Transcript Document
th 7 Grade Research Paper Everything you need to know to make your life easier! Let’s Check Out Some Web Sites: • • • • • • http://allaboutexplorers.com/ http://konstantkitten.com/index.html http://zapatopi.net/treeoctopus/ http://dhmo.org/ http://www.sudftw.com/jackcon.htm http://zapatopi.net/afdb/ 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 2 Evaluating Web Sites • Watch the first video. • Read the poster. How can I verify a Web sites information? • • • • http://snopes.com/ http://scholar.google.com/ http://urbanlegends.about.com/ http://whois.domaintools.com/ 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 4 Helpful things about Web sites: • Ctrl + F – Find feature • Allows you to type in the find box and the Web browser will search for that word. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 5 Helpful things about Web sites: • Every Web site has a unique address, or uniform resource locator (URL), that includes a top-level domain that identifies the type of site. Uniform resource locater (URL): The address of a Web site, including “http://,” the domain name, top-level domain and the subpage name. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 6 How can I evaluate a Web site? THE FIVE W’S OF WEB SITE EVALUATION • Who wrote the pages and are they an expert? • Is a biography of the author included? • How can I find out more about the author? How can I evaluate a Web site? • What does the author say is the purpose of the site? • What else might the author have in mind for the site? • What makes the site easy to use? • What information is included and does this information differ from other sites? How can I evaluate a Web site? • When was the site created? • When was the site last updated? How can I evaluate a Web site? • Where does the information come from? • Where can I look to find out more about the sponsor of the site? How can I evaluate a Web site? • Why is this information useful for my purpose? • Why should I use this information? • Why is this page better than another? CARRDSS • A method for evaluating Web sites • What does CARRDSS stand for? – Credibility – Accuracy – Reliability – Relevance – Date – Sources – Scope Let’s Practice! • The following activities are taken from the Web site CARRDSS Website Evaluation. CARRDSS CREDIBILITY : Who is the author? What are his or her credentials? CARRDSS • Go to the Cyberbullying Research Center • Find two pieced of evidence that show how credible the people who add the information are. CARRDSS ACCURACY: Can facts, statistics, or other information be verified through other sources? Based on your knowledge, does the information seem accurate? CARRDSS • Go to Choose Responsibility. • Mothers Against Drunk Driving cites research on their website that says that an estimated 25,000 lives have been saved by raising the Minimum Legal Drinking Age to 21 in the United States. • Open the site above and skim the page to find the section that addresses this statistic. • Write down at least one reason that one of the sites gives to dispute this idea. Do you find the argument convincing? Why or why not? • Hint: Use the Ctrl and F keys together to get a search box for finding the word traffic on the page. CARRDSS RELIABILITY: Does the source present a particular view or bias? CARRDSS • Take a look at these three sites to see the difference in point of view and purpose: Site #1 (sell: a site from the beef industry) Site #2 (inform: a site from Harvard School of Public Health) Site #3 (persuade: a site from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) You can detect bias in a site by paying to attention to: – strong/emotional language – missing information – misrepresenting other people's points of view CARRDSS RELEVANCE: Does this information directly support my hypothesis/thesis or help to answer my question? CARRDSS • Does this Web site below answer the question: Should we lower the minimum legal drinking age to under 21? – Alcohol Problems and Solutions • Does this site have answers to your question? CARRDSS DATE: When was this information created? When was it revised? Are these dates meaningful in terms of the subject matter? CARRDSS • When was this information last updated in this identity theft Web site? • Privacy Rights Clearinghouse CARRDSS SOURCES BEHIND THE TEXT: Did the author use reliable, credible sources? CARRDSS • Where did this Web site get its information from about over population? • Let’s look up these sources. Do you still trust them? CARRDSS SCOPE: Does this source address my hypothesis/thesis/question in a comprehensive or peripheral way? Is it a scholarly or popular treatment? CARRDSS • Who is the audience for each site below? • Pick one of the sites and briefly explain what audience the Web site was designed for. • Example 1 • Example 2 • Example 3 Bare Bones 101 A Basic Tutorial on Searching the Web Web Address • http://www.sc.edu/beaufort/ library/pages/bones/bones.sh tml What are Search Engines? • Search engines are huge databases of Web page files that have been assembled automatically by machine. (From Bare Bones 101.) • Merriam-Webster Online dictionary defines search engine as: – computer software used to search data (as text or a database) for specified information How do Search Engines Work? • “Spiders” or “Robots (bots)” crawl the Web to find your information. • Web masters must tell the search engine what their Webpage contains or the “spiders” will not find their page. • Search engines do not search the Web as it currently exists and only searches part of the Web. Pros of Search Engines • You can get a large number of public pages available on the Web. • Currently the best way to