user groups. Many of their questions are related to the special needs of the community, while others are shared by any new user. This draft document attempts first to define the most frequently asked questions related to the use of the Internet in pre-university education and then to provide not only answers but also pointers to further information. For new user questions of a more general nature, the reader should get FYI 4, "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly Asked 'New Internet User' Questions." [1] For information on how to get this document, see Appendix B. It is important to remember that the Internet is a volatile and changing virtual environment. I have tried to include only the most stable of network services when listing resources and groups for you to contact, a good solution but by no means a fool-proof one to the problem of changing offerings on the Internet. This constant change also means that there is a lot out there that you will discover as you begin to explore on your own. Future updates of this memo will be produced as Internet School Networking group members are made aware of new questions and of insufficient or inaccuracte information in the memo. The RFC number of this document will change with each update, but the FYI number Internet School Networking WG [Page 2] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 (XX) will remain the same. 2. Acknowledgments The author wishes to thank for their help and contributions to this draft the members of the Consortium for School Networking, Kidsphere, and Ednet electronic mailing lists, as well as Ronald Elliott, Science and Technology Center; Ellen Hoffman, Merit Network, Inc.; William Manning, Rice University; Michael Newell, NASA Advanced Network Applications; and Anthony Rutkowski, CNRI; all of whom made contributions to this document. Special thanks goes to Raymond Harder, Microcomputer Consultant, who not only made contributions but also kept a steady stream of feedback flowing. Extra special thanks goes to the remarkable Ms. April Marine of the NASA Network Applications and Information Center for her expert advice and unparralleled support. 3. Questions About the Internet in an Educational Setting 3.1 What is the Internet? The Internet is a series of more than 10,000 interconnected computer networks around the world that makes it possible to share information almost instantly. The networks are owned by countless commercial, research, governmental, and educational organizations and individuals. The Internet allows the more than 1.5 million computers and 10 millions users of the system to collaborate easily and quickly through messaging, discussion groups, and conferencing. Users are able to discover and access people and information, distribute information, and experiment with new technologies and services. The Internet has become a major global infrastructure for education, research, professional learning, public service, and business and is currently growing at the rate of about ten percent per month. The Internet Society serves as the international organization for Internet cooperation and coordination. See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." For a more complete basic introduction to the Internet, see FYI 20, "What is the Internet?" [2] Instructions on retrieving FYI documents can be found in Appendix B. Internet School Networking WG [Page 3] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 3.2 What are the benefits of using the Internet in the classroom? The Internet expands classroom resources dramatically by making many resources from all over the world available to students, teachers, and media specialists, including original source materials. It brings information, data, images, and even computer software into the classroom from places otherwise impossible to reach, and it does this almost instantly. Access to these resources can yield individual and group projects, collaboration, curriculum materials, and idea sharing not found in schools without Internet access. Internet access also makes possible contact with people all over the world, bringing into the classroom experts in every content area, new and old friends, and colleagues in education. With access to the Internet, your site can become a valuable source of information as well. Consider the expertise in your school which could be shared with others around the world. The isolation inherent in the teaching profession is well-known among educators. By having access to colleagues in other parts of the world, as well as to those who work outside of classrooms, educators able to reach the Internet are not as isolated. A hands-on classroom tool, the use of networks can be a motivator for students in and of itself, and their use encourages the kind of independence and autonomy that many educators agree is important for students to achieve in their learning process. Because class, race, ability, and disability are removed as factors in communication while using the Internet, it is a natural for addressing the needs of all students; exactly how this is done will vary from district to district as schools empower individual teachers and students. School reform, which is much on the minds of many educators today, can be supported by the use of the Internet as one of many educational tools. See the answer to Question 4.1 for more specifics. 3.3 How can educators incorporate this resource into their busy schedules? Most educators learn about the Internet during the time they use to learn about any new teaching tool or resource. Realistically, of course, this means they "steal" time at lunch, on week-ends, and before and after school to explore resources and pursue relationships via the Internet. Those who do so feel that it is Internet School Networking WG [Page 4] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 well worth the rich rewards. It's important that computers used to access the Internet are easily accessible and not so far away physically as to make using the resource impossible for educators and others. As the value of the resource becomes more evident, school systems will need to look toward building the time to use it into educators' schedules. 3.4 I'm already using the National Geographic Kids Network (or Learning Link, or FrEdMail, or ______). Does this have anything to do with the Internet? Is the Internet different from what I'm already using? Since the Internet is a network of many different networks, you may be using one of the networks which is connected to the Internet. Some commercial programs for schools use networks and provide value-added service, such as curriculum software, technical support, project organization and coordination, etc. Some provide value-added service, but don't allow for all basic Internet services. Networks like FrEdMail (Free Educational Electronic Mail), FidoNet, and K12Net are bulletin board and conferencing systems linked via the Internet which provide inexpensive access to some Internet services. If you can use telnet, FTP, and electronic mail, you are probably "on" the Internet. If you have questions about the specific service you're currently using, ask its support personnel if you have Internet access, or call the InterNIC for help in figuring this out. (InterNIC stands for Internet Network Information Center.) See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts" for how to reach the InterNIC, FrEdMail, FidoNet, and K12Net. 4. Questions About School Support for an Internet Connection 4.1 Where does my school get the money for connecting to the Internet? Although school budgets are impossibly tight in most cases, the cost of an Internet connection can be squeezed from the budget when its value becomes apparent. Costs for a low end connection can be quite reasonable. (See the next question.) The challenge facing those advocating an Internet connection sometimes has less to do with the actual cost than it has with the difficulty of convincing administrators to spend money on an Internet School Networking WG [Page 5] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 unfamiliar resource. In order to move the Internet connection closer to the top of your school's priority list, consider at least two possibilities. First, your school may be in the process of reform, as are many schools. Because use of the Internet shifts focus away from a teacher-as-expert model and toward one of shared responsibility for learning, it can be a vital part of school reform. Much of school