Kid-Friendly Government Sites
A selected electronic bibliography
Compiled by the Wirtz Labor Library Staff
(www.dol.gov/oasam/library)
U.S. Department
of Labor
NGA Kids (National Gallery of
Arts)
(www.nga.gov/kids/kids.htm)
The site has interactive art adventures, an animated musical
adventure about Lizzy and Gordon visiting the Sculpture Garden, a section on
Jarama II that includes a guessing game, and a section on Saint George and the
Dragon by Rogier van der Weyden.
Smithsonian Institute Kid's Castle
(National Gallery of Arts)
(www.kidscastle.si.edu/)
The Arts is one of eight sections in the clubhouse. In the arts room,
you can find information and activities in the fine arts, including music,
writing, and art itself. (other sections of the site are: science, animals,
personalities, sports, worldwide, history, and air and space)
America's Story (Library of
Congress)
(http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi)
This site allows kids to discover the stories of America's past. Meet
Jane Addams, Buffalo Bill Cody, Duke Ellington, Harry Houdini and many more
amazing Americans. Take a trip to an era in American history. Explore the
states. Play games. Discover America's favorite pastimes, sports and hobbies!
Watch a movie, hear a song, play a tune from America's past.
Student Links from the Department of
Education
(www.ed.gov/free/kids.html)
Loads of links for students in the following subject areas: Arts,
educational technology, foreign languages, health and safety, language arts,
mathematics, physical education science, social studies, and vocational
education.
Mega-Mathematics
(www.c3.lanl.gov/mega-math/)
From Los Alamos National Lab, here you'll find the Infinity Hotel,
games on graphs, the most colorful math of all, machines that eat your words,
etc.
EIA Kid's Page
(www.eia.doe.gov/kids/)
Energy Ant is your host on this site from the Energy Information
Administration that has information about both renewable and non-renewable
energy sources. Kid's Corner has "Greek Mythology and the Forms of Energy", a
unit of measurement conversion chart, and energy pioneers.
Kids Corner Endangered Species
(endangered.fws.gov/kids/index.html)
On this site, kids can play the "Risky Critters" game, access a
crossword puzzle, and find Creature Features! & Wildlife Fact Sheets.
Recycle City
(www.epa.gov/recyclecity/)
Play the Dumptown game. See how the people of Dumptown turned their
town around. Find out how Recycle City reduces waste. Learn where all the
garbage goes.
USDA for Kids
(www.usda.gov/news/usdakids/)
This is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's portal to all sorts of
kid information. Smoky the Bear and Woodsy Owl are here, as are S.K. Worm, the
Beagle Brigade, RUS the surfin' squirrel, and Thermy.
U.S. EPA's Explorers' Club
(http://www.epa.gov/kids/)
In the Clubhouse Science Room, you'll find "Darby Duck and the
Aquatic Crusader" and "On the Trail of the Missing Ozone". In the Art Room,
visit with the many animals in Charlie Chipmunk's forest home. There are also
Earth Day and Planet Protectors activities and coloring books. In the Game
Room, there are activities like Detective Training, Environmental Science
Center Games, and The Environauts Mission to Earth.
NationalGeographic.com Kids
(www.nationalgeographic.com/kids/)
This site is loaded with things for kids, like the NG Kids
Magazine and NG Explorer Classroom Magazine. There are games,
activities and experiments, creature features, a cartoon factory, the GeoBee
Challenge, homework help, a book club, maps, and a print 'n' go coloring
book.
Peace Corps Kids World
(www.peacecorps.gov/kids/)
On this site, kids can help the site's guide, Traveler, get ready for
the Peace Corps with the "Pack Your Bags" game. The site includes folk tales
and information on other countries and cultures (food, holidays, schools, a
typical day, etc.).
United Nations CyberSchoolBus
(www.un.org/cyberschoolbus/index.html)
This United Nations site has a water quiz and the flag tag game.
There is information about how the U.N. works and about the member nations.
Kids can find out about the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. and the model U.N.
program. There is also a galley of kids drawings about peace.
www.kids.gov for Kids
(www.kids.gov/)
This is the U.S. government's interagency Kids Portal. Developed and
maintained by the Federal Consumer Information Center, the site provides links
to federal kids' sites and some of the best kids' sites from other
organizations all grouped by subject.
Kids in the House
(clerkkids.house.gov/)
This is the Office of the U.S. House of Representatives Clerk's Web
site for children. Here kids can explore the role that the Office of the Clerk
plays in the U.S. House of Representatives. Learn about the legislative process
and its effect. Fun stuff includes build-a-bill, capitol trivia, coloring
pages, tic tac toe, and seek-a-word.
Kids Next Door (Dept. of Housing and
Urban Development)
(www.hud.gov/kids/index.html)
Learn about being a good citizen. Take field trips to places in the
community. Learn about community workers and about the homeless in our
communities. Go on a scavenger hunt, or try to catch the Community Scrambler.
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Kids Pages
(www.uspto.gov/go/kids/)
Play games like the Towers of Hanoi and the Gold Mine, and work
mazes, picture puzzles, and word searches. Check out the patent time machine to
see what was invented when. Visit the idea hatchery.
www.whitehouse.gov/kids/
(www.whitehouse.gov/kids/)
Four friends help kids tour this site. Spotty leads a tour of the
White House. Barney has the White House ABC's. India has group of history
quizzes for kids. Ofelia introduces kids to the American Dream Team of baseball
players and other athletes, patriots, teachers, and authors. The site also
provides links to information about President and Mrs. Bush and Vice President
and Mrs. Cheney. Kids can meet the White House pets Jackson and Dave.