conduct a search. Cons of Search Engines • You get too many hits! – What you are searching for could be: • The only time that word is in the document or Webpage. • Some engines read the Webpage’s URL (address.) • Some engines will look at the html codes! – What is html???? Are Search Engines all the Same? • Yes – They all use software. • No, they find information in different ways. – The amount of places they look for information from. – The speed at which they look for information. – They have different search options. Are Search Engines all the Same? – How they rank the WebPages you are searching for relevancy to the topic. They follow different rules. • Some search for the location and number of times your topic is in the document. • Check the headings and text near the top of the document. • How many times a link is clicked on. • How many other Websites link to a Webpage. Search Engines are Good for: • Finding unique words, phrases or quotes. • Getting lots of hits. • Showing a wide range of responses to your search. Let’s see just how many hits we can get! • Open up Internet Explorer. – Search for bing and open it. • Key: cat in the search box. – How many hits do you get? – Where is the search box now? Next……. • Let’s try Google. • Key in cat in the search box. – How many hits? Next….. • Click in the URL line, the address line. – Key in yahoo.com – In the search box, type in cat again. • How many hits this time? Conducting Good Internet Searches • Internet Search with Tim and Moby 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 42 Conducting Good Internet Searches • Boolean search (pronounced BOO-lee-an): A search that uses keywords plus special symbols to find the exact information you want by eliminating search results that are too general or too broad. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 43 Conducting Good Internet Searches To Find Web Pages With… Operator(s) Examples An exact phrase Quotation marks “apple trees” “giant redwoods” Two or more keywords • AND & •+ • a space One or both keywords • OR •^ One keyword but not the other 7/16/2015 • NOT •– copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved • dolphins AND whales • dolphins + whales • dolphins & whales • dolphins whales • novels OR poems • novels ^ poems • sports NOT football • sports –football 44 Conducting Good Internet Searches • Another option is to use the Advanced Search options in your Web browser. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 45 Conducting Good Internet Searches • Or, like bing, try these: 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 46 But be sure to know…. Practice your searching skills! • Go to BrainPop – Username: seitz – Password: pirates • Search for Internet Search – Click on the link for Internet Search • On the right, click on the button for GameUp What is a Gateway? Bare Bones 101 Website Address http://www.sc.edu/beaufort/library/p ages/bones/lesson4.shtml What is a Gateway? • There are two different kinds: – Library gateways. – Portals . • Library gateways are collections of databases and informational sites, arranged by subject, that have been put together, reviewed and recommended by specialists. These specialists are usually librarians. What is a Gateway? • Gateway collections support research you need to do by finding and linking to recommended, academically-oriented pages on the Web. What is a Subject Specific Database? • They are also called votrals (vertical portals.) • They are only on one topic. • Created by college instructors, researchers, experts, government agencies, businesses, or someone who is really, really interested in the subject. When should I use a Library Gateway or Subject-specific Database? • If you need high quality information Websites. • If you are looking for: – News links. – Multimedia files. – Archives. – Mailing lists. – People. – Job finders. Examples of Library Gateways: • http://www.loc.gov/z3950/gateway.html#lc • http://lii.org/ • http://www.digital-librarian.com/ Examples of Subject-specific Databases (Vortals) • http://www.kbb.com/ • http://www.rcdb.com/ • http://us.imdb.com/ Meta Search Engines • Searches many search engines for you! • http://metasearch.com/ • http://www.dogpile.com/info.dogpl/search/h ome • http://www.mamma.com/ • http://www.search.com/search?q=cat 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 57 Search Engines for Kids 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 58 Other Resources • World Book Online: http://www.worldbookonline.com/ • Michigan Electronic Library (Mel): http://mel.org/index.php?P=SPT-BrowseResourcesKids&ParentId=843 – If you cannot access articles, you will need someone with a driver’s license or MI ID to log in. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 59 Citations • What is a citation? • What is plagiarism? • How do we prevent plagiarizing someone else’s work? Make a citation! 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 60 Citations • Web sites to make citations: – http://citationmachine.net/index2.php – http://secondary.oslis.org/cite-sources/mlasecondary-citation 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 61 Citations • Where do I find the Web site publisher or sponsor? – Go to the very bottom of the Web page. If there is a different name from the Web site or who you would know owns the Web site, fill it in in the citation maker. – Sometimes you need to go to the home page. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 62 Citations • Where do I find the date posted/published? – Again, go to the bottom of the Web page. – Sometimes you need to go to the home page. 7/16/2015 copyright www.brainybetty.com 2006 All Rights Reserved 63