3. A quick plug…
Library
workshops
Listed on the library
blog
APA
Image from: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrsdkrebs/6812988187/
Tuesday, March
25th 3:30-4:30 –
Cook Library 317
5. Wikipedia Woes and Google Gaffs
What are the pros and
cons of so much
information being
online?
What do you do to be
sure you’re finding
credible resources?
New York Times (2013) If a Story Is Viral, Truth
May Be Taking a Beating
http://nyti.ms/1d7MUUB
Google Analytics (2012) Google analytics in
real life – Site search.
http://youtu.be/cbtf1oyNg-8
DuckDuckGo (2012). There are no “regular
results” on Google anymore.
http://vimeo.com/duckduckgo/bubble
How do you evaluate
the information you
find while
researching?
Why is it important to
support your argument
with valid sources?
6. Web “Pre-Searching”
Why
start your search online?
Find background information
Help solidify research topic
Find new terminology to use as keywords
Find links and/or citations to other sources
7. Improve Google
internet and bully
Advanced
searching
Duck
Google
Duck Go
body image and girls
Cook
Library’s
Guide to the Web
8. Keywords are critical!
Sample
topic:
How have processed foods negatively
altered the health of Americans?
First,
break the question down into key
concepts:
Which age is childhood obesity in the
United States the highest?
9. More on keywords…
Expand
your list to include synonyms then add
to it once you have done some background
reading.
Which age is childhood obesity in the United
States the highest?
childhood
adolescent
child
young
obesity
over weight
BMI
obese
United States
Americans
North America
USA
10. Create keywords
Enter
your research topic on your
worksheet
Pass it to a group member
Partner 1 fills in keywords
Partner 2 fills in synonyms
What
helped you find synonyms?
11. Search Tip #1
Boolean “search connectors”
AND OR NOT
internet AND children
Combining >1 topic
instruct OR teach
Combining
synonymous terms
Which is better?
12. Search Tip #2
Use
truncation!
Educat*
finds
Educate
Education
Educating
Educator
Etc…
13. Search Tip #3
Phrase
Searching…
Use quotations to keep a keyword phrase
intact (words will be searched in the
specific order)
Examples:
“No
Child Left Behind”
“school reform”
14. Putting it all together…
Which age is childhood obesity in the United States
the highest?
childhood
adolescent
child
young
obesity
over weight
BMI
obese
United States
Americans
North America
USA
child* OR adolescent OR young
AND
obesity OR overweight OR BMI
AND
United States OR USA OR North America
15. Create a search strategy
Using
the keywords on your worksheet
and the search tips mentioned here
create a search strategy
Enter
your search strategy here:
http://bit.ly/tsem2014arnitaWSC1
16. Evaluate what you find
Go
to one of the websites below and
analyze it
http://bit.ly/cosmicweb3
http://bit.ly/cosmicweb4
http://bit.ly/cosmicweb5
http://bit.ly/cosmicweb6
http://bit.ly/cosmicweb7
Tell
me what you think!
18. Check for CRAP
Currency
How recent is the
information?
Can you locate a
date when the
resource was
written/created/upda
ted?
Based on your
topic, is this current
enough?
Why might the date
matter for your topic?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/helloeveryone123/393737
4193/sizes/m/in/photostream/
Guidelines for CRAP provided by the Jean and Alexander Heard
Library
19. Check for CRAP
Reliability
What kind of
information is
included in the
resource?
Does the author
provide citations &
references for
quotations & data
Where am I
accessing this
information?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/schnappi/5930145952/sizes/l/in/photostrea
m/
Guidelines for CRAP provided by the Jean and Alexander Heard
Library
20. Check for CRAP
Authority
Can you determine who
the author/creator is?
What are their
credentials
(education, affiliation, e
xperience, etc.)?
Who is the publisher or
sponsor of the work/site?
Is this publisher/sponsor
reputable
http://rantchick.com/a-doctrine-on-respect/
Guidelines for CRAP provided by the Jean and Alexander Heard
Library
21. Check for CRAP
Purpose/Point of
View
Is the content
primarily opinion?
Is the information
balanced or
biased?
What is the purpose
of the information? Is
it to
inform, teach, sell, e
ntertain or persuade
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cogdog/5484085301/sizes
/m/in/photostream/
Guidelines for CRAP provided by the Jean and Alexander Heard
Library
22. Find a website resource
Find
a website resource on your topic
Enter
it here:
http://bit.ly/tsem2014arnitaWSC1
Analyze
your website with CRAP
23. Thanks for listening!
Next
class:
Watch 2 more video and prepare for
discussion
Use your keywords to find books/articles
24. Questions?
Feel free to contact me:
Laksamee Putnam
lputnam@towson.edu
410.704.3746.
Twitter: @CookLibraryofTU
Or any reference librarian:
Visit Cook Library Reference Desk
410.704.2462.
IM – tucookchat
Notes de l'éditeur
Aka it’s a good starting pointYou can read the wikipedia article… just don’t cite it