reform attempts to move away from teacher isolation and toward teacher collaboration, away from learning in a school-only context and toward learning in a life context, away from an emphasis on knowing and toward an emphasis on learning, away from a focus on content and toward a focus on concepts. [3] The Internet can play an integral part in helping to achieve these shifts. Second, to demonstrate the value of a connection, actual Internet access is more useful than words. While this may sound like a chicken-and-egg situation (I have to have Internet access to get Internet access), some organizations will provide guest accounts on an Internet computer for people in schools who are trying to convince others of the value of an Internet connection. Contact local colleges, universities, technology companies, service providers, community networks, and government agencies for both guest accounts and funding ideas. For alternatives to your own school's budget or for supplements to it, look for funding in federal, state, and district budgets as well as from private grants. Work with equipment vendors to provide the hardware needed at low or no cost to your school, and consider forming a School/Community Technology Committee, or a joint School District/School/Community Technology Committee. The Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) has information on grants and funding. See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." Ask for the AskERIC InfoGuide called "Grants and Funding Sources." Grants can be a way for you to acquire the initial money to demonstrate the value of telecommunications in the classroom, and since these monies are often awarded on a short-term basis should probably be looked at as temporary means of funding your activities. 4.2 How much does it cost to connect to the Internet, and what kind of equipment (hardware, software, etc.) does my school need in order to support an Internet connection? The cost of an Internet connection varies tremendously with the Internet School Networking WG [Page 6] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 location of your site and the kind of connection that is appropriate to your needs. In order to determine the cost to your school, you will need to answer a number of questions. For help in learning what the questions are and getting answers to them, begin asking at local colleges, universities, technology companies, government agencies, community networks (often called "freenets"), local electronic bulletin board systems (BBS), service providers, or technology consultants. To give you an idea of possible equipment needs, here are three sample scenarios. Keep in mind that these are very general examples and that there are many solutions at each level. See also the answer to Question 5.5. Low-end: You could subscribe to some kind of Internet dial-in service. This may be provided by a vendor at a cost, by a local university gratis, or as a part of a public access service like a community network. You will need a computer which allows terminal emulation, a modem which is compatible with your dial- in service, and terminal emulation software. The approximate cost, not including the PC, is $100 to $800 plus a monthly fee of approximately $30. Mid-range: You could subscribe to a dial-in service that provides Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP) or Point to Point Protocol (PPP), allowing your machine to effectively become a host on the Internet. You will need a computer with SLIP or PPP software, a modem which is compatible with your dial-in service, and telecommunications applications software (to allow you to use telnet and FTP - File Transfer Protocol). The approximate cost, not including the PC, is $100 to $800 plus a monthly fee of approximately $60. High-end: You could subscribe to a service that provides a full Internet connection. You will need a router and a connection to a service provider's router. Typically the connection is a leased line with a CSU/DSU (Channel Service Unit/Data Service Unit). A local area network, which may consist only of the router and a PC, Macintosh, or other computer system, is also needed, and your computer(s) will need some special software, that is a TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) stack, as well as telecommunications software. The approximate cost, not including the computers, is $2,000 to $3,000 plus a monthly fee of at least $200. 4.3 What is required in terms of personnel to support an Internet Internet School Networking WG [Page 7] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 connection? (Will it require extra staff, training, more time of teachers and librarians?) Any plan for implementing technology in schools must consider staff development. Training is often the most neglected aspect of a technology plan, and a lack of training can lead to failure of the plan. In the case of the Internet, all users will need some kind of training, whether they are teachers, librarians, students, administrators, or people fulfilling other roles in the school. Train-the-trainer, in which a group of people are trained in a subject or tool and each individual in turn trains other groups, is a good model for Internet training. Depending on the hardware involved, there may be a need for technical support. Finding this kind of support, which schools will certainly need because it is not usually in place, may be tricky. Some districts are beginning to provide it at the district level. Some schools are able to use volunteers from business, industry, or government agencies. Much of this type of support can be done over the network itself, which makes it possible for someone located off-site to maintain the equipment with only occasional trips to the school. 4.4 How do I convince the people in our system with the purse strings to spend money on this? Most people become convinced with exposure. One excited individual in the school who is able to show proof of concept by starting a pilot program can be the catalyst for a school or an entire district. If you can get an Internet account (as suggested above) and use it for instruction in your classroom, you can make presentations at faculty, school/community, and school board meetings. The National Center for Education Statistics in the Office of Educational Research and Improvement at the United States Department of Education has released a video targeted at school administrators. Its purpose is to educate them about what the Internet is and to encourage support for the use of telecommunications in primary and secondary schools. For further information, See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." 4.5 Where do I go for technical support and training? Much technical support and training can be found by using the Internet School Networking WG [Page 8] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Internet itself. You can post questions to people in the know and join discussion lists and news groups that discuss and answer questions about support and training. One such list is Tipsheet, the Computer Help and Tip Exchange, the purpose of which is to provide a supportive setting where people can ask questions or discuss products. Other lists are the education-related lists mentioned in Question 7.2 and listed in Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." Specific news groups to look for are those beginning with "comp." and followed by the type of operating system, hardware, or software you have a question about. For example, comp.os.unix or comp.os.msdos.apps. Your local community has resources that you may be able to tap. These are again colleges and universities, businesses, computer clubs and user groups, technology consultants, and government agencies. Your service provider may offer training and support for technical issues, and other groups also offer formal classes and seminars. For those schools who have designated technical people, they are good candidates for classes and seminars. There are some documents for further reading and exploration that you may want to peruse. See Section 8, "Suggested Reading." There are books on almost every specific subject in the computing world that may answer your questions. For new books, check your local library, bookstore, or booksellers' catalogs. 