(Flashback to a phone call from a hematologist at a children's hospital...he had just sat down in a conference space with a very distressed mom and dad of a sick child when his elbow bumped a mouse, killed the screensaver, and revealed a browser displaying a pic of a very naked man and woman doing the nasty.... It wasn't a pleasant day, but the episode did bolster my budget request for filtering...)
tanstaafl: What would be an easy, not highly technical method of doing this?
Not sure that there's a solution that is as non-technical as could be desired, but....
Bitt: I mean, what happens when someone comes into the room and tells the chaperone that they need him right now. Is he going to stop and turn the internet off first?
On a very machanistic basis, if they were using something like a Netgear/Linksys router, I'd put it in a locked cabinet handy to the classroom door with a barrel-key power switch on the outside of the cabinet. Teacher keeps key on keyring, turns off on way out, back on when returning.
If the existing Win2K base dictates choices, then Tony's suggestion re: Proxy Server add-ins could be the route, but might cost some money depending on hat they already own, software-wise.
I run Squid+Privoxy and that combination would make for a much more tailorable solution for the long haul, but I don't know that it qualifies for the "easy" award. There is a version of Squid out there somewhere compiled for Windows, FWIW, but that doesn't automatically remove complexity.
If he was interested in exploring his options a bit more and had an old, spare computer, it would not take much longer than a few hours to install Linux/BSD with Squid and check it out. Of note, I read
this story in the last Linux Journal that is pretty relevant to his situation. It mentions a program called "Dan's Guardian" that looks like a freeware Squid add-in.
If complexity is really an obstacle, I'd probably go with the cabinet and locked power switch approach!