Friendship Through Education: A Sampler of International Web Projects
These online initiatives seek to enhance global understanding.
by Edutopia Staff
Students from around the world exchange data and learn about each other through a variety of online projects.
Credit: Kristi Rennebohm Franz
A month after the September 11 terrorist attacks, President Bush announced the formation of a nationwide educational effort to "fight fear with friendship."
"We're going to ask schools all across the USA to join with schools in other countries, to spread the message that we care for each other, that we want to understand each other better," Bush said.
The result is Friendship Through Education, a consortium of organizations that connect classrooms and children in more than one-hundred countries both through the Internet and offline. Projects run the gamut and have included creating "comfort quilts" for sick children in Pakistan, sending letters to children in refugee camps, and taking part in an online student conference on human rights.
Governing members of the consortium include ePals Classroom Exchange, Global SchoolNet, iEARN-USA, NetAid, People to People International, Schools Online, Sister Cities International, UN CyberSchoolBus, US Fund for UNICEF, and Paul D. Coverdell World Wise Schools Program of the Peace Corps.
Here are some samples of current Internet projects that promote global understanding:
International Schools CyberFair 2002
What has been billed as the largest educational event of its kind on the Internet entered its seventh year with the theme, "Care and Unite." This year, more than 500,000 students from more than seventy-five countries are producing Web sites that narrow the "Care and Unite" theme to such categories as "Local Music and Art Forms," "Historical Landmarks," and "Environmental Awareness and Issues." As in past years, peer evaluation of the student work, as well as by a panel of "distinguished judges," determines the winning Web sites. Last year's Platinum winner in the Local Business category was Robina State School on Australia's Gold Coast for its "Roaming 'round Robina." With notebooks and digital cameras, students visited forty local businesses and created a comprehensive guide for visitors and locals alike.
Square of Life
This is what students at Blangah Rise Primary School in Singapore saw when they looked closely at a square meter of land in their schoolyard: ants -- "both black and red" -- a plastic bottle cap, dried leaves, and small rocks. Ten-thousand miles away at Sand Hill Elementary School in Carrollton, Georgia, students also saw ants, plus a black spider, wood chips, gum, a piece of apple peel, seeds, leaves, acorns, tree roots, and nuts. The students from those schools and more than two dozen others collected the data for the Square of Life project sponsored by the Stevens Institute of Technology's Center for Improved Engineering and Science Education. Students shared their information and then wrote a report about what they learned. They posted an introduction about their school and their region and then e-mailed questions back and forth during the semester. "We were interested to find that our square had many of the same things that other schools found on their playgrounds," wrote an Arizona class. "We decided the 'Square of Life' must be part of the 'Circle of Life.'"
ThinkQuest
The ThinkQuest Internet Challenge, in which students team up with their peers in other parts of the world and create a Web site, posed some special challenges for Sizwe, a South African student. Sizwe, who speaks Zulu and very little English, was paired with English-speaking students Janine and Jason of Singapore. Sizwe had never seen a computer before his teacher at the South African Ningizimu School for the Mentally Handicapped enlisted him to contribute the artwork for the site, "20th: The Passing of a Century." The site, chronicling with art and words the events, world trends, and people who made a mark during the last one-hundred years, won ThinkQuest's Silver Award. The collaboration results are now among the more than 5,000 Web sites in the ThinkQuest library designed by students for students on such topics as math, science, language arts, art, music, technology, social studies, and sports.
Team members David Mericle and Jacob Kitzman took first place in the ThinkQuest social services category with their The Cuban Experience Web site. Following the win, they founded an organization ("run exclusively by and for students") called Student Exchange Between Cuba and America, Inc. (SECA). Their first project brought an exchange student from Camagüey, Cuba, to sister city Madison, Wisconsin. Continued efforts include working with the International Outreach Educational Center on summer programs for American students in Cuba, developing a computer center in Havana with the National Peace Foundation, and helping other sister cities programs establish student exchanges. The idea to create the 500-page Experience Cuba site grew from Mericle's and Kitzman's idea that "there was a lack of good, reliable, and unbiased information about Cuba available in the United States."
GeoGame
"It's a game that you can play in school and not get in trouble." "We were learning and having fun at the same time." That's how two Sulphur, Louisiana, middle school students sum up GeoGame, a Web-based geography challenge played in forty-eight countries that helps users learn geography terms, read and interpret maps, and increase awareness of geographical and cultural diversity. Maplewood Middle School teacher Lisa Montieth lets her students work individually or in small groups. They get ten or twenty clues and then set about identifying a mystery city. Students use maps, atlases, and other reference materials, including online resources, to identify the locations and to back up their deductive guesses. When new groups join the game, information about their hometowns is used to develop new mystery cities. Montieth has used GeoGame in conjunction with social studies classes on polar and Cartesian coordinates and maps. "GeoGame was always the catalyst for motivating the kids," says Montieth. "They discovered that maps and geography could be fun as well as informative."
