The Rings, Please...
Jun 8, 1999 -
© Arden Davidson
One of the best ways I've found to search for unique, quality sites is through webrings. Webrings are kind of a like a discount store - you have to pick through a lot bad stuff, but you can find some real gems. In case your not familiar with webrings, the officicial definition is: WebRing is the largest, first and fastest-growing service of its kind on the Internet, providing one of the easiest ways for visitors to navigate the Web. There are webrings for children, parents, writers, literature - plus just about any other subject you can think of. There are tens of thousands of rings linking webpages of similar content together. And since, I've spent a substantial amount of time surfing through them, joining them and reading about them, I thought I'd save you the trouble and point you to some of the better webrings regarding my topic. "The Ring of Young Authors" at http://nav.webring.com/cgi-bin/navcgi?ri... connects the original poems and stories of kids and teens around the world. "A Children's Literature Gathering" at http://nav.webring.com/cgi-bin/navcgi?ri... is a collection of family friendly web sites devoted to stories and books for young people. Their target audience is adults with a fondness and appreciation for children's books both past and present, and children, for whom the stories were written in the first place. "Moms With Modems" at http://nav.webring.com/cgi-bin/navcgi?ri... is the first and largest Ring of Mom's on the net. "KidsLink Choice" at http://nav.webring.com/cgi-bin/navcgi?ri... is a ring of Quality...NOT Quantity. (They have 27 members at present). Their requirements include that all content must be educational and/or fun. Schools', organizations', businesses' and personal homepages are all welcome. Each webring is started and maintained by an individual website owner. For more information on how you can became the owner of your own webring, or to search through other webrings, visit the homepage at http://www.webring.org Happy surfing!
The copyright of the article The Rings, Please... in Children's Poetry is owned by Arden Davidson. Permission to republish The Rings, Please... in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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