5. Questions About Implementation and Technical Options 5.1 How do I learn about options for getting my school connected? In the United States, there are a number of state-wide educational networks, most of them with access to the Internet. To find out if there is a state education network in your area which gives accounts to educators and/or students, contact the Consortium for School Networking. The InterNIC (Internet Network Information Center) has a list of regional and national network providers. Both the Consortium for School Networking and the InterNIC are listed in Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." You can sometimes locate a person friendly to the idea of using networks in schools and willing to help you who works as an independent consultant, in a local college or univerisity, in a technology company, for a service provider, at a community Internet School Networking WG [Page 9] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 network, or in a government agency. There are a number of books out on the Internet and how to get connected to it. Some are listed in Section 8, "Suggested Reading," and more are being published every month. Check libraries, bookstores, and book-sellers' catalogs. 5.2 How many of our computers should we put on the Internet? You will probably want to make Internet *access* possible for as many of your school's computers as possible. If you are using a dial-up service, you may want a number of shared accounts throughout the school. If your school has a Local Area Network (LAN) with several computers on it, one dedicated Internet connection may be able to service the whole school. 5.3 Should we set up a telecommunications lab or put networked computers in each classroom? A computer lab is an easier maintenance set-up for the person in charge of keeping the equipment running and allows each individual (or pair) in an entire class to be using a computer at the same time. You will probably want to get a commitment from specific teachers or media specialists to use the lab in the course of their teaching. On the other hand, a computer located in the classroom is more convenient for both the teacher and the class. At the same time, networking all computers campus-wide can be expensive. You will need to consider both options and weigh them against your school's needs and priorities. You may also want to investigate having one lab and a few classrooms with modem access, assuming phone lines are availble. As use of the Internet catches on, it will be more effective to create a campus-wide local area network that is routed to the Internet through a dedicated line than to keep adding modems in classrooms. 5.4 Can people get on the Internet from home? This depends on your service provider. It is certainly a possibility. You will need to discuss whether you want to make this option available to students even if it is possible technically. This is best discussed with the community your school serves in a public forum such as a school/community meeting. At issue is the shared responsibility of educators and parents to monitor student Internet use. Internet School Networking WG [Page 10] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 5.5 What are some of the options for using Internet services without paying for a full, dedicated-line Internet connection? It is possible to create a local, store-and-forward network using various implementations of the Unix to Unix Copy (UUCP) software suite, available as public domain (free) or shareware (small, often optional, fee) software, which can run on many different platforms including Amiga, IBM, and Macintosh. The connections are via dial-up phone lines using local phone numbers. Usenet News and email are "stored" on a machine until the time appointed for that machine to contact the next one along the path to the final destination, at which time it is "forwarded" along its way. Most machines are set up to process outgoing requests at least every 30 minutes. With this type of system you will have access to as many Usenet News groups as your site agrees to carry, as well as email, which includes access to mailing lists and listservs such as those listed in Section 9, Resources and Contacts." Many file servers also offer file transfer and other services via email. There are a couple of important advantages to such a system. First, it is much more affordable. Second, it allows for filtering, which gives a school control over what kind of information is available to its students. FrEdMail, FidoNet, and K12Net are store-and-forward systems. FidoNet, for example, is a network of amateurs and hobbyists which operates on personal computers and is publicly accessible by anyone with a microcomputer and a modem. Contact information for all three organizations can be found in Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." 6. Questions About Security and Ethics 6.1 Who should have access in the school, the teachers or the students? Clearly the answer is that teachers AND students should have access to the Internet. There's no reason why media specialists, administrators and support staff should not also have access. In elementary schools, access for students may be more supervised than in the upper grades. 6.2 I've heard that there are files on the Internet that parents would not like their children to get. How can students be kept from accessing this objectionable material? Internet School Networking WG [Page 11] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Technically, if your school has a direct Internet connection, they can't. The store-and-forward scenario described in Question 5.5 is one solution to filtering the information to which students have access. Everyone on the network, including students, is able to download files from public electronic repositories, some of which contain materials that just about anyone would consider objectionable for school-age children. For this reason, it is important that schools develop clear policies to guide students' use of the Internet and establish rules, and consequences for breaking them, that govern behavior on the Internet. Additionally, schools should consider integrating issues around technology and ethics into the curriculum. [4] Although I said that technically students can't be kept from accessing objectionable material, this is only true if a direct Internet connection is used. As described in Question 5.5 there are ways of sending and receiving email and Usenet News using store-and-forward systems, bulletin board systems, or information servers. In this case, you are not capable of using some of the Internet tools. Many of the files and resources available using these tools can also be acquired via email or news groups (which can be stored, filtered, and forwarded), but this will not be the case with all resources available on the Internet. You will have to decide whether it is worth limiting access to ensure a measure of technical control. Some find that it is well worth it and others do not. Another possibility is to control the times and opportunities that students have to access the Internet, and only allow access under supervision. This is a less desirable option than teaching the ethics of Internet access as a matter of course, but may be used in combination with other methods to ensure the integrity of the school, its students, and its educators. 6.3 How do we keep our own and other people's computers safe from student "hackers"? In the language of computer folks, a "hacker" is someone who is excellent at understanding and manipulating computer systems. A "cracker" is someone who maliciously and/or illegally enters or attempts to enter someone else's computer system. Computer security is unquestionably important, both in maintaining the security of the school's computers and in ensuring the proper behavior of the school's students (and other who use the network). In this area, not only school policy, but also state and national laws may apply. Two sources of information which you can read to Internet School Networking WG [Page 12] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 help you sort through security issues are: FYI 8: Site Security Handbook "Ethical Uses of Information Technologies in Education" The full references for these documents can be found in Section 8, "Suggested Reading." The pamphlet "Ethical Uses of Information Technologies in Education" is more applicable to the laws of the United States than to those of other countries, but several of the ideas are shared in various cultures. 