I have a huge backlog of resources that I’ve been planning to post about in this blog but, just because of time constraints, have not gotten around to doing. Instead of letting that backlog grow bigger, I regularly grab a few and list them here with a minimal description. It forces me to look through these older links, and help me organize them for my own use. I hope others will find them helpful, too. These are resources that I didn’t include in my “Best Tweets” feature because I had planned to post about them, or because I didn’t even get around to sending a tweet sharing them.

Here are This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”:

ESL Flow seems to have a good number of useful reproducibles. I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Free ESL/EFL Hand-Outs & Worksheets.

Conflict History is a pretty neat interactive showing all (or most) violent recorded conflicts in world history.

The Complete Facebook For Educators! comes from Tech The Plunge. I’m adding it to A Beginning List Of The Best Resources For Learning About Facebook.

Dadaab: city of refugees – interactive is from The Guardian. I’m adding it to The Best Web Resources About Somalia’s Drought & Famine.

Creating Infographics with Students
is from Langwitches. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Creating Infographics.

The Daring Librarian: Wikipedia is not wicked! is a useful post at The Washington Post.

Here are some other regular features I post in this blog:

“The Best…” series (which now number 691)

Best Tweets of The Month

The most popular posts on this blog each month

My monthly choices for the best posts on this blog each month

Each month I do an “Interview Of The Month” with a leader in education

Periodically, I post “A Look Back” highlighting older posts that I think are particularly useful

The ESL/EFL/ELL Blog Carnival

Resources that share various “most popular” lists useful to teachers

Interviews with ESL/EFL teachers in “hot spots” around the world.

Articles I’ve written for other publications.

Photo Galleries Of The Week

Research Studies Of The Week

Regular “round-ups” of good posts and articles about school reform