BHS Faculty Picks
Here are the website picks that you were all (and at this point by "all" I mean Claire-Marie) kind enough to send me. If you are awash with guilt at reading this, and wish to email me your list, I will be happy to post them here.
CLAIRE-MARIE HART'S SITES
International Congress on Medieval Studies
Alibris - a great place for new used and out-of-print books.
Renaissance Dante in Print - Notre Dame, University of Chicago and The Newberry Library joined forces to create this collection.
College Board Information for Educators
DAN KELLEHER'S PICKS
Mount Holyoke College's International Relations Pages are excellent.
JANE COHEN
(in addition to the Rutgers page in the literary criticism section)
Community Learning Network - "A site designed to help K-12 teachers integrate technology into the classroom. Here you’ll find over 5,800 annotated links to educational sites with free resources, all organized by theme pages and keyword search."
Mr. William Shakespeare and the Internet - A comprehensive annotated guide to the scholarly Shakespeare resources available on Internet from Terry Gray of Palomar College.
Harvard Chaucer Page - This site provides materials for Harvard University's Chaucer classes in the Core Program, the English Department, and the Division of Continuing Education. (Others of course are welcome to use it.) It provides a wide range of glossed Middle English texts and translations of analogues relevant to Chaucer's works, as well as selections from relevant works by earlier and later writers, critical articles from a variety of perspectives, graphics, and general information on life in the Middle Ages. At the moment the site concentrates on the Canterbury Tales, but the longer-term goal is to create a more general Chaucer page.