6.4 How do we keep viruses from attacking all our computers if we get connected to the Internet? If you use the Internet to exchange data (such as text or pictures), virus infection is generally not a problem. The real concern is when you downlaod software programs and run them on your own computer. Any program you downlaod over the network and run could have a virus. For that matter, any program, whether on tape or a disk, even commercial software still in its original packaging, might possibly have a virus. For this reason, all computers should have virus protection software running on them. Virus checking software is available free over the Internet via Anonymous FTP from ftp.cert.org. (For information on using Anonymous FTP, see Appendix B.) Your hardware or software vendor, your network access provider, your technical support resources, or your colleagues on network mailing lists should be able to provide more specific information applicable to your site. To help reduce the risk of downloading a virus with your program, try to use trusted sources. Ask someone you know or post the question to a mailing list or news group to find the most reliable sites for software access. 6.5 What are the rules for using the Internet? When your Internet connection is established, your access provider should acquaint you with their Acceptable Use Policy (AUP). This policy explains the acceptable and non-acceptable uses for your connection. For example, it is in all cases unacceptable to use the network for illegal purposes. It may, in some cases, be unacceptable to use the netowrk for commercial purposes. If such a policy is not mentioned, ask for it. All users are expected to Internet School Networking WG [Page 13] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 know what the acceptable and unacceptable uses of their network are. Remember that it is essential to establish a school-wide policy in addition to the provider's AUP. 7. Questions About Educational Collaboration, Projects, and Resources 7.1 How can I find specific projects using the Internet that are already developed? There are a several resources on the Internet that are directed specifically at the primary and secondary school communities, and the number is growing. The InterNIC gopher server has a section on K-12 (Kindergarten through 12th grade) Education, the Consortium for School Networking maintains a gopher server, and NASA's Spacelink is directed entirely at primary and secondary school educators and students. NYSERNet's Empire Internet Schoolhouse is an extension of its Bridging the Gap program. For access to these and others, see Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." Many people on electronic mailing lists such as Ednet, Kidsphere, and the Consortium for School Networking Discussion List (cosndisc) post their projects and ask for partners and collaborators. The K12 hierarchy of Usenet News has several groups where educators post these invitations as well. For subscription to these and other electronic lists and for names of news groups, see Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." For news groups and mailing lists of special interest to educators, see the "Ednet Guide to Usenet Newsgroups" and "An Educator's Guide to E- Mail Lists," both of which are listed in Section 8, "Suggested Reading." As you explore the Internet, there are some tools that will help you find projects that are already developed. A good overview of many of these resource discovery tools is the "Guide to Network Resource Tools" written by the European Academic Research Networks (EARN) Association. It explains the basics of tools such as Gopher, Veronica, WAIS, Archie, and the World Wide Web, as well as others, and provides pointers for finding out more about these useful tools. It is listed in Section 8, "Suggested Reading." 7.2 Where do I go to find colleagues who support networking and schools willing to participate in projects? Internet School Networking WG [Page 14] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 The electronic mailing lists and Usenet News groups in Section 9, "Resources and Contacts" are rich with people who want to collaborate on projects involving use of the Internet. There are also a number of conferences you may want to look in to. The National Education Computing Conference (NECC) is held annually, as is Tel-Ed, a conference sponsored by the Interntational Society for Technology in Education (ISTE). ISTE maintains an online server which has a calendar of conferences all over the world in telecommunications for education. The INET conference is the annual conference for the Internet Society. See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts," for contact information for these organizations and for information on access to ISTE's online server. 7.3 What are some examples of how the Internet is being used in classrooms now? Projects which use the Internet sometimes require sites from all over the world to contribute data from the local area then compile that data for use by all. Weather patterns, pollutants in water or air, and Monarch butterfly migration are some of the data that has been collected over the Internet. In Appendix A you will find several examples from the Kidsphere electronic mailing list, each from a different content area and representing different ways of using the Internet. There are a number of specific projects you may find interesting. KIDS-94 (and subsequent years), managed by the non-profit KIDLINK Society, is one. It currently includes ten discussion lists and services, some of them only for people who are ten through fifteen years old. Another place to look is Academy One of the National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN), which usually has between 5 and 10 projects running at a time. The International Education and Research Network (I*EARN), a project of the non-profit Copen Family Fund, facilitates telecommunications in schools around the world. Chatback Trust, initiated to provide email for schools in the United Kingdom and around the world with students who have mental or physical difficulty with communicating, and Chatback International, directed at any school on the Internet, maintain a network server that you may want to investigate. The European Schools Project involves approximately 200 schools in 20 countries and has as its goal building a support system for secondary school educators. For contact information on these groups and server access, refer to Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." Internet School Networking WG [Page 15] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 7.4 Is there a manual that lists sites on the Internet particularly useful for class exploration? There are a number of resource guides, and so far only a couple are directed specifically at an education audience. "An Incomplete Guide to the Internet and Other Telecommunications Opportunities Especially for Teachers and Students K-12" is compiled by the NCSA Education Group and is available online. The "Internet Resource Directory for Educators, Version 2" is also available online. It was prepared by a team of 46 teachers in Nebraska and Texas who were enrolled in telecomputing courses at two universities in 1992 and 1993. Ednet's "Educator's Guide to Email Lists" is available electronically, as is the "Ednet Guide to Usenet News Groups." ERIC offers several documents relating to telecommunications and education, including the ERIC Digest "Internet Basics," the ERIC Review "K-12 Networking," "Instructional Development for Distance Education," and "Strategies for Teaching at a Distance." Complete bibliographic information for these documents is listed in Section 8, "Suggested Reading." For help in retrieving the documents electronically, see Appendix B. There are also printed guides to the Internet appearing along with the new books on the Internet. The problem with paper resource guides is that the Internet is a changing environment, so they become outdated quickly. Check libraries, bookstores, and booksellers' catalogs for these guides. One answer to the problem of printed Internet guides is the newsletter. NetTEACH NEWS is a newsletter specifically for primary and secondary school educators interested in networking. It contains information on new services on the Internet that are of interest to educators, projects for collaboration, conferences, new books and publications, and includes "The Instruction Corner," which gives practical tutorials on using network tools and services. NetTEACH NEWS is published ten times a year, and is available both hardcopy and via email. Subscription information can be found in Section 9, "Resources and Contacts." 