Bullying.org
A Web site created by a Canadian teacher allows students from around the world to commiserate and communicate about bullying, which doesn't stop at borders. "God help me. I am so depressed," fourteen-year-old Alexandra wrote on the site. "Why do they hate me so much!!" Bill Belsey, who founded the project after Alberta suffered a tragedy similar to the fatal school killings in Littleton, Colorado, calls it "a collaborative attempt to help people help each other." "You are not alone! It's not your fault! You can do something about it," the home page declares. The site offers resources to combat bullying as well as advice and empathy from students in such countries as Bulgaria, South Africa, the United States, Australia, Sweden, Sierra Leone, Ghana, and Ireland. Students post pictures, films, poems, and drawings and share their stories and sympathy. "I have never experienced bullying, and thanks to your story never will bully again, Alexandra, because I don't want anyone to feel like you do!" wrote thirteen-year-old Kayleigh.
Postcard Geography
"We are friendly kids living in Uzbekistan. We come from around the world. ... We say kids are the hope of Earth. We dream of peace in the world. We try to make friends with everybody." Fifth graders from Tashkent International School introduced themselves to fifth graders at Killingly Memorial School in Danielson, Connecticut, and at Country Lane Elementary School in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. A simple and direct project, Postcard Geography connects U.S. students with kids around the world through Internet and snail-mail postcards. Each class sends postcards that typify aspects of their communities to every other class on the mailing list. In return, they receive postcards from all the other participants. The project motivates students in social studies, writing, artwork, and creating connections with kids around the world.
World Link Online
United Nations Day had special meaning for some Florida students last October. Through the Internet, either via videoconferencing or e-mails, students peppered U.N. commissioners from around the world with questions about human rights and refugees, had conversations with students as far away as Cameroon and the Philippines on such topics as AIDS, free trade, and the effect of war on children, and joined Palestinian and Israeli students for a discussion about the Mideast. Sondra Snowdon, founder of Worldlink, hopes the U.N. interactive summit can expand and become a regular part of United Nations Days of the future.
Playwriting-in-the-Round
When students at the Cleveland School of the Arts got the first act of The Bucco Goat Mystery via e-mail from the International School of Port of Spain in Trinidad, they were slightly intimidated by the island dialect. But not for long. Their fellow playwrights from the Caribbean pointed the city dwellers to Web sites about island-speak, and the Americans were able to maintain the island voice. Cleveland creative writing teacher Jonathan Fairman says that when classes in different parts of the world use the carefully constructed outlines and deadlines for plot development, characterization, scripting, and dialog, the results can be enlightening and entertaining. His inner city students have a new take on the world and the important bonus of writing better and more clearly because they have an audience that needs to advance the material they are given. "For my kids, the project is empowerment," Fairman says.
International School Partnerships Through Technology (ISPT)
When teacher Mary Evans signed up with ISPT, an arm of the North Carolina Center for International Understanding, she didn't know exactly what project would come out of the global Internet relationship. Students in Evans' computer applications class at South Lenoir High School began by sharing a PowerPoint ® presentation on emerging technology with their partner school in Zimbabwe. But a project grew organically once the American students learned the devastating effect of AIDS on the African country. The students decided they didn't know enough about the immune deficiency disease in their own rural community, and so they devised a survey about AIDS awareness, which they shared with the Zimbabwean students, who then took their own survey.
Global Grocery List
The Global Grocery List asks users to find retail prices for a number of common consumer items: hamburger, rice, oranges, sugar, flour, milk, chocolate, potatoes, butter, corn, peanut butter, coffee, chicken, eggs, and gasoline. Fourth graders in Kim Johnson's class at Oakridge Elementary School in Hollywood, Florida, shopped with their families for prices of items on the list. They compiled and averaged the prices and entered them onto the Global Grocery List Web site. Using math skills, they analyzed data to develop their consumer skills. They were surprised to realize how much it costs to feed a family. They were shocked at how local prices compare with prices from other parts of the world. They wondered how people in poorer places are able to afford a trip to the store.


We are students from Russia.We would like to have friends around the world. We study English and do projects.
Let's be friends.
Larisa Tarasevich
Friends
Hi! Have you checked out ePals? http://www.epals.com/
6th grade Social Studies
Hello, I would love to match my students with yours. I have 21 students. how many students do you have? If you do not have this many, this is not a problem. I can contact other students of other countries. I teach Social Studies at Heritage Christian School in Indianapolis Indiana, USA. If you would like to set up pen mails with my students, i would love it. If you have access to the internet, we can even email letters which would be even more fun. I know my students would enjoy this opportunity to learn more about your country and culture! I look forward to your response! Blessings, Jennifer