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Blended Learning Resources


A series of college-level math lessons, tutorials and drills developed by the math department at Temple University. Despite the name, it covers not only calculus, but also some algebra, number theory, and pre-calculus. Students can set up a free account to record their own progress, and there is a basic Reporting function which can, if set up, allow instructors to monitor progress.


A neat little series of applied math tutorials. These are aimed mostly at a developmental math level. Instructors cannot track student progress, however.

Concord Consortium is a STEM educational research and development organization based in Massachusetts. The site has links to research on education involving many different types of technology from iPads to probes, as well as open-source interactive simulations that they have developed and Molecular Workbench, open-source interactive software that allows you to create your own simulations.

Aims to be a clearinghouse for digital materials in science and math. Differs from many other sites in that it catalogs materials a number of different ways: subject matter, educational level, anticipated use of material (i.e., review). As an example, they have concept maps that illustrate interaction between scientific concepts and list material in library related to each concept.

This website contains interactive applets that display graphs of statistical concepts (distribution, regression, etc.) that update automatically as users reset the values for different variables. One nice feature -- a ghost of the preceding graph is displayed every time a new graph is created allowing students to directly compare two states.

Contains several applets that can be used to illustrate science and math concepts: Moving Man applet (motion, slope of a line, derivatives, etc.); two water flow applets; and two current flow applets.

This resource provides both random data generators and a variety of automatically-generating models for presenting and examining the data it generates.