
Transcript: My name is Katherine Puckett. I work in the eLearning office and I have been teaching for HindsCC for over 17 years. This video is all about online resources and how to find them! Students are probably Internet authorities. When it comes to Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube, you might know far more than I know. All of that time spent tweeting and chatting doesn’t necessarily translate to deep learning though. As students progress through school, online research skills become more important — for good reason. Both college professors and employers will expect young people to know their way around the academic side of the Internet. In a Pew survey, a majority of teachers said that their students lacked patience and determination when doing difficult research. A majority of teachers also said that their students didn’t know how to use multiple sources to support an argument. The good news is that you can learn basic skills to help you research successfully on the internet. I will also show you some good websites to help you with your community college endeavors! Here are some key skills you will need to successfully search the internet! Check your sources. Evaluating information found in your sources on the basis of accuracy, validity, appropriateness for needs, importance, and social and cultural context. Here are four questions to keep in mind: currency (Is the information up to date?), security (Does the site ask for too much personal information or prompt virus warnings?), scope (Is the information in-depth?), and authority (Does the information come from a trusted expert?). Ask Good questions: Developing and refining search queries to get better research results. Being specific can narrow your search to get the results you need. Keep this in mind, how can changing a few words, change your search results. Go beyond the surface: Be persistent by continuing to pursue information to gain a broad perspective. Don’t just limit yourself to one resource. Look up 10! Look at the actual URL address to see where you’re going before you click on a search engine result. Use some intuition to decide whether it seems reliable. Is it from a well known site? An educational or government institution? Is it a forum or opinion site? Look at the actual URL address to see where you’re going before you click on a search engine result. Use some intuition to decide whether it seems reliable. Is it from a well known site? An educational or government institution? Is it a forum or opinion site? Validity: Remember you cannot believe everything you read on the internet or see on TV. Make their own judgement by checking more than one source if you are not sure. Be on the lookout for click bait and fake news sites. Purpose: Be wary of websites that are cluttered with advertisements or might be trying to sell you something. Those are good spyware traps as well! Background: When reading articles, try to look for the author’s name and when the article was written. Is it recent or outdated? Respect Ownership: remember to cite sources and do not plagiarize. There are some really good online resources available to you: 1)Khan Academy: 2)Vocabulary.com 3)Grammarly 4)Hinds on line learning resources 5)online tutorials: Google, YouTube, Canvas Help Guides Let’s take a look at a few of these!
Research on the Internet - YouTube |
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| Education | Upload TimePublished on 1 Jun 2017 |
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\u200fسورة الكهف
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\u200fhttps //ios.snapp.ir
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\u200fطيور الجنة
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\u200fسورة البقرة
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\u200fقران
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\u200fgoogle translate
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\u200f\u202bgoogle\u202c
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\u200fدعاء السفر
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\u200finstagram
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\u200fصباح الخير
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\u200fجمعة مباركة
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\u200ffacebook
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\u200fشباب البومب
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\u200fsiri
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\u200fyoutube
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