As I sit in my blue, fuzzy Snuggie (yes, I have one, don't judge...) listening to pre-Thanksgiving Christmas music on Pandora.com, I scan the internet for no reason at all as many of us do. I type in "Thought Bubble," because I once saw a comicbook writer list the names for the random symbols inside thought bubbles, and this delightful little website collection graces my monitor's screen like Santa's sleigh (too early? I don't care! I'm a Christmas-a-holic!). How cute! It kind of makes me want to be a science teacher...ok, for a second.
Then I'm poking around with my little mouse arrow and go to the home page. Likely being a future teacher, I find this website absolutely intriguing. Jerrie Cheek gets an idea for Educational hotlists, eh? Wouldn't the world be a better place if we could all have our own little educational hotlists with resources listing web-based learning under all our interests? "Mark Twain Hotlist: Click for all the other pseudonyms Samuel Clemens considered. Click to compare and contrast Twain with Seuss and Poe. Click for a free viewing of Big River. Click to figure out the circumference of Mark Twain's head from the dimensions of his skull!" Once again, the curse of the English major: too many ideas, too little time.
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