I represent lots of students who have difficulties with things like slang and parents who need a ready reference on history and other academic topics. The following post comes to me from Fiona King with references that you might not find any where else. Some of the references are strange and some just funny like translating a whole website into Elmer Fudd speak. . The author Laura Milligan states:
"Beyond Google, Wikipedia and other generic reference sites, the Internet boasts a multitude of search engines, dictionaries, reference desks and databases that have organized and archived information for quick and easy searches. In this list, we’ve compiled just 100 of our favorites, for teachers, students, hypochondriacs, procrastinators, bookworms, sports nuts and more."
Some of these may be just the ticket as you are looking to develop goals and and helping your student understand the differences between the first and second Punic Wars.
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