7.5 How can I add my own contributions to the Internet? The network server operated by the Consortium for School Networking exists expressly for the sharing of ideas by the elementary and secondary school community. Educators are encouraged to submit projects, lesson plans, and ideas. A gopher server maintained by PSGnet and RAINet also accepts educator submissions for addition to the many sections of its menu tree Internet School Networking WG [Page 16] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 devoted to elementary and secondary school interests. See Section 9, "Resources and Contacts" for information on reaching CoSN or submitting materials, and for access to the server maintained by PSGnet and RAINet. It is important to remember that anything you create should be updated for others as you make changes yourself in the course of your learning by experience. The electronic lists and news groups mentioned are also places to share your knowledge and yourself as a resource, and as you gain experience you may find you have the knowledge to put up an electronic server at your site. A group of schools in Pittsburg shares one such server, and there you could recently find and download to your own machine photographs and notes from an exhibit on the architecture of one of the elementary schools. 8. Suggested Reading Those items marked with an asterisk (*) are available free online. For information on retrieving documents electronically, see Appendix B. Dearn, Daniel. The Internet Guide for New Users Washington, DC: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1994. *Ednet Guide to Usenet Newsgroups online: nic.umass.edu pub/ednet/edusenet.gde *Educator's Guide to E-Mail Lists online: nic.umass.edu pub/ednet/educatrs.lst *ERIC Digest, Internet Basics *ERIC Review, K-12 Networking "Ethical Uses of Information Technologies in Education" by Jay P. Sivin and Ellen R. Bialo. 1992. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice. To order, call 1-800-851-3420 from within the United States or 1-301-251-5500 from outside of the United States. Or write to: Internet School Networking WG [Page 17] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs National Institute of Justice Washington, DC 20531 Fraase, Michael. The Mac Internet Tour Guide. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: Ventana Press, 1993. *FYI 4 "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly asked "New Internet User" Questions," Malkin, G.S., A. Marine (fyi4.txt or rfc1325.txt) *FYI 5 "Choosing a Name for Your Computer," Libes, D. (fyi5.txt or rfc1178.txt) *FYI 8 "Site Security Handbook," Holbrook, J.P. (fyi8.txt or rfc1244.txt) *FYI 16 "Connecting to the Internet: What Connecting Institutions Should Anticipate," ACM SIGUCCS Networking Taskforce (fyi16.txt or rfc1359.txt) *FYI 19 "Introducing the Internet--A Short Bibliography of Introductory Internetworking Reading for the Network Novice," Hoffman, E., L. Jackson (fyi19.txt or rfc1463.txt) *FYI 20, "What is the Internet?" Krol, E., E. Hoffman (fyi20.txt or rfc1462.txt) The FYI series is online in the following locations. Choose the site nearest you from which to download the files: United States East Coast ds.internic.net (198.49.45.10) fyi/fyi##.txt United States West Coast ftp.nisc.sri.com (192.33.33.22) fyi/fyi##.txt Pacific Rim munnari.oz.au (128.250.1.21) fyi/fyi##.txt Europe nic.nordu.net (192.36.148.17) fyi/fyi##.txt Internet School Networking WG [Page 18] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 *"Guide to Network Resource Tools," EARN Association. May 1993. 64 pp. online: naic.nasa.gov files/general_info/earn-resource-tool-guide.ps and earn-resource-tool-guide.txt *"Incomplete Guide to the Internet and Other Telecommunications Opportunities Especially for Teachers and Students K-12," NCSA Telnet Group. January 1993. ~300 pp. online: ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu Education/Education_Resources/Incomplete_Guide To order a hardcopy, contact: Chuck Farmer NCSA Education Group 605 E. Springfield Ave. Champaign, IL 61820 cfarmer@landrew.ncsa.uiuc.edu or: Lisa Bievenue NCSA Education Group 605 E. Springfield Ave. Champaign, IL 61820 bievenue@ncsa.uiuc.edu *Internet Resource Directory for Educators online: tcet.unt.edu pub/telecomputing-info/IRD/IRD-telnet-sites.txt, IRD-ftp-archives.txt, IRD-listservs.txt, and IRD-infusion-ideas.txt Kehoe, Brendan. Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1992 (An earlier version is also available free online.) Krol, Ed. The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog Sebastopol, California: O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1992 LaQuey, Tracy. The Internet Companion: A Beginner's Guide to Global Networking. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1992 Marine, April, Susan Kirkpatrick, Vivian Neou, and Carol Ward. Internet: Getting Started. Englewood-Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentic Hall, 1993. Internet School Networking WG [Page 19] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 *Internet Resource Directory for Educators online: tcet.unt.ede pub/telecomputing-info/IRD/IRD-telnet-sites.txt, IRD-ftp-archives.txt, IRD-listservs.txt, and IRD-infusion-ideas.txt *RFC 1480 "The US Domain," Cooper, A., J. Postel. June 1993. (rfc1480.txt) This document will also be useful to people not in the United States. See the sites listed under the FYI documents for the location nearest you from which to download the file. rfc/rfc1480.txt 9. Resources and Contacts ------------ CONFERENCES: ------------ NECC and Tel-Ed International Society for Technology in Education 1787 Agate Street Eugene, Oregon 97403-1923 USA phone: 503-346-4414 or 1-800-336-5191 fax: 503-346-5890 email: iste@oregon.uoregon.edu (Compuserve: 70014,2117) (AppleLink: ISTE) Electronic accss to a calendar of conferences all over the world and other information is available on the ISTE server. See "Network Servers" in this section. INET Internet Society 1895 Preston White Drive Suite 100 Reston, Virginia 22091 USA phone: 703-620-8990 fax: 703-620-0913 ---------------------- ELECTRONIC MAIL LISTS: ---------------------- Internet School Networking WG [Page 20] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Cosndisc (Consortium for School Networking Discussion List) To subscribe, send a message to... listerv@bitnic.educom.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe cosndisc YourFirstName YourLastName To post, send a message to... cosndisc@bitnic.educom.edu Ednet To subscribe, send a message to... listserv@nic.umass.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe ednet YourFirstName YourLastName To post, send a message to... ednet@nic.umass.edu Kidsphere To subscribe, send a message to... kidsphere-request@vms.cis.pitt.edu Type any message asking to be added to the list. To post, send a message to... kidsphere@vms.cis.pitt.edu KIDS-95/KIDLINK To learn about KIDLINK projects, subscribe to the news service by sending a messgage to... listserv@vm1.nodak.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the meesage enter... subscribe KIDLINK YourFistName YourLastName K12admin (K-12 Educators Interested in Educational Administration) To subscribe, send a message to... listserv@suvm.syr.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe k12admin YourFirstName YourLastName To post, send a message to... Internet School Networking WG [Page 21] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 k12admin@suvm.syr.edu LM_NET (A list for school library media specialists worldwide.) To subscribe, send a message to... listserv@suvm.syr.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe LM_NET YourFirstName YourLastName To post, send a message to... LM_NET@suvm.syr.edu SIGTEL-L (List for the Special Interest Group for Telecommunications, a service of the International Society for Technology in Education) To subscribe, send a message to... SIGTEL-L@unmvma.unm.