Transcript Slide 1
Perspectives on search:
Making the implicit explicit
Sharpening our skills:
› Deep web niche engines
› The social web
Search literacy lesson plans
Search derby
Raising the bar in web evaluation
Free digital collections
Future directions
Searcher
Evaluation
Resources
Principles
Context
Searcher
Evaluation
Principles
USER
Resources
Context
Most
searches are….
› Done by a unique searcher
› Done in a unique context
› Done for an information need unique
to the user
Search Strategy
› Overall plan to achieve your goal
Search Tactics
› Specific actions taken as you follow the
strategy
Know (or learn) the parameters and
capabilities of the resource.
›
›
›
›
›
What? Type of information or format
Who? Creator(s)
When? Recency or coverage dates
How? Can it be searched?
Why? Key factors for its credibility
Know (or discover) the most effective
search term(s) for the resource you are
using
Know (or learn) the user’s specific needs
Deep Web Niche Engines
(aka Verticals)
Social Web Resources
The Reference Desk
› www.martindalecenter.com
Health Sciences Guide
› www.martindalecenter.com/HSGuide.html
Calculators On-Line
› www.martindalecenter.com/Calculators.html
Extensive collection of deep web
resources of high quality
37 broad categories
Frequent updates
Maintained by Jim Martindale
Began in 1994 as project at UC-Irvine
Gateway to over 500 niche engines and
directories
18 broad categories
New listings in most categories
Created and maintained by Internet Oracle
of Littletown, New Hampshire, an enterprise
search company
E-mail & Reverse Look-up (17)
Video & Image (13)
Women’s Resources (19)
Reference & Research
› Biographies (30)
› Dictionaries & Encyclopedias (60)
› Glossaries & Acronyms (24)
› Homework Helpers (25)
› Thesauri & Quotations (28)
People you don’t know
› Wikipedia
› Human-created databases, directories
“I need a few good sites on solar energy”
Mahalo, Ipl2.org
› Q&A Services
“How do I repair my garage door opener?”
Yahoo Answers, Answers.com, Mahalo
Answers
People you follow
› Twitter-human created Tweets
“What’s the buzz on Beyonce?”
People you know
› Post a question to friends and family
“What type of Mac should I buy?”
› Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, Bing (login via
Facebook)
Access to unfiltered, real-time perspective
on what people are thinking and doing
Authority (and usefulness) of a tweet
depends on
› Who sent it
› The number and “authority” of their followers
› When it was sent
› Documents/sites it refers to
Public responses/attitudes
› Trending topics and people
› Political candidates and issues
› Companies and products
› Colleges and universities
Locate individuals and their networks
› Who they follow
› Who follows them
Monitor collaborations
Twitter.com
› Requires a (free) account
› Only the latest 2 weeks available
› Searchable by hashtag (#)
Author-designated keyword or significant
term or phrase
#rochester
#jobs
#marketing
Search.twitter.com
› No account required
› Only the latest 2 weeks available
› Advanced search features
Booleans
Hashtag
Language limit
Author search (tweets from or to)
“Near this place”
Attitude – positive, negative, question
Twitter Venn
www.neoformix.com/Projects/TwitterVenn/view.php
Venn diagrams illustrating the rate of tweets
containing specific terms
Twitter StreamGraph
www.neoformix.com/Projects/TwitterStreamGraphs/
view.php
Words most highly associated with a specified
term
Limited to the latest 1,000 tweets containing that
term
google.com/insidesearch/searcheducation
/lessons.html
Part of Google’s search education initiative
5 main topics with beginner, intermediate
and advanced levels
› Picking the right search terms
› Understanding search results
› Narrowing a search to get the best results
› Searching for evidence for research tasks
› Evaluating credibility of sources
Focus is using Google, but adaptable to
other sources
Each plan lists Common Core Standards
addressed
Include illustrative slides and suggested
assessments of student work
“A Google-a-day challenge” questions
with answers
Good strategies for deep web searching
in Advanced Level of Lesson #1
Where we are and how we got here
Checklists: what they do and don’t do
Raising the bar beyond the basics
Using the Social Web in evaluation
Active learning applications
Transfer protocol/Domain name/Directory &
subdirectory/File name
TP- hpertext
https-(http secure) Encrypts all traffic to
and from that site
Domain name
Name unique to the server where the site
is located. Includes domain type and
country if outside the US.
