Numen is a very, very handy electronic Latin word-study tool and dictionary. And as an added plus, it is completely work-safe. I would say any student who is capable of working an internet browser with a degree of competence is capable of using it. This, unsurprisingly, will be quite helpful to Latin students, although I would prefer to 'hide' it until students reach Latin III (as the dictionary will not only give you the word's definition, the principle parts, it also gives textual citations for where the word is found and has an option to show every single form...which is something Latin I's and II's do not need to see so soon). You can enter up to 50,000 words into the word study tool at a time, which will then give you the definitions and parts. It also features a handy little English -> Latin tool, which only allows one word at a time, but does give a multiplicity of definitions for your word you want to see in Latin. For those who miss how things used to be, there is an 'old-style,' browse-by-letter dictionary function as well.
It has an option to create an account (which is free), and upon registering, you can create decks of electronic flash cards with words you've looked up to drill yourself with. This, unsurprisingly, is very handy.
The site is not very commercial at all, with no advertisements that I noticed. On the whole, the site is quite easy to navigate, but it has been rather unresponsive at times recently (possibly linked to server issues, or just my ISP being distinctly unhelpful).
I would say there is no adult supervision needed, beyond monitoring students to keep them from typing dirty words into the English -> Latin tool and learning some words that they don't need to know.
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