National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences Kids' Pages
(www.niehs.nih.gov/kids/home.htm)
This site is loaded with fun things for kids to do, including
brainteasers, jokes, puzzles, story time, name that tune, coloring pages, and
links to all sorts of kid-friendly science pages.
Garfield Star Sleeper
(http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/sleep/starslp/)
Garfield a Star Sleeper has teamed up with the National
Center on Sleep Disorders Research to tell about sleep and how getting enough
sleep at night helps you to do your best during the day. The site has games and
a Star Sleeper contest.
GirlPower
(http://www.girlpower.gov/)
From the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the site was
designed to help encourage and motivate 9- to 14- year-old girls to make the
most of their lives. The GirlPower locker has sections for making your own web
page, games and puzzles, body wise, books for girls, etc.
healthfinder for kids
(www.healthfinder.gov/kids/)
Cool and uncool stuff about health, like alcohol and other drugs,
environmental health, exercise, and feelings. There are games like Bash the
Toxic Waste Bugs! and Feed the Worms. There are also art contests like the
Refrigerator Art Contest.
CIA's Homepage for Kids
(www.odci.gov/cia/ciakids/index.html)
The site has a wide variety of activities, from a Electronic Bibliography of the
CIA, information about items from the CIA Museum and the SPY-FI Archives (40
Years of TV and Movie Spy Fiction). There are code breaking and disguise
activities and a geography quiz, as well as information about the CIA Canine
Corps.
FBI Kids Pages
Air Force Jr.
(www.af.mil/aflinkjr/home.htm)
The site includes information about the NavStar satellite, a game
room with puzzles and word searches, a math adventure, and the story of the Air
Force.
Maritime Administration Especially for kids
and teens
(www.marad.dot.gov/kids/index.html)
This site has a video theater, a 3D photo gallery, a Smithsonian
presentation of FDR talking about the role of the American merchant marine and
shipbuilding industry during World War II, information about the Adopt-A-Ship
program in which each ship involved is adopted by a classroom and the class and
the ship's crew correspond and share experiences. There are links to sites
about fascinating historic vessels, including the World War II Liberty and
Victory ships still sailing today.
U.S. Coast Guard Kids Corner
(www.uscg.mil/hq/g-cp/kids/kidindx.html)
Although under development, the site has "Boat Safe with Coastie",
coloring books, and information on lighthouses, lightships, shipwrecks and
more.
H.I.P. Pocket Changes (U.S. Mint)
(www.usmint.gov/kids/)
From the U.S. Mint, this site has cartoons,
games, a time machine, Camp Coin, and other information about coins.
Money Central Station (Dept. of
Treasury)
(www.bep.treas.gov/kids/start.html)
An interactive site with games broken into two age groups. Bucky's
Fair is for ages 5-8 and has games like "Whack a Buck" and " Funny Money". The
Treasure Dome, for ages 9-13, has games like "Alien-A-Buck-tion" and "Treasury
Planet".
FDA's Kids Home Page
(www.fda.gov/oc/opacom/kids/default.htm)
An interactive site where kids can help Mac & Molly inspect a
food warehouse, solve a sliding pet puzzle, and take a food safety quiz. There
is also a teen section with links to information and a "cosmetics" quiz. The
parent's section has FDA Consumer Articles.
FEMA for Kids
(www.fema.gov/kids/)
The site is hosted by Herman, the spokescrab. Kids will learn how to
be prepared for disasters and how to prevent disaster damage. They can also
learn what causes disasters, play games, read stories and become a Disaster
Action Kid. A story about Herman's search for a disaster-proof shell is also
available.
MSHA's Kids Page (Mine Safety and Health
Administration)
(www.msha.gov/kids/kidshp.htm)
This site allows kids to do some virtual prospecting, find out about
the coal miner's canary, and even explore the quantity of minerals each new
born baby will use in its lifetime.
United States Fire Administration Kid's
Page
(www.usfa.fema.gov/kids/)
This site has a quiz that let's kids become a junior fire marshall.
There are online games about fire safety and Hydro's Hazard House game.
Dr. E's Energy Lab(Dept. of Energy)
(www.eren.doe.gov/kids/)
From D.O.E.'s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, the
site has activities, quizzes, and information about general, geothermal, solar,
and wind energy and alternate fuels. The site also provides energy efficiency
tips.
Kids' Science Page (National
Agricultural Library)
(www.nal.usda.gov/kids/)
On this site, kids can check their nutrition IQ, find out about
animals, insects, and veterinary medicine. There is also information on plants
or ecology and chemistry, all part of the food and agricultural sciences.
NASAKids
(kids.msfc.nasa.gov/)
In addition to NASA News and News by NASA kids (such as an interview
with Sally Ride), the site has lots of interactive pieces. There are projects
and games, NASA "toons", and sections on rockets and airplanes, astronauts
living in space, creation station, and our earth.
StarChild
(starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/StarChild.html)
This site is a learning center for young astronomers. It provides
information and activities on the solar system, the universe, and biographies
of Albert Einstein and Sir Isaac Newton. There is a companion site, Imagine the
Universe, for teens at (imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/homepage.html)
Transportation Wonderland (Dept. of Transportaion)
(education.dot.gov/k5/gamk5.htm)
On this page from the Department of Transportation, kids can explore
how things are transported. Sections include transportation super heroes and
activities at the bus station, marina, and train depot. The site also has a
truck stop, a rest stop, and a garage with more information and activities.
Vince & Larry's Safety City
(www.nhtsa.dot.gov/kids/)
From the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the site has
lots of things for kids to explore--a bike trail leads to information about
bike safety. The research lab talks about crash testing and seat belts. There
is information about school bus safety and emergency medical services. The art
gallery has coloring pages.