Directory
Specific “folder” on the server where this
file is found
File name
Actual name and information about the
file
› Markup language used: html, htm, php
› Dynamic content: shtml, asp
› Format: pdf, docx, jpg, mpeg, mp3
Pro
› Structured approach to a complex process
› Useful reminders of what to look for
Con
› Many focus on potential flaws of a site rather
than its strengths
› One checklist does not “fit all” types of sites
› No substitute for critical investigation geared
to the specific site
› Time-consuming and impractical
Pushing
past superficial generalizations
to think critically and deeply about the
web site
Domain type is just the beginning of
critical evaluation and analysis
Effective evaluation may call for an
approach unique to that site
.com
Very high
› Articles from trusted magazines and other
news sources
› Archives of public media sites (BBC, NPR, etc.)
High
› Public-service organizations (many are .org)
› Academic scholarly articles
.com
Medium
›
›
›
›
Advocacy groups/special interest sites
News wires
Company-issued white papers
Company home pages
Low
› Personal pages
› Marketing/sales pages
› Bloggers I don’t know
.gov
Very high
› Federal statistics sites
› Recognized international organizations
High
› Federal government information
clearinghouses
› Governmental public service pages
.gov
Medium
› State/local public records information
› Departmental/agency home pages (may
be subject to political pressure)
› Embassies/consulates
.edu
High
› University administration pages
› Faculty home pages (publication links, syllabi)
› Library guides
› Research center findings and reports
Medium
› Graduate papers
Low
› Undergraduate papers
Currently unrestricted:
› .com
› .info
› .net
› .org
Currently require proof of eligibility
› .edu
› .gov
› .xxx
.coop
.int
.aero
.mil
.museum
.asia
Many social media services offer data on
the sites and topics their users are citing
Mining this data can be a measure of a
site’s influence and popularity
Wheeler, Emily and Samara Ormundson
“Evolution In Source Evaluation: Using
Social Media Data” FUMSI Jan. 5, 2010
Check for
› Self-reported web traffic data
› Number of comments (blog)
› Intended audience
› Audience profile
› Incoming links (link:URL in Google)
Description
Associated
Metrics
Reach
Readership or
subscriber base
Unique visitors per
month
Twitter followers
Buzz
Secondary readership
via social media
channels
Popularity metrics
Inbound blog links
Retweets
Engagement
Reader participation or Time spent on the site
dialogue with creators Number of comments or
or other readers
replies
Content
Relevance of source
content to topic
Frequency and depth of
relevant content
Audience
Reader groups
targeted or reached
by the site
Intended audience as
per content
Reader demographics
Alexa
› Alexa traffic rank
› Views
› Sites linking in
› Star ratings
› Time spent on site
Quantcast
› Traffic frequency
› Comments
› Audience
demographics
Technorati
› Authority
Twitter
› Followers
› Est. monthly US visitors
YouTube
› Following
TwitterCounter
› Twitter rank
› Predicted followers
in 30 days
Learning Goals
› Discern 4 key indicators of a website’s
credibility
› Understand the complexity of these indicators
by analyzing a given website and responding
to questions using a 5-point scale
› As a team, agree to a common answer for
each question
› As a team, articulate the rationales for these
answers to the entire class
http://tinyurl.com/refwhs2
Students work as individuals
Everyone sees responses and progress
Serves as springboard for discussion
Encourages participation throughout the
class
Adaptable to web evaluation
assignments
Hunter’s Picks:
http://hwshunter.weebly.com
Currently 1097 free, peer-reviewed books
27 international publishers
Companion site to Directory of Open
Access Journals (www.doaj.org) with
over 1231 scholarly and scientific journals
worldwide
Portfolio of free MIT courses offered through
an online learning platform
Features online laboratories and student-tostudent communication
Certificate of completion awarded by MIT
“for a modest fee”
MIT’s OpenCourseWare will continue
“Circuits and Electronics” March-June 2012
More courses in Fall of 2012
“Answer me” 48%
› Give me exactly what I ask for…
“Educate me” 26%
› Broad, contextual understanding, with
multiple perspectives
“Inspire me” 28%
› Fun, “browsy” search; Looking for surprises,
travel, etc.
How would you define “an expert”?
› 96% include “self-taught “allies with
experience and motivation
› 89% include the wisdom of crowds in
social or outside networks
› 87% include traditional credentialed
experts
Social networks as sources for information
and se ranking data
Facebook as e-commerce hub (stores
and companies’ fanpages)
Content packaged in video and audio
Mobile search apps
› May only search for one thing but it does that
very well
Development of niche engines for
different search modalities (Return of
vertical engines?)