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe SIGTEL-L YourFirstName YourLastName To post, send a message to... SIGTEL-L@unmvma.unm.edu Tipsheet (Computer Help and Tip Exchange) To subscribe, send a message to... listserv@wsuvm1.csc.wsu.edu Leave the Subject field blank, and in the first line of the body of the message enter... subscribe tipsheet YourFirstName YourLastName ---------------- NETWORK SERVERS: ---------------- Chatback Trust and Chatback International network server via telnet... telnet rdz.stjohns.edu login: student (Follow login instructions on screen.) via gopher... sjuvm.stjohns.edu (port 70) Choose "Rehabilitation Resource Center" from first menu. Choose "SJU Unibase Bulletin Board and Conference System" from Internet School Networking WG [Page 22] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 menu which then comes up. Consortium for School Networking gopher server via gopher... cosn.org (port 70) via telnet... telnet cosn.org login: gopher (no password) Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) Digests Archives are available via FTP... ftp ericir.syr.edu login: anonymous password: your_email_address cd pub via email... mail askeric@ericir.syr.edu via gopher... ericir.syr.edu (port 70) Empire Internet Schoolhouse via gopher... nysernet.org (port 70) via telnet... telnet nysernet.org login: empire (no password) International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) gopher server via gopher... gopher.uoregon.edu (port 70) via telnet... telnet gopher.uoregon.edu login: gopher (no password) Once connected via either of these two methods, use the menu item Internet School Networking WG [Page 23] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 "Search Titles in This Gopher Server" and enter ISTE when asked what to search for. InterNIC gopher server via gopher... is.internic.net (port 70) via telnet... telnet is.internic.net login: gopher (no password) KIDS Gopher, a KIDLINK service via gopher... kids.duq.edu (port 70) via telnet... telnet kids.duq.edu login: gopher (no password) NASA Spacelink via telnet... telnet spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov login: newuser password: newuser (Follow registration instructions on screen.) via FTP... ftp spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov PSGnet and RAINet gopher server via telnet... telnet gopher.psg.com login: gopher (no password) via gopher gopher.psg.com (port 70) ------------ NEWS GROUPS: ------------ alt.education.distance Internet School Networking WG [Page 24] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 alt.kids-talk comp.security.announce k12.chat.elementary k12.chat.junior k12.chat.senior k12.chat.teacher k12.ed.art k12.ed.business k12.ed.comp.literacy k12.ed.health-pe k12.ed.life-skills k12.ed.math k12.ed.music k12.ed.science k12.ed.soc-studies k12.ed.special k12.ed.tag k12.ed.tech k12.lang.art k12.lang.deutsch-eng k12.lang.esp-eng k12.lang.francais k12.lang.russian k12.library k12.sys.projects misc.education misc.education.language.english misc.kids misc.kids.computer pubnet.nixpub (where a list of open access Unix sites is often posted, for those looking for access to Usenet News and email only) -------------- ORGANIZATIONS: -------------- Chatback International Dr. R. Zenhausern, Executive Director Psychology Department St. Johns University SB 15, Marillac Jamaica, NY 11439 USA Phone: 718-990-6447 Fax: 718-990-6705 Email: drz@sjuvm.stjohns.edu The Chatback Trust Internet School Networking WG [Page 25] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Tom Holloway, UK Director 25 Clemens Street Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire, CV31 2DP Phone: +44-926-888333 Fax: +44-926-420204 Email: t.holloway@warwick.ac.uk The Chatback Trust is the organization which was originally concerned primarily with school children with various types of language disorder. Chatback International is the expansion of that project onto the Internet and is concerned with the use of networks to educate all children. Consortium for School Networking P.O. Box 65193 Washington, DC 20035-5193 USA Phone: 202-466-6296 Fax: 202-872-4318 Email: cosn@bitnic.educom.edu According to a recent brochure, "The Consortium for School Networking is a membership organization of institutions formed to further the development and use of computer network technology in K-12 education." To join CoSN, request an application at the above address. To contribute your ideas, lesson plans, projects, etc., for others to access over the Internet, send to email to: ferdi@digital.cosn.org ERIC Clearinghouse on Information Resources 030 Huntington Hall Syracuse University Syracuse, New York 13244-2340 USA Phone: 315-443-9114 Fax: 315-443-5448 Email: askeric@ericir.syr.edu According to a recent electronic brochure, "The Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) is a federally-funded national information system that provides access to an extensive body of education-related literature. ERIC provides a variety of services and products at all education levels." Another portion of the electronic brochure states, "AskERIC is an Internet-based question-answering service for teachers, library media specialists, and administrators. Anyone involved with K-12 Internet School Networking WG [Page 26] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 education can send an e-mail message to AskERIC. Drawing on the extensive resources of the ERIC system, AskERIC staff will respond with an answer within 48 working hours. If you have questions about K-12 education, learning, teaching, information technology, educational administration - AskERIC at: askeric@ericir.syr.edu" FidoNet 1151 SW Vermont Street Portland, OR 97219 USA Phone: 503-280-5280 Contact: Janet Murray Email: jmurray@psg.com FidoNet is a dial-up, store-and-forward messaging system which takes advantage of late night phone rates to send and receive email and conferences. FrEdMail Foundation P.O. Box 243, Bonita, CA 91908 USA Contact: Al Rogers Phone: 619-475-4852 Email: arogers@bonita.cerf.fred.org International Education and Research Network (I*EARN) c/o Copen Family Fund 345 Kear Street Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 USA Contact: Dr. Edwin H. Gragert Phone: 914-962-5864 Fax: 914-962-6472 E-mail: ed1@copenfund.igc.apc.org According to Dr. Gragert, "The purpose of the I*EARN Network is to create low-cost telecommunications models to demonstrate that elementary and secondary students can make a meaningful contribution to the health and welfare of people and the planet. We want to see students go beyond simply being "pen-pals" to use telecommunications in joint student projects as part of the educational process." I*EARN works with international service and youth organizations to add telecommunications to existing partnerships. KIDLINK Society 4815 Saltrod Norway Internet School Networking WG [Page 27] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Phone: +47-370-31204 Fax: +47-370-27111 Email: opresno@extern.uio.no Contact: Odd de Presno KIDLINK is the organization that runs the yearly KIDS projects, KIDS-94, KIDS-95, etc. For information on getting files related to KIDS-NN/KIDLINK, see "Electronic Mail Lists" in this section. For access to the KIDS Gopher, see "Network Servers" in this section. K12Net 1151 SW Vermont Street Portland, OR 97219 USA Phone: 503-280-5280 Contact: Janet Murray Email: jmurray@psg.com K12Net is a collection of conferences devoted to curriculum, language exchanges with native speakers, and classroom-to-classroom projects designed by teachers in K-12 education. The conference are privately distributed among FidoNet-compatible bulletin board systems on five continents and are also available as Usenet Newsgroups in the hierarchy "k12." More information about K12Net is available from gopher.psg.com. via telnet... telnet gopher.psg.com login: gopher via gopher... gopher.psg.com (port 70) National Center for Education Statistics 555 New Jersey Ave N.W., R.410 C Washington DC 20208-5651 USA Phone: 202-219-1364 Contact: Jerry Malitz Email: gmalitz@inet.ed.gov InterNIC Information Services General Atomics P.O. Box #85608 San Diego, California 92186-9784 USA Phone: 800-444-4345 Internet School Networking WG [Page 28] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 619-455-4600 Fax: 619-455-3990 Email: info@internic.net The InterNIC is a (United States) National Science Foundation funded group tasked with providing information services to the United States research and education networking community. The Reference Desk is in operation Monday through Friday, from 5:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Pacific Time. Internet Society 1895 Preston White Drive Suite 100 Reston, Virginia 22091 USA phone: 703-620-8990 fax: 703-620-0913 The Internet Society is the international organization for Internet cooperation and coordination. 