1) Nanozone.org
A button for museum professionals takes you to pdfs of reports of their front end study, exhibit catalog, lessons learned, and the summative report they conducted in conjunction with the exhibition. Not only does this help to validate the information presented, it is a great resource for other museum professionals who can use this to guide an evaluation project they are working on. And if time and budget is too tight, this assembled data can be extroplotated for use at a similar institution.
They also had pre- and post-visit lesson plans for teachers; however the pages didn't load, making them not quite as useful and they were intended to be.
I only tried a few games and they were very educational - yet not exactly thrilling. I didn't bother to find out which sick cow was producing the green milk, sorry Farmer John. I did like that they included pictures and interviews with scientists that work on this technology, as it is always cool to meet real people beyond the science. However, there was no sound to the site - it was literally a scary (to me, kids might think it looked funny) talking head reading the written interview that popped up.
2) lawrencehallofscience.org/kids
Wow, a lot of choices - but I don't like the layout, it seems overwhelming. I have to learn about paleontology for another class, so I went to FossWeb. As I know nothing about this subject, I went to the age old default of "talk to me like a two year old" and opted for the k-2 section of the FossWeb.
They had some interesting sections.
"Who lives here" is a matching game that focuses on the animals that live on/near a particular tree. Always a sucker for matching games, it was fun. The photo gallery includes pictures of different trees and then a sample of the wood that comes from that tree, interesting enough, but no interactive component to help you remember which wood is linked to which tree. Ask a scientist, again, a nice inclusion of real life jobs, but only written answers and definitely way above any K-2 year olds head/interest level. And in the movies section - there were no movies listed - that is totally lame - I don't think you should have any links that don't lead anywhere.
3) Virtual Museum of Canada
This had a promising component - create your personal museum, but only if you log in. I hate having to log in. I have more user names and passwords than one could possibly remember.
4) ology.amnh.org/paleontology
Again, exhibits class has been on my mind lately as I desparately look to find simple, easy to digest information about paleontology - and this is a great website for that purpose. I took the "What do you know" quiz and didn't do so well - obviously I need to spend more time on this website. This website is packed with information and tons for photographs, games, and collecting cards. It is pretty layered and does take time to get through - you would really have to be interested in paleontology to go all the way through the pages (or you would need to learn the information for class and therefore want to plow all the way through the pages). I wonder who this is designed for. It is a lot of information (almost too much information) for a general web-goer and yet it might be broken into too simple chunks for someone who has knowledge about the area. For me, it works.