10. References [1] FYI 4 "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers to Commonly Asked 'New Internet User' Questions," Malkin, G.S., A. Marine (rfc1325.txt) [2] FYI 20, "What is the Internet?" Krol, E., E. Hoffman (rfc1462.txt) [3] "Restructuring Schools: A Systematic View" in Action Line, the newsletter of the Maryland State Teachers Association, a National Education Association Affiliate. Roger Kuhn, Editor. No. 93-6. June, 1993. [4] Sivin, Jay P. and Ellen R. Bialo (1992) "Ethical Uses of Information Technologies in Education." Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, National Institute of Justice. [5] FYI 19 "Introducing the Internet--A Short Bibliography of Introductory Internetworking Reading for the Network Novice," Hoffman, E., L. Jackson (rfc1463.txt) Internet School Networking WG [Page 29] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 11. Security Considerations General security considerations are discussed in Section 6 of this document. 12. Author's Address Jennifer Sellers NASA NREN 700 13th Street, NW Suite 950 Washington, DC 20005 USA sellers@quest.arc.nasa.gov (202) 434-8954 Internet School Networking WG [Page 30] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 APPENDIX A: EXAMPLES OF PROJECTS USING THE INTERNET The following examples of projects using the Internet appeared on the Kidsphere electronic mailing list during the 1992-93 school year. The messages ahve been edited in the interest of space and because many of the details about how to participate are dated, but the information presented can give you a feel for the types and range of projects that happen today. ========================================= Example One, "Middle School Math Project" ========================================= This is the official invitation to participate in "Puzzle Now!". "Puzzle Now!" is an interdisciplinary project using educational technology as a tool to integrate the curriculum. "Puzzle Now!" provides teams of mathematics and language arts teachers and students with thematic puzzle problems via VA.PEN. PROJECT : Puzzle Now! SUBJECT AREA : Mathematics/Language Arts GRADE LEVEL : 6 - 8 DURATION : This project will consist of eight - one week cycles. PROJECT GOALS : -to increase student motivation for math problem solving; -to emphasize the importance of addressing problems in a clear, concise, and logical manner; -to provide students with opportunities for developing skills in written expression; -to familiarize students with computer and modem as tools for problem solving projects. PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The puzzles presented in this project are no mere entertainment. These puzzles will help the student reason logically, develop thinking Internet School Networking WG [Page 31] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 skills, and will assist in the understanding of many practical disciplines, such as geometry. IT IS VERY IMPORTANT to remember that getting the correct answer isn't as important as figuring out how to find it. DO THE SOLUTIONS HAVE TO BE SUBMITTED IN A PARTICULAR FASHION? Yes, the solution format requires that the group/team/individual first 1)restate the puzzle/problem; 2)explain the strategy, or strategies used in finding the answer; 3)state the answer. Your team/class may turn in only one solution. That means you must work together to develop one solution to be examined by the "Puzzlemeister". ========================================== Example Two, "Poetry Contest, Grades 9-12" ========================================== National Public Telecomputing Network -- Academy One Project Announcement FIRST ANNUAL INTERNET POETRY CONTEST FOR SECONDARY STUDENTS GRADES 9-12 ***FEATURED FORM: THE SONNET*** ***First Place Award: $50.00*** ***Second Place Award: $25.00*** ***Honorable Mentions: $10.00*** The first annual Internet Poetry Contest invites entries from students in grades 9-12 for original sonnets written within the last 3 years. The purpose of the contest is to encourage young creative writers to practice the discipline needed to write in a particular poetic form, in this case, the sonnet form. (The sonnet is defined and examples are given below.) Sonnets may be submitted in any recognized sonnet form including Petrarchan, Shakespearean, Miltonic, or Spenserian. Students submitting entries must include a form (given below) Internet School Networking WG [Page 32] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 certifying that each sonnet entered in the contest is original and written within the last 3 years. The deadline for mailing entries is April 30, 1993. Winners will be notified individually and winning entries will also be announced via Academy I on the Internet. Judges for the contest are current or retired English instructors throughout the United States. ============================================== Example Three, "Tracking Monarch Butterflies" ============================================== Our school has begun a study of monarchs using Nova's Animal Pathfinders. After working through these lessons, which will give us the necessary background information, we will design the format for collecting the data on sighting monarchs. We will send information on the format to any school who wishes to participate in the project. Our fifth grade students will begin this project and we hope that students from kindergarten through twelvth grade will get involved. We hope that schools from south to north along the migratory flyways will be interested in joining and collecting data about first sightings and population counts. We still have not foundt the lepidopterists who did the initial research but will keep looking. Hope to heaar from you soon. ======================================= Example Four, "Simulated Space Mission" ======================================= National Public Telecomputing Network -- Academy One Program Announcement SPECIAL EVENT: NESPUT 24-HOUR CENTENNIAL SPACE SHUTTLE SIMULATED MISSION ON APRIL 27, 1993 SCHOOLS, TEACHERS, STUDENTS, SPACE ENTHUSIASTS: The April 27 simulated and telecommunicated space shuttle mission is a mostly real-time 24 hour mission involving numerous activities in space. Your school could be involved for an entire Internet School Networking WG [Page 33] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 24 hour period or for a much lesser amount of time (say just your school day or even a few hours). During that 24 hour period, schools will be linked to share information via telecommunications and a variety of activities will be going on via telecommunications and in the classroom--most of them created by the schools and students involved. The space shuttle Centennial at University School in Shaker Heights, Ohio, a real and permanent simulator, will act as itself and use its mission control area as Houston. Reports on the progress of our real student astronauts will be posted on the listserv and via the menus on NPTN affiliate systems carrying Academy One. Your school can act as any one of the following: A second American shuttle. A second Russian shuttle. A weather reporting station for your area. One of NASA's alternate landing sites. A science station posing questions and problems for all astronauts in simulated space. An information station, posting interesting information of interest about the space shuttle and the space program. A graphics station, sending GIF files to other schools (especially good if you have a scanner for your computer). Any other type of space related station or activity you can imagine. ================================================== Example Five, "Equinox Experiment and Calculation" ================================================== ATTENTION - MARCH 20, l993 IS THE EQUINOX A WORLDWIDE SCIENCE AND MATH EXPERIMENT ERATOSTHENES EXPERIMENT Eratosthenes, a Greek geographer (about 276 to 194 B.C.), made a surprisingly accurate estimate of the earth's circumference. In the great library in Alexandria he read that a deep vertical well near Syene, in southern Egypt, was entirely lit up by the sun at noon once a year. Eratosthenes reasoned that at this time sun must be directly overhead, with its rays shining directly into the well. In Alexandria, almost due north of Syene, he knew that the sun was not directly overhead at noon on the same day because a vertical object cast a shadow. Eratosthenes could now measure Internet School Networking WG [Page 34] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 the circumference of the earth (sorry Columbus) by making two assumptions - that the earth is round and that the sun's rays are essentially parallel. He set up a vertical post at Alexandria and measured the angle of its shadow when the well at Syene was completely sunlit. Eratosthenes knew from geometry that the size of the measured angle equaled the size of the angle at the earth's center between Syene and Alexandria. Knowing also that the arc of an angle this size was 1/50 of a circle, and that the distance between Syene and Alexandria was 5000 stadia, he multi- plied 5000 by 50 to find the earth's circumference. His result, 250,000 stadia (about 46,250 km) is quite close to modern meas- urements. Investigating the Earth, AGI, l970, Chapter 3, p. 66. The formula Eratosthenes used is: D A d=distance between Syene and Alexandria _____ = _____ A=360 degrees assumption of round earth a=shadow angle of vertical stick d a D=to be determined (circumference) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Are you interested in participating? All you need to do is place a vertical stick (shaft) into the ground at your school and when the sun reaches it's highest vertical assent for the day (solar noon), measure the angle of the shadow of the stick. - - stick -> - - a a=shadow angle - - ground___________________-___________________________________ By doing this experiment on the equinox we all know that the vertical rays of the sun are directly over the equator, like the well at Syene. Using a globe or an atlas the distance between your location and the equator can be determined and the circum- ference can be calculated. ***************************************************************** But how about sharing your shadow angle measurement with others around the real globe. ****************************************************************** Send your measurement of the shadow angle____________degrees Send your location city ____________________________________ Send your location country _________________________________ Internet School Networking WG [Page 35] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 Send your latitude _________________________________________ Send your longitude ________________________________________ We will compile all the data and send you a copy to use in your classroom to compare the various locations and angles. If you're interested send us your data. We will compile and return it to you. ===================================== Example Six, "Famous Black Americans" ===================================== Project Name: Who Am I?: Famous Black Americans Subject Area: Social Studies, Research Skills Grade Level: Grades 4-12 Project Description: The goal of this project is to assist students in increasing their knowledge of American black history. Each week, on Monday Morning, a set of three or four clues will be sent to your account. The same will occur on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday mornings. At any time, through the end of the day on Friday, your students may send their answer (the name of the famous American identified by the clues) to the following online address: whoami@radford.vak12ed.edu A class should send only one answer each week. If two are sent, the sponsors will assume that the first of the answers is the one intended to be submitted. The sponsor will collect all answers, compile a listing of classes who send the correct answers, and will forward this list to all participants via email by early on the following Monday morning. On that morning, in addition, the sponsor will send all classes a new problem. Internet School Networking WG [Page 36] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 This project lasts five weeks, with clues each week being given for a different famous person in American history. Project Length: Five Weeks Awards: Every Monday morning, participating classes will receive an online message from the sponsor congratulating those who have sent correct answers during the previous week. At the end of the five weeks, attractive certificates will be awarded to all participating classes (sent by way of the Postal Service). In addition, classes which have participated in each of the five weeks will receive a separate style of certificate for their school or class. Internet School Networking WG [Page 37] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 APPENDIX B: TRANSFERRING FILES The traditional way to access files available online on the Internet is via a program based on the File Transfer Protocol (FTP). Many information sites have hosts that allow "anonymous" FTP, meaning you don't need to already have an account on the host in order to access the files it makes public. For example, the online files sited in Suggested Reading can all be retrieved via anonymous FTP. In most cases, when you see a reference to a file available for FTP, the reference will give you both a hostname and a pathname. So, for example, the ASCII text version of the EARN Resource Tool Guide is on the host naic.nasa.gov in the /files/general_info directory as earn- resource-tool-guide.txt. Many online files are mirrored on more than one host. RFC files, for example, are so popular that several hosts act as repositories for them, so when they are cited, rarely is a hostname given. To find out all about getting RFCs, send a message to rfc-info@isi.edu and in the body of the message, type 'help: ways_to_get_rfcs'. RFCs are available both via electronic mail and via FTP. Here is some information about transferring files based on text from the access.guide file referenced in FYI 19 [5] and written by Ellen Hoffman. If you are on a machine connected to the Internet and can use FTP (file transfer protocol), you can access files online. If your VM/CMS, VAX/VMS, UNIX, DOS, Macintosh, or other system has FTP capability, you can probably use the sample commands as they are listed. If your machine doesn't work using the sample commands, you may still have FTP access. You will need to ask your system administrator or local network consultant. If you don't have FTP, you may be able to get files via electronic mail. If you are using a UNIX machine, you can use FTP directly from a system prompt. For other machines, there are commercial and public domain programs that will allow you to use FTP. (For the Macintosh, a very easy-to-use shareware program is called "Fetch"; for DOS machines you can use a program such as NCSA Telnet.) Once you establish that you have FTP access, you will need to send a series of commands to reach the host machine with the file you want, connect to the appropriate directory, and have the file transferred to your machine. A typical FTP session is described here, but not all software is exactly alike. If you have Internet School Networking WG [Page 38] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 problems, check your software's documentation ('man' page) or contact your local help-desk. This session uses the EARN Guide to Network Resource Tools in its naic.nasa.gov home as an example file to be transferred. Here's what you can do: (1) Tell your computer what host you are trying to reach: ftp naic.nasa.gov (2) Log in to the machine with the username "anonymous". You will be prompted for a password; often the host will suggest which password it prefers, often your email address. (3) Navigate through the directory to find the file you need. Two useful commands for doing so are the one to change directories ('cd'), which you can use to step through more than one directory at a time: cd files/general_info and the command which shows you the files and subdirectories within a directory: dir (4) Give a command to have the file sent to your machine: get earn-resource-tools.txt (5) Quit FTP: quit RFC Repositories: Following is a list of hosts are primary repositories for RFCs, and, for each host, the pathname to the directory that houses these files: - ds.internic.net rfc - ftp.nisc.sri.com rfc - nis.nsf.net internet/documents/rfc - nisc.jvnc.net rfc - venera.isi.edu in-notes - wuarchive.wustl.edu info/rfc - src.doc.ic.ac.uk rfc - ftp.concert.net /rfc Internet School Networking WG [Page 39] INTERNET DRAFT FYI Q/A FYI - for Schools JUNE 1993 RFCs are in the file format you see in the Suggested Readings section, e.g. rfc####.txt, with #### being the number of the RFC. To retrieve an RFC, then, you would FTP to a host above, log in as anonymous, cd to the directory noted, and retrieve the RFC you want. The file ways_to_get_rfcs, mentioned above, explains which sites make RFCs available for electronic mail retrieval, and provides directions for doing so. Internet Draft Expires: December 30, 1993 Internet School Networking